The Whisky Master of Seville

Originally appeared on Spear’s

What does Seville have to do with Scotch? David Taylor heads to southern Spain to find out 

A month or so ago, an email pinged into my inbox with an invitation to a whisky launch in Seville. Usually there would be no hesitation, but I hovered over the reply button. What did Seville, spiritual home of Spanish exploration, tapas and oranges, have to do with a dram that was dreamed up over 60 years ago in the drizzle of Aberdeen and matured at Speyside’s Strathisla distillery?

Quite a lot, as it turns out. It all comes down to sherry.

Again, you might think that sherry and whisky have very little in common, but finishing whisky in sherry casks is a practice with a long tradition. Sherry’s sweetness can add a depth of flavour the original liquid would otherwise lack.

The sherry casks used by Royal Salute Whisky come from Pedro Ximénez grapes. Combine them with the dark caramel notes of a Scotch, and you have a match made in heaven. Where are the best Pedro Ximénez casks said to come from? Just outside of Seville.

And so I found myself watching a private Flamenco performance within Seville’s UNESCO World Heritage Royal Alcázar palace complex while trying Royal Salute’s 29 Year Old Pedro Ximénez Sherry Cask Finish Edition. The whisky’s Master Blender, Sandy Hyslop, was there, too, and waxed lyrical both about his new creation and the casks he’d had the fortune of using: “We have a good working relationship with the cask providers and that was important for the development of this special blend. We didn’t want to just buy empty casks, but wanted to control the process from start to finish.

‘We were able to create Pedro Ximénez casks that were fabricated for us from Spanish oak, fully conditioned with sherry and shipped to us in Scotland during the winter months to avoid any issues with transit in containers in the warmer months. This process took several years, but was worth the wait.’

Waiting is something in which Royal Salute has become particularly versed. Launched in 1953 by Chivas Brothers in tribute to the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II, the whisky is named after the traditional 21-gun salute. It follows, therefore, that all whisky used in the blend has been aged for a minimum of 21 years, demanding a significant amount of forward planning, to the extent that Sandy is now planning whiskies he’ll likely never taste. This hasn’t dampened his drive: ‘We started talking about this expression years ago, and as we’re always turned towards innovation, we felt this was a great opportunity to create a “first” for Royal Salute, as we’ve never fully finished our whisky in first fill Pedro Ximénez sherry casks before.

‘Whisky is such a versatile and complex spirit that we felt enhancing the flavour of the liquid by finishing every single drop of it in the sherry casks would add another dimension to the blend. The sherry butt finish brings an amplification of the rich velvety character of the whisky but also brings a gentle spicy nuance too.’

Thanks to its Sevillian influence, the whisky has orange notes on the nose, along with a tell-tale hint of sultana, courtesy of its Spanish sherry partner. The sweet taste is full of plum and treacle, and the finish is long and sweet with that spicy kick, a product of the whisky’s long maturation and full sherry finish. A Scottish spirit informed by an Andalusian fire: the journey from Speyside to Seville and back again might sound like an unexpected package holiday, but it’s done the trick for Royal Salute. A bit of Spanish sun never did anyone any harm, after all.


Experience Hamburg like a local: Nat Geo Traveller

Originally appeared in Nat Geo Traveller

For a snapshot of both classic and cool Germany, look no further than its second city. Whether you’re seeking high-brow concerts or bargain cast-offs, here’s where to head for the best of both worlds

Big-hitters

It would be remiss not to start with the Elbphilharmonie, affectionately called ‘Elphi’ by the Hamburgers. After 10 years of delays, fundraising and building, the city’s stunning concert hall opened in 2017 and is now a firm fixture on the cultural scene. Concerts take place throughout the year, covering everything from chamber music to modern jazz, with visiting orchestras such as the London Philharmonic often appearing on the calendar. For a quick meal before a concert, or a post-music pick-me-up, Kinfelts Kitchen & Wine serves the Elphi-Menü, a five-course dinner split into two acts: three courses before the concert, then a main and dessert served afterwards.

Wilhelmsburg, an island suburb between the northern and southern branches of the River Elbe, has gone from industrial corner to creative hub in the south of Hamburg-Mitte. Check out Atelierhaus23, a community project run by local artists showcasing their own and others’ works, with guest exhibitions running regularly.

As one of Europe’s largest ports, Hamburg is indelibly linked with the water — and there’s no better place to learn about its trading past and present than in the wide boulevards and mazy backstreets of the historic Speicherstadt, the world’s largest warehouse district and a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Since 2008, the district has made up part of Hamburg’s newest quarter, HafenCity; currently Europe’s largest inner-city urban redevelopment project, HafenCity (‘HarbourCity’) has seen the port area revitalised with a wealth of new waterfront hotels, shops and offices. Don’t miss Discovery Dock, in the shadow of the Elbphilharmonie, which offers an overview of the inner workings of the port and features interactive exhibitions that let visitors search for smuggled contraband and load shipping containers via VR headsets.

If there’s a poster boy of the area’s regeneration, the 137ft-tall Energiebunker, rising from Wilhemlsburg’s 19th-century Reiherstieg quarter, is surely it. Built as a flak tower in 1943, it was designed to defend the city against aerial bomb attacks. These days, the solar panel-adorned building serves as a renewable energy plant and giant heat storage facility. Make your way to the top floor, where you’ll find Café Vju, a 360-degree panoramic terrace and bar offering the finest views of Hamburg’s urban sprawl.

Alternative scene

Seen by many as the city’s counter-cultural centre, Schanzenviertel is where those in the know go to when the Reeperbahn — the city’s main nightlife drag — becomes too crowded. Its main street, Schulterblatt, is home to the area’s best cafes, bars and pubs, as well as a wide array of restaurants focused on plant-based cuisine. Mamalicious is known as Hamburg’s favourite veggie breakfast joint, and its all-day offerings are top-quality and nearly all vegan. For a quick sweet treat, stop by Herr Max for vegan chocolate-blueberry cupcakes and dairy-free ice cream.

Despite gentrification bringing renovation and higher rents to the area, Rote Flora — a former theatre that now houses Germany’s oldest squat — stands as a symbol of Hamburg’s strong alternative scene and is known for its status as a political and cultural hub.

Another highlight is the Flohschanze flea market, a hot, noisy haggler’s paradise offering a heap of treasures, from rare LPs to designer labels. If the action at Flohschanze gets a bit much, nearby Portuguese coffeehouse Café Estrela serves a proper galão — a Portuguese upgrade on your usual latte and the perfect accompaniment to a spot of people-watching.

The narrow streets of the Karolinenviertel neighbourhood are a hotspot for the best independent shops and clubs Hamburg has to offer. Hot Dogs is the place to go for footwear, and designer grotto Goldig offers pieces by a range of Scandinavian, English and Spanish brands. After an afternoon’s retail therapy, take five with a coffee in the rustic, cosy ambience of Café Panter or try Gretchens Villa for some fin de siecle-style decadence.

The area is also home to a booming music scene, with a huge number of record stores alongside bars such as Das Neue Dschungel and Kleines Phi. Live music venue Knust, inside an old abattoir, hosts both international and underground artists.

Finding culinary balance in Vietnam

Originally appeared in The Paper by Carrier

From the capital of Hanoi, with its stunning architecture, to the heady delights of Ho Chi Minh City, take in the all-encompassing metropolis, people, and food of such a diverse country. As well as staying in the best luxury retreats, such as Four Seasons Resort The Nam Hai, explore the most enchanting culinary scene. 

Due to Chinese control of Vietnam from 111BC to 938AD, local dishes showcase a strong focus on traditional Chinese medicine: philosophically balanced, it takes the best of the region and perfects it, creating a distinct and unforgettable flavour profile. Finding a balance of bitter, spicy, sour, sweet and salty flavours, Vietnamese food corresponds to the five elements of fire, metal, wood, earth and water through each fragrance, colour and taste. Take the use of the fermented fish sauce nuoc mam, the juice of the kalamansi citrus fruit, or sweet/spicy tamarind and chilli peppers: it’s a gastronomic treat for the five senses.

It’s also seen as one of the healthiest cuisines in the world, due to its fresh ingredients, negligible use of dairy and oil, and focus on vegetables, spices and herbs. The principle of Yin and Yang is central to the kitchen: after all, a balanced meal means a balanced body. Push your exploration beyond its normal limits by delving into the vibrant and fresh flavours of lemongrass, ginger and mint, while indulging in dishes unique to each part of this fertile and lush country.

Hanoi

On the bank of the Red River is Vietnam’s capital, Hanoi. Wide, tree-lined boulevards and luxury villas mix with ancient streets, making this a lively and vibrant city. There’s certainly plenty to enjoy in Hanoi with its traditional entertainment, fascinating history and, of course, its mouth-watering street food, whose vendors provide Hanoi’s almost 8 million stomachs with perfect treats day and night. Many of Vietnam’s most famous dishes are said to have their beginnings in Hanoi, including Phở, the country’s world-famous rice noodle soup.

There’s a place for tradition and a place for innovation, and it’s here that food bloggers like Van Cong Tu are an invaluable source of local knowledge. A street food tour with him will reveal the area’s best culinary spots. Try stir-fried noodles with beef at his favourite spot, or grab bún chả, a charcoal-roasted pork in a sweet/salty soup with rice noodles and lettuce – it’s a local favourite.

Halong Bay

As balance is all-important, time spent in the big city should be paired with something a little more serene. Halong Bay, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, is famous for its thousands of limestone islets dotting the sea and tropical, evergreen setting. The best way to see this unique part of the world is by ‘junk’, a type of ancient Chinese sailing boat. Hop aboard Violet, a traditional deluxe vessel, for an overnight cruise to discover the otherworldly Tien Ong cave, a natural and ancient grotto with stalactites shaped like peacocks and crocodiles and stone artefacts from the Hoa Binh, a mystical community that lived as long ago as 10,000 BC.

Experience the beauty and serenity of Cua Van, Halong’s largest floating fishing village, with its fishermen always ready to educate tourists about their traditional culture and customs. Watching nets be made and the fishing itself is an experience not to be missed, and reinforces the importance of learning how best to live life sustainably from those who call the area home. For a few more life lessons, a cooking class on the Violet with its chef is a good way to perfect your seafood dishes, as Halong Bay is home to a healthy number of cuttlefish, oysters, prawns and lobsters. Wash your hard-earned food down with a few drams of sticky rice wine or try a Moscow Mule, made – of course – with Hanoi Vodka.

Ho Chi Minh City

With a population of 8.6 million, it’s impossible to remain disconnected from the sights and smells of the bustling Ho Chi Minh City. This is Vietnam at its most high-energy, a heady, disorienting destination, where local vitality and pace of life carry you away to the very essence of what it means to be Vietnamese.

Exploring the back streets and eateries of what was once known as Saigon is a thrilling enough experience on foot, but here, Carrier goes the extra mile. Hop on the back of a Vespa with an expert guide leading the way through street food stalls, to restaurants run by Michelin-starred chefs, to the oncein- a-lifetime experience of Ben Thanh Market. Expect to be welcomed by stall owners selling everything you love – and things you’ve never even considered. Wind your way through the labyrinthine aisles to the wet market at the back of the complex to find a dizzying array of local produce and ingredients laid out for Saigon’s hungry throngs. As dusk falls, the surrounding restaurants open their doors, drifting the scents of their wok-fried noodles and barbecued fish until the early hours – much needed after an afternoon of giddy sightseeing.

 Ho Chi Minh City isn’t necessarily all action – an escape from the city is possible by spending time with local farmers and their families among the rice paddies and fruit farms of the fertile Mekong Delta. This tranquil setting is the perfect retreat – spend time among its floating markets and Khmer pagodas, dotted along the many canals and waterways that crisscross the landscape of the ‘Rice Bowl of Vietnam’. The hectic and the calm; the loud and the quiet; you’ll leave Vietnam with your body and mind in perfect harmony.

12 hours in Frankfurt - Atlas City Guide

Originally appeared on Atlas by Etihad

Germany’s financial centre is about more than big banks and shiny suits. Lose yourself for the day in the best of Frankfurt’s restaurants, gardens and museums

10:00 Frankfurt Botanical Garden

Frankfurt has the image of a bustling financial hub, but you can start your day in greener surroundings at the Botanischer Garten Frankfurt am Main – seven hectares of botanical garden in the central Westend-Süd district, only a 20-minute taxi ride from the airport. A fixture in the city since the 18th century, it originally served as a medicinal garden for the adjacent public hospital, and all three of its gardens are open to the public daily throughout summer. Directly next door is the Palmengarten, 22 more hectares of free-air and acclimatised greenhouses full of tropical and sub-tropical plants.
Siesmayerstraße 61, 60323; +49 69 2123 6689

11:30 Main Tower

The best view of the city comes from the 56th-floor observation deck of Main Tower in the financial district. It’s Frankfurt’s (and Germany’s) fourth tallest building, and the only skyscraper in the city with a viewing platform. Take in the stellar view of the Old Town and the banks of the River Main, surrounded by the superstructures of the financial district.
Neue Mainzer Straße 52-58, 60311; +49 69 3650 4878

12:45 Oosten

A leisurely half-hour wander down the river from Main Tower, Oosten is an industrial-style restaurant in a glass, steel and wood building at the base of a massive crane by the waterside. You get a 270-degree view of the Frankfurt skyline, and delicious local soul food along with vegan and gluten-free options. Oosten is good at any time of day (though the terrace is a must at sunset), but lunchtime gives you an insight into local life in Frankfurt in the coolest part of the city.
Mayfarthstraße 4, 60314; +49 69 949 425 6814

14:30 Museumsufer

Why have one museum when you can have 16? Frankfurt’s museum embankment flanks both sides of the river and houses some of Germany’s most important artworks and artefacts. Central to this is the Städel Museum, which holds one of the country’s most precious art collections: 2,700 paintings, 600 sculptures, 100,000 drawings and prints, and 100,000 books. Paintings from masters such as van Eyck, Rembrandt, Botticelli, Degas and Vermeer adorn the walls. Besides the Städel, the Museumsufer covers themes such as film, architecture, communication and Frankfurt’s Jewish community.
Schaumainkai 63, 60596; +49 69 2123 6325

17:30 Old Town

While Frankfurt’s Old Town was mainly destroyed in the Second World War, plans to rebuild it according to its original design were put in place in the 1980s, and have recently been completed. The historic centre, Römerberg, is a beautiful square showcasing the traditional half-timbered architectural style of medieval Europe. The centrepiece Römer building has been Frankfurt’s city hall for more than 600 years, and was also painstakingly restored by the city. Take a seat and enjoy a sweet coffee with cream at nearby Bitter & Zart, a chocolaterie specialising in all things cocoa.
Braubachstraße 14, 60311; +49 69 9494 2846

19:30 Restaurant Klosterhof

A trip to Frankfurt wouldn’t be complete without a taste of its grüne soße, or green sauce. This “grie soss” (as the Frankfurters pronounce it) is a mixture of seven fresh herbs and a combination of creams, oils and any other delicious ingredients you could think of that would work in a sauce. Usually served cold with boiled potatoes, boiled eggs or roast beef brisket, the best way to experience it is with the Frankfurter schnitzel – accompanied by local apfelwein (cider). Restaurant Klosterhof serves a praiseworthy schnitzel – as does Austrian eatery Salzkammer – but insist on the green sauce.
Weißfrauenstraße 3, 60311 (Klosterhof), Weißadlergasse 15, 60311 (Salzkammer)

22:00 Robert Johnson

Despite it being named after a famed blues musician, the Robert Johnson club is all about techno and electronic music. It’s said that the sound system is the best in Europe, and whether true or not, international and local DJs flock to play this small club in the Offenbach district. Like most German clubs, it has a strict, no-nonsense door policy, but with a main room holding fewer than 100 people, it’s worth the hassle for an intimate musical experience.
Nordring 131, 63067; +49 69 9202 0990

Behind The Scenes At CRN Shipyard, Ancona

Originally appeared on Wallpaper*

Two things strike you as you walk around CRN’s shipyard in Ancona, Italy. The first is that the water in this part of the Adriatic is a very particular shade of light, chalky blue, which bounces off the hull of a yacht as if by design. The second is that everything is really big.

This makes sense: after all, CRN is in the business of thinking big. Designing and building fully custom steel and aluminium yachts of up to 100 metres in length needs space – 80,000 sq m, in fact, of gargantuan warehouses and private marinas, all based in Ancona’s historic harbour. Founded in 1963 in the city, CRN’s dedicated fleet now numbers more than 180, along with a healthy number of aluminium and light-alloy models built for other brands under the Ferretti Group umbrella.

Having just completed its latest megayacht, CRN is building four other custom yachts simultaneously, each build bringing its own challenges and ambitious owners. Working in such a bespoke and exacting world should be a sure-fire formula for stress, especially when any new materials you develop or solutions you find probably won’t be used again, but to Gabriele Piacenti, senior project architect at CRN, it’s anything but. ‘It’s very fun,’ says Gabriele, pretty persuasively. ‘For an architect or designer it’s probably one of the best places to work.

‘Maybe you never use things again, but our yachts are one-offs. For example, we’ve been working with these guys at Fendi and other luxury brands, and we asked them to study some elements for decorative walls. We work directly with the craftsmen, asking for something new.

‘Each detail has to be clear in our mind. We have to make in three dimensions what we draw in two dimensions, so you think in 3D, you draw in 2D, you come back to 3D. It’s not so easy, but it’s really fun.’

Costanza Pazzi, chief architect of CRN’s design department, has just finished work on CRN’s latest creation, the 79-metre steel and aluminium M/Y 135 megayacht, launched earlier this year at a lavish private ceremony attended by not only the owner and guests, but all those who worked on the yacht’s creation. Working alongside Zuccon International Project on the exterior and Laura Sessa for interiors, the new ship has five decks accommodating 12 guests in five VIP cabins, plus the owner’s suite and a 29-strong crew.

Even working with experts like Zuccon and Laura Sessa, and nearly 200 other accomplished professionals, getting a superyacht from a mood board to the water isn’t an easy task: ‘I worked closely with Laura and the [owner’s] family,’ Costanza explains. ‘In the first meeting, they asked for a mountain chalet on the water. We used a lot of white wood, oak, a lot of wallpaper. We also used a lot of teak and all the colours that the family chose, because they each chose their own cabins. It was amazing to work with them.’

CRN is represented in every meeting a client has with its designers, because as Constanza says, ‘at the end of the day, they would like something, but I have to build [the boat]. I have to explain what we can and can’t do, because we’re not in a building.

‘Sometimes we fight, but at the end we find a compromise. For me, a boat is a beautiful compromise.’

Other concept projects in the pipeline are collaborations with some of yachting’s most important designers – Alfarosso (45m, 50m and 55m) by Francesco Paszkowski, Begallta (75m) by Lobanov and She (70m) by Vallicelli. Looks like there are more beautiful compromises on the horizon.

Sheffield: Why It's Time To Reconsider The Steel City

Originally appeared on Esquire UK

Sheffield doesn’t seem to get much national coverage. It’s that city in South Yorkshire, isn’t it? Used to make steel, two decent football teams, pretty hilly. Not much to see here.

For most Sheffielders, that’s fine with them. Sheffield is comfortable being itself, cheerfully under-hyped. From sport - it’s the home of modern football (the original rules were written here in 1858) and hosts snooker’s World Championship - to music (Arctic Monkeys, Pulp and The Human League, anyone?), Sheffield has plenty to brag about, yet gets on with life, letting other local cities vie for the limelight.

It still has parochial elements, but Britain’s biggest village isn’t all greasy chip butties and old men supping a warm ale with their whippets (although we’ll hear nothing against that). The Steel City has another side that it would be remiss not to experience, a creative, independent and dynamic underbelly that locals and privileged outsiders know all about. For a weekend away, Sheffield should be near the top of the list. Just don’t tell too many people.

To stay: Brocco on the Park

This beautiful Edwardian boutique hotel overlooking Endcliffe Park is perfectly placed for wherever your mood takes you. From here it’s a ten minute walk into the city centre (and probably about twenty back, courtesy of one of Sheffield’s hills / that last Old Fashioned you had “for the road”). For a day surrounded by nature, grab one of Brocco’s Big Five super smoothies and head only ten minutes by car into the Peak District. You might think this is an exaggeration, but the city is deeply connected to the countryside, and has the most trees per person in Europe - it’s come some way since its industrial days.

Breakfast: Marmadukes

This independent café in the heart of Sheffield has been serving a greedy city from three floors of an old Georgian townhouse since 2012, its eccentric, winding layout lending it a conspiratorial atmosphere. Almost everything is made in-house each morning, the artisan bread coming from nearby Worksop and the milk from Our Cow Molly, only three miles away. If you’re feeling ambitious, go for the gut-busting Duke’s Breakfast. If this is too much for your morning sensitivities, don’t worry - their avocado toast is just as good.

Coffee: Take your pick

The people of Sheffield love coffee. Maybe it’s all the walking everyone seems to do, or maybe the nightlife is too tempting, but a morning pick-me-up is vital to the vast majority. Luckily, the city has its fair share of quality coffeehouses, especially around busy West Street.

Tamper Coffee is run by Kiwis and brings the best of New Zealand coffee culture to the city, while Steam Yard is in a great little courtyard that feels miles away from the centre. A few minutes down the road is Sheffield’s most design-led coffeeshop - Ink & Water serves premium coffee and local treats, but is also a graphic design and animation studio, with a real Bauhaus vibe throughout.

Dinner: Jöro

Shipping container restaurants are definitely a thing, at least at Krynkl, a collection of containers housing start-ups, a rooftop bar and Jöro, a restaurant offering “a meal built of many small plates”. It was awarded a Bib Gourmand in the Michelin Guide 2019, and head chef Luke French cooks his “New Nordic” dishes with hyper-seasonal and sustainable ingredients. The barbecued Moss Valley pork belly with Hoisin is a highlight. As are the other seven dishes you’ll invariably have.

Cocktails: Public

Public was recently awarded the best place to drink in the country by Observer Food Monthly, which is a far cry from the underground building’s original use as a public toilet. Underneath the Town Hall, the owners weren’t even allowed to install card machines at first due to the building’s protected status. Somehow they’ve sweet-talked the council, so no need to walk across the road to the cash machines.

The brass-and-leather-soaked bar serves cocktails from a menu split into four sections: Public Awareness (sustainable), Public Footpath (locally sourced), Public Liability (extra strength), and Public Health (alcohol free). Many focus on sustainability and locality, with regular forage sessions in the nearby Peak District and agreements with coffeeshops to take in their used grounds. Public also collaborates with other local businesses, such as vinyl store Bear Street Records and potter Grey Suit Clay. It’s small, it’s cool and it serves (probably) the best hedgerow negroni in the world.

Pub: Kelham Island Quarter

If you like beer, you might never leave. Sheffield has a huge range of pubs, but nowhere is the ale-to-person ratio more skewed to the amber liquid than Kelham Island. Formerly the industrial heartland of the city, the Quarter is regularly voted one of the coolest areas to live in the UK, and with good reason: plenty of start-ups have moved into the attractive Edwardian-era buildings, thirsty for emerging business and a good pint. There’s also the monthly Peddler Night Market, an open-plan food truck paradise with live music and a pop-up gin bar.

Art: Millennium Gallery

A visit to the central gallery offers an intriguing insight into Sheffield’s industrial and artistic pasts, and art, craft and design installations share the modernist space with permanent exhibitions detailing the city’s past - and current - expertise in steel. The gallery shares a wall with the Winter Garden, a huge temperate glasshouse and botanical garden open to the public that also serves as the BBC studio during the snooker World Championship.

Theatre: The Crucible

The Crucible is much more than the home of snooker, putting on world class theatre, music and ballet year-round. Sir Ian McKellen has regularly performed there through the years, and recently said “I shall always be proud that, with Edward Petherbridge, I was in the first play ever at the Crucible in 1971. Chekov’s Swansong was part of the concert which opened the now iconic open stage.” He’s back this year with a solo show. If it’s good enough for Gandalf, it’s good enough for you.



Madeira: the Old World charms of a New World destination

Originally appeared on Living It

When I took on a brief to cover Madeira and its wine festival, I wasn’t expecting to be standing up in the back of an open-top jeep plucking passionfruit flowers off their stalks to drink the nectar inside. Nor was I expecting to still be standing in the back of said jeep while we weaved our way through mountains, villages and plantations, either like some sort of militia or the Man from Del Monte.

We were being driven across the island by the hospitable and mischievous Vald (short for Valdemar, he insisted we shorten his name “as every English person starts calling me Voldemort”). Vald is a Madeiran, and driver for Green Devil Safari, a fleet of 4x4 vehicles perfectly tuned to traverse whatever the steep, exotic mountains of the island have to throw at them. Potholes as deep as a bath, fern leaves larger than a car boot, turns in the road sharper than a u-bend? No problem for Vald and the group of whooping tourists under his care.

While it’s not quite The Lost World, Madeira arguably was, until 1418, an undiscovered one. The earliest potential mention of the Madeiran archipelago is by Greek-Roman biographer Plutarch in AD75, who recounts conversations with Atlantic sailors about the legendary ‘Isles of the Blest’. There’s also archaeological evidence that the Vikings stopped on the islands sometime between 900 and 1030, undoubtedly taking a quick break from exploration and pillaging.

The final claim for discovery of the islands comes from a semi-historical English source (as per usual). As the story goes, in 1346, trader Robert Machim fell in love with Anne d’Arfet, a woman of higher social standing than poor Robert. They eloped, and fled England for France. This went drastically wrong, as their ship was driven away from the coast of France, and 13 days later, arrived on the coast of Madeira. Having escaped England, and found a place to spend their lives together, the star-crossed lovers promptly died of exhaustion. The story has been forever commemorated by the inhabitants of Madeira, who actually named the island’s third biggest settlement, Machico, after the romantic pair.

While it’s certain that the islands had at least been noted before the Portuguese arrived, there’s no indigenous population on the archipelago, a pretty small batch of rocks more than 1,000 kilometres from Portugal, and on a latitude with Casablanca. There wasn’t a huge amount of life generally until the 15th Century reign of Portugal’s Prince Henry the Navigator. Two captains under his command, João Gonçalves Zarco and Tristão Vaz Teixeira, were driven off their usual course, and miraculously stumbled upon Porto Santo (Holy Harbour, named in gratitude to the divine intervention needed to save them from shipwreck). After catching their breath, they realised they were on to a winner, and brought an official expedition in 1419 to settle on Porto Santo and the larger island they had found: this would eventually become Madeira.

Madeira’s volcanic base has created fertile ground for plant life, and the island’s 24 (or 20, or 7, depending on who I asked) microclimates cater for what seems to be any nation’s landscape. In the space of four hours, our jeep had topographically travelled across most of the world; one particularly odd moment was a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it transition from the fresh, pine-filled air and landscape of the Scottish Highlands to the hot, yellowed plains of the Sierra Nevada. Pack a wardrobe, if you can.

For a more manicured look at Madeira, a stay at Quinta Jardins do Lago is a fascinating look at how locals have tamed the wild side of their home. Describing itself as a botanical garden hotel, the grounds of this 18th Century Quinta, or villa, overlook Madeira’s capital, Funchal, and pack in as many aspects of the island’s natural abundance as possible. Capability Brown would be in awe.

The quinta was also the home of Britain’s General Beresford during the Napoleonic wars, and the era’s architecture has been retained, giving the hotel an air of plantation opulence seen here and there across the island. The absolute star of the show, however, is Colombo the giant tortoise, who has just celebrated his 60th birthday. Named after Christopher Columbus, who visited Madeira during his time as a sugar trader, wily old Colombo is given free rein of the grounds, but understandably chooses to stay within relative proximity to his plush home in the centre of the hotel’s gardens.

Alongside the verdant landscapes, Madeira has produced a few famous faces. Vasco da Gama was possibly the most famous, until Cristiano Ronaldo’s free kicks and over-enthusiastic celebrations meant he muscled his way to the top. Thinking it was perhaps a misspent youth treading grapes for the local vineyards that made his feet so supple, I decided to become acquainted more intimately with the Vedelho grape by jumping into a massive vat of the stuff and squelching to my heart’s content. Luckily, this wasn’t frowned upon, as treading the grapes is part of the island’s annual wine festival. An excitable group of young journalists, Madeirans dressed in traditional clothing, and septuagenarian cruise-goers all got stuck in, my shorts were ruined, and I was delighted. I even tried a shot of the resulting juice, and it didn’t taste like feet, which was much more than could’ve been hoped.

Madeira is, of course, renowned for Madeira wine. The yearly wine festival takes place in September, centred on Funchal’s main thoroughfare, with stalls showcasing the very best wine and food pairings available. Blandy’s, an established Madeira wine producer since 1811, invites guests into its wine lodge to sample its wares, and organises wine pressings, tastings and parties to celebrate the island’s most famous produce. The lodge is open year-round for visitors to get a more detailed look at Madeira wine’s production process - and have an excuse for a midday tipple.

Even without the energy of the wine festival, Funchal is a charming and vibrant capital city, feeling much bigger than its 112,000 population would suggest. Its small, winding streets, still cobbled, are easy to escape into - and even easier to become lost in. The most beautiful of these alleys is Rua de Santa Maria, lined with inviting restaurants and benefitting from the sea breeze. This is the old town, so it’s already charming enough, but Santa Maria’s main attraction is the multitude of decorated, coloured doors each side of the street. Around 200 doors were ‘given’ to artists to reinvigorate, and the doors vary between traditional depictions of Madeiran life, to political statements, to Impressionistic homages.

While wandering the streets of Funchal, it would have been remiss of me not to make the two kilometre trip to Reid’s Palace, Madeira’s answer to Europe’s fin de siècle magnificence. Teetering on a rocky outcrop over the crashing Atlantic, Reid’s Palace was built by Scotsman William Reid in 1891, a few years after he arrived on the island as a sick 14 year old boy without a penny to his name. It immediately attracted the European set, brought to the hotel by its lavish interiors, dramatic views and impeccable, confident service. Generations of the great and the good have stepped foot under the Murano chandeliers of Reid’s, with Winston Churchill and George Bernard Shaw becoming such loyal guests that there are suites named after both. I was given a tour of Churchill’s suite, a bright, airy complex with a blue-tiled bathroom and expansive verandah overlooking the sea. It was classic British design with a Madeiran influence. I took a mint.

Before Belmond took over in 1996 and revitalised the hotel, Reid’s had garnered a reputation as being for ‘the newly wed and the nearly dead’, a moniker unfairly given sometimes to the island as a whole. Madeira has had a bit of an image problem - simply put, it’s been a victim of its own success. The agreeable year-round weather, staggering scenery and location of the islands has made it a hotspot for cruise liners, bringing with them more than a fair share of ‘grey tourism’. However, times are changing, with an upturn in younger generations discovering the old-world charms of a new-world destination. It might’ve been the wine talking, but I promised at least a dozen locals that I’d be back within the year. It’s hard to stay away.

Cédric Grolet, the world's best pâtissier

Originally on Living It 

Cédric Grolet can certainly make pastry. Trained by master pâtissier and creator of the indulgent L’Eclair de Génie, Christophe Adam, Grolet moved in 2011 to Parisian high luxury hotel Le Meurice to work alongside two Michelin stalwarts, head chef Alain Ducasse and executive chef Jocelyn Herland. After only two years, Ducasse had seen enough to name him executive pastry chef at the hotel, and his exploits since have only seen his stock rise further among his peers.

Grolet was recently crowned best pastry chef by the World’s 50 Best Restaurants Awards, and it’s not hard to see why. His unfathomably lifelike creations range from fruit, to personal twists on traditional French desserts, and the fruit creations in particular have garnered praise across the gastronomic world - achieved by a thin shell of airbrushed white chocolate, the desserts have to be seen to be believed. Luckily for us, they have helped him gain a formidable following on social media, where he showcases the very best of his wares.

Earlier this year, Grolet opened his first pastry shop, handily situated in Le Meurice. While undoubtedly this is a priceless opportunity to develop his craft within the juggernaut of the Dorchester Collection and under the watchful eye of Ducasse, the opening also reflects on how highly Le Meurice values his skills - the hotel is surely desperate to keep hold of one of its biggest assets. In between bouts of globe-hopping, receiving awards, and the small matter of his day job, we managed a few quiet minutes with the 32-year-old crown prince of pastry.

Q. The 50 Best Awards shows how fêted you are by your peers. How have you reached such a high level of quality in a relatively short period?

"I love watching and listening. Exchange is important of course, but when you have very great professionals in front of you, I think you just have to take what they offer you: their time. It is an honour to win an award which gives me a platform to shine a light on the incredible creativity of pastry chefs the world over. I have been inspired by many innovative chefs in my career and especially by the pâtisserie tradition of my home country of France. I always seek to create moments of togetherness, menus which produce lasting memories and introduce diners to our world. After all, that is what we, as chefs, seek to do every day."

Q. How is working at Le Meurice with Alain Ducasse and Jocelyn Herland?

"The transmission of knowledge is very important to me. I’ve had the chance to learn from a number of very talented chefs; today evolving alongside Alain Ducasse is a great opportunity. His style, centred on essential tastes and original fragrances, allows me to revisit my classic techniques and deepen my skill-set. Both Alain and Jocelyn have taught me how to select raw materials, to ensure their quality, to work with them in the simplest possible way - revealing their optimum taste."

Q. Where do you get the ideas for your pastry creations?

"I am very lucky, my mother is a real cordon bleu. She has always made a lot of desserts at home and it is indisputably she who gave me the desire to cook and make pastry. Everything is inspiring. I draw a lot from my childhood memories and my education, but typically, I am inspired by everything around me; fashion, cars, colours, architecture, museums, travels. I’m particularly inspired by the cultures from all different countries in which I have traveled. I love Asia; I have had the chance to travel there several times. I particularly appreciate the delicacy of the products used and their originality. There is no bad idea."

Q. What makes a great pâtissier?

"A great pâtissier... what a question! I do not think there are any specific criteria. In addition to mastering the classics, the key is to be greedy, curious and passionate. My only pleasure is to evoke an emotion. The profession of a pastry chef is very demanding, but it is also very rewarding. To secretly observe an unknown person and to read joy and happiness from the first bite is magical. I like more than anything that my pastries evoke a pleasant memory."

Q. What's next for you?

"My goal is to grow my team, to push our knowledge further and develop our good relations. I would also like to develop my shop internationally."

The Millionaire Flatshare: The Hideaways Club

Originally on Living It

It's a common predicament: what is a high net worth individual to do if they want a second home abroad, but don’t feel like they can commit to one place?

Until 2007, the poor souls would have had to bravely put up with their one villa in the Maldives. However, help is at hand, courtesy of The Hideaways Club. The Club is an international investment fund of shared ownership properties, through which members can jet off to myriad destinations across the world and enjoy a second home/flat/chalet/villa/castle without the onerous tasks usually associated with it, such as maintenance and energy costs. To sweeten the deal, there’s a 24/7 concierge at your beck on call, and the properties are smack bang in the middle of each destination. Suffice to say, members are usually happy with what they get.

One such member is Wimbledon stalwart and former British number one tennis player, Tim Henman. When his playing career came to a close, there was a decision to make: “When I stopped competing, my wife and I thought about buying a place overseas. I was never allowed to ski when I was playing tennis, because of the injury risk, so we thought about buying a chalet, but then we like France and Italy for the hot weather.

“Then we came across The Hideaways Club. It’s very much a lifestyle choice and you can have a second home for every season of the year. Having travelled so much of my life and had just one or two weeks of holiday a year, suddenly I wanted to take advantage of my extra free time. I’d much rather spend my time in a villa than a hotel - I spent most of my career living in hotels - and we love to get away from it all during our holidays, so it’s very much about the space and privacy.

“Most of the villas sleep around 10-12 people so it’s great too for inviting friends and family along.”

To say Mr Henman is an enthusiast would be an understatement, with the sportsman recently becoming an official ambassador for the Club. He’s certainly used the service to its full extent, visiting 15 of the Club’s properties in places as varied as France, Italy, Sri Lanka, Spain, Switzerland, and Ko Samui in Thailand.

“One we really enjoyed was Ko Samui for New Year’s a few years ago,” said Henman. “It’s an amazing beachfront villa and we had incredible staff looking after us. There were 10 of us, we went with another family who are great friends of ours. I lived in hotels from the ages of 16 to 33 for probably 35 weeks a year, so I enjoy the space and the privacy that goes with the Club.”

For reasons still unknown to myself, I was invited to stay at the Club’s Paris property, an apartment just off the Champs Élysées. The apartment is part of the City Collection, a newer range of properties in cities such as Berlin, London and New York.

As promised, my local concierge was waiting for me, a jovially acerbic American man who’d lived in Paris for more than twenty years. A quick tour around the apartment - a chic two-bedroom with open-plan living and dining areas set in a perfectly-Parisian townhouse complex - and some tips for the best places to eat in the area, and I was left to my own devices.

This included accidentally pulling down a curtain rail in the master bedroom, but one phone call with my American fairy godfather and the problem was sorted while I was out at one of his recommended bistros catching up with an old friend and becoming acquainted with a bottle of red wine. I’d say I tore the curtain down deliberately, as some kind of journalistic test, but nobody would believe me.

This service is also vital for Henman: “The first-class Concierge team takes care of everything, from restaurant bookings, airport transfers, arranging curated tours, babysitting, and more. You’ll be very hard-pressed to find a team who knows more about our destinations.

“When our children were small the Concierge would organise things like cots, car seats and they even stocked our fridge with our favourite foods. You can be pretty demanding!”

Luckily, I had no children with me to add to the destruction, especially when taking the record-breakingly small French lift up to the apartment after one too many absinthes. However, this is all part of the experience.

“It’s all about the lifestyle,” says Henman, “and enjoying our second homes without the usual hassles of owning property from afar, leaving us to enjoy every minute of our holiday time with friends and family wherever we go.

“I’d love to go South Africa next for some winter sun. There’s virtually no time difference with the UK which is a bonus and there’s lots to see and do, with some excellent wines to try too.”

See you there, Tim.

Travel feature: Basque in Glory

This article originally appeared on Living it

It was hard to believe we were only a few miles from the Spanish border.

Then again, it was pretty hard to believe we were in France, too. Such is the nature of the Basque region, straddling the South West of France and North West of Spain. The culture is of its own, from the clothes to the cuisine, and, importantly, the language.

Spain’s General Franco banned Euskara (Basque) during his time in power from 1939-1975, such was his fear of the Basque sense of independence; non-Castilian (non-Spanish) names were also banned for newborns. Secret lessons were run in church basements and private homes for decades until the transition to democracy began in the ‘70s. An estimated 35 percent of the population in the region now speaks Basque, having saved it, and a large part of the area’s identity, from near extinction.

The Iparralde (literally “the northern part”), is located on the French side of the border. Here, there is certainly more of a sense of ‘French-ness’, in the coastal towns of Biarritz and Saint-Jean-de-Luz. However, Basque pervades every café, every delicatessen, every patisserie. The road signs are in French and Basque. The houses show both French and Spanish influence, oak windowsills and terracotta roofs.

The Basque coast differs from other coastal destinations in France, such as the Côte d’Azur. Here, it seems more local, more attuned to the desires of those who live in, or near, the towns and cities. Saint-Jean-de-Luz, for instance, relies on huge tourism figures from northern Spain and the rest of southwestern France, and Biarritz, while attracting a certain type of international guest, is still conspicuous in its local feel.

Even the towns themselves have distinct characters. Biarritz is a glamour town. Known for its Casinos - most notably the Barrière and the Bellevue on the waterfront - the streets are flanked by luxury boutiques and grandiose buildings, most notably the Hôtel du Palais, built in 1855 for Empress Eugénie, wife of Napoleon III. Destroyed by fire in 1903, it was rebuilt to an even more opulent degree and became famous for its international clientele, such as the UK’s King Edward VII.

Biarritz, and the coast, in general, is also famous for its high-end surfing conditions. It’s here, allegedly, that surfing was first practised in Europe. The story goes that in 1957, German-American director Peter Viertel was filming in Biarritz with his wife, actress Deborah Kerr when a family friend visited from California. His use of a surfboard off the coast of the town is cited as the moment surfing was introduced to the continent, and before long, Biarritz was heralded as one of the most popular destinations for surfers. The popularity continues to this day, with surfers even braving the cold Atlantic water in early spring in order to find the perfect wave.

Lesser-known than its glamorous cousin, the port town of Saint-Jean-de-Luz is a favourite spot for those looking for calm waters and serene beaches, due to its strong sea walls protecting the bay from the worst of the Atlantic’s force. The town has enjoyed wealth for centuries due to successful fishing, but also a period when Basque pirates would raid and capture foreign ships off the coast - English sailors even went as far as calling Saint-Jean-de-Luz the ‘Viper’s Nest’.

The town is also renowned for its royal wedding connection. The undisputed highlight for any architecture enthusiast is the Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Saint-Jean-du-Doigt. Saint-Jean-du-Luz’s central church, it was here that Louis XIV, King of France and Navarre, married the Spanish Infanta Maria Theresa in 1660, thereby solidifying international relations and his claim to the Navarre throne. The outside, while physically imposing, is unadorned and unassuming. It’s when you enter the building that the splendour of 17th Century France greets you, with Romanesque stained glass and a remarkable Baroque altarpiece stretching almost from floor to ceiling.

For my time in the Basque region, I stayed at Saint-Jean-de-Luz’s La Réserve, a luxury complex of hotel and studio flats nestled on a cliff face overlooking the might of the Atlantic. Slightly distanced from the town, along the coast towards Biarritz, La Réserve manages to engender a sense of privacy and discretion while having an open-plan design centred around the hotel’s new infinity pool. La Réserve is owned by Groupe Floirat, along with Les Manoirs de Tourgeville in Normandy, and Hôtel Byblos in St Tropez. Each hotel is strikingly different; whereas Les Manoirs is a leafy, more family-centric destination, and Byblos is the archetype of Tropezian glamour, La Réserve makes the most of its stunning surroundings by cultivating an ambience of relaxed quality: the owners and staff know they have a first-class product. The air of ease and confidence can only serve to relax guests even more - as if that were necessary in the first place.

Dinner at La Réserve is an accomplished affair. I was treated to the ‘Dîner à 4 Mains’, a tasting menu devised by the house chef Fabrice Idiart and MOF (Meilleur Ouvrier de France) and officially world champion of frozen desserts, Thierry Bamas. Each of the seven courses mixed sweet, sour and savoury to create dishes almost impossible to label. Highlights included the ‘profiterole’ of local goats’ cheese, spring vegetable and broad bean foam, and the ‘Tarte au Citron’, a concoction of strawberries, fruits of the forest, citrus, coconut and buttery biscuit base, unlike any lemon tart I’ve ever seen or tasted.

The morning after the meal demanded some exercise, so I involved myself in one of the hotel’s fitness offerings, Bungy Pump. The oddly-titled sport was invented by the Swedes as a way to add weight resistance to walks and hikes. There are similarities to Nordic Walking - brisk marching through the countryside, improving oxygenated blood - but whereas the sticks in Nordic Walking are fixed, Bungy Pump derives its name from the elastic inside the sticks, which can be altered to provide various levels of resistance. What started out as a leisurely stroll soon turned into an intense training session. I was thankful for the slightly cooler weather saving any embarrassment, especially as my trainer, Fabien, was a former striker for French Ligue 1 football team Toulouse FC, and had obviously maintained peak physical fitness.

In between heavy breaths and beads of sweat, I managed to enjoy a final view of Saint-Jean-de-Luz, as we traversed the cliffs overlooking the town. It’s a mystery why this part of the coast isn’t busier, especially with foreign tourists. I suppose the locals don’t mind: sometimes it’s better to remain a gem undiscovered by the majority, rather than be cursed by your own natural beauty. I’m certainly glad I discovered it.

Hotel Review: Mandarin Oriental, Barcelona

Originally appeared in The City Magazine

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Mandarin Oriental, Barcelona

A jewel in the crown of the Passeig de Gràcia

Passeig de Gràcia is Barcelona’s most luxury-laden boulevard. Brioni sits near Swarovski; Chanel vies for your attention with next-door Dior; the street, less than a mile long, is bookended by Emporio Armani and Ermenegildo Zegna. It also boasts some of the city’s most architecturally important buildings by, among others, Barcelona’s favourite son, Antoni Gaudí. As one of the most exclusive streets in Barcelona – and Spain in general – it’s no surprise that the Mandarin Oriental sits at its centre.

The MO Barcelona faces Casa Batlló, one Gaudí’s most revered buildings, and is itself an architectural beauty. On walking up the expansive, floating ramp to reception, however, the design changes. It becomes a more modern, brighter hotel, with walls reaching up to a glass ceiling seven floors above.

You’re provided with a concierge, whose personal mission is to make your stay as comfortable and easy as possible, and is available at any time for any whim. The rooms reflect the contemporary image of the rest of the hotel, with free-standing baths, monsoon showers, and minimalist, comfortable balconies overlooking a discreet courtyard. The courtyard is actually comprised of the back of a number of buildings, and the calm of a sleepy Barcelona adds a surprising degree of normality and quiet to one of the city’s busiest areas.

The roof terrace offers an almost unrivalled view of the Eixample district and beyond, with vantage shots of many major Modernista (Catalan modernist) constructions, including Casa Milà, Casa Amatller, and the aforementioned Casa Batlló. A look to the left shows the Gothic Quarter, and further on to sea, while turning round shows you Sagrada Família.

Taking the lift all the way down to the base of the hotel lands you in the spa. As is expected, the complex is a sea of calm, with eight treatment rooms including two couples’ suites, a 12-metre
lap pool, oriental steam room and a Pedi:Mani:Cure studio by podiatrist Bastien Gonzalez.

Both restaurants in the hotel are headed up by superstar chef Carme Ruscalleda, who comes with seven Michelin stars to her name. The food on offer at Moments and Blanc reflects Catalonia’s food history, and the staff continue the hotel’s approach of calm and care, with thoughtful suggestions and unobtrusive service. Head to the Banker’s Bar for a good time after dinner, the bar hinting to the building’s former use as a bank. Opt for the Banker’s Martini while looking at a ceiling fashioned from original security boxes for a good end to the night – or, if embracing the Spanish way of life, the start.

mandarinoriental.com/barcelona

The Spirit of France - G'Vine Gin

Originally in The City Magazine

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An unconventional ingredient makes for a very french gin

Jean-Sébastien Robicquet speaks with the confidence of a man who knows his drink. He has good reason to – his family has been in the wine business for 400 years, and without him, the world wouldn’t have the P. Diddy-backed Cîroc Vodka. Having gained masters degrees in Oenology and Business, Jean-Sébastien worked with Hennessy for more than ten years, before founding the Maison Villevert group. Based in a beautifully restored 16th century château in the Charente prefecture of France called – you guessed it – Maison Villevert, Jean-Sébastien’s team created the aforementioned grape vodka, as well as the unconventional gin that’s just celebrated its 10th birthday, G’Vine.

Bringing his expert understanding of grapes to the table, Jean-Sébastien looked at gin from a different angle: “I created G’Vine because I was not fully satisfied, as a Frenchman, by the gin on offer. I wanted to have something elegant and pleasant for my palate.” The use of grapes as the base for a gin might sound odd, but the sweet properties of grape worked beautifully in comparison to the traditional grain.

Ryan Chetiyawardana, owner of Dandelyan, the world’s best bar according to the Spirited Awards, is a big fan of the gin, as is head bartender Alex Kratena. Both took part in the ‘G’Vine Perspectives’ video series, using the brand’s Floraison expression as a base to their cocktails.

G’Vine’s 10th anniversary was celebrated on the rooftop of Galeries Lafayette in Paris. Gin experts mingled and danced into the night with models wearing green sunglasses – the perfect symbol for a thoroughly French gin.

The G’Vine expressions

Floraison

Floraison stands for ‘flowering’, and with good reason: it’s the most important time in a vine’s life, when it is distilled, in this case, into a fresh and floral gin that aims to bring to mind the vineyards
in springtime, when the scent of the blossoming vine flowers fills the air.

Unsurprisingly for a grape gin, the taste – smooth but full-bodied – is unique, and is surprising in its subtlety and sweetness. The less alcoholic of the two expressions at 40 per cent ABV, it’s best in a classic G&T or a light and breezy summer cocktail.

Nouaison

Nouaison means ‘setting’, when the flower turns from bloom to berry. The berry turns a subtle gin into something spicier and more intense, and a good alternative to a traditional dry gin. This version comes in at a heftier 43.9 per cent ABV, offering more punch than Floraison. It’s perfect for those who like stronger cocktails such as the Negroni.