ESTIVA
The New Porkers
It’s been a couple of years since we’ve had new PIGs on the horizon. Choosing the perfect properties isn’t something that can be rushed, but we are delighted to share that we have just completed on two sites with a view to opening a pair of new PIGs over the next couple of years, subject to all planning and listed building permissions.
We hope the first to open, just south of Stratford-upon-Avon will be THE PIG-on the farm in 2024, a mid-16th-century listed stone manor house set in 53 acres of pasture and arable land in the heart of rural England.
Following this, with a fair wind behind us, will be THE PIG-at Groombridge in 2025, in the landmark moated manor house of Groombridge Place, on the border of Kent and East Sussex near Tunbridge Wells.
Working closely with Historic England, we look forward to restoring these unspoilt listed gems sensitively. Their classic beauty complements our eight PIGs, and both are located in counties steeped in historic significance. We will be creating something a bit different to our other PIGs, but they will have our classic style running through the fabric of the buildings. Watch this space for more news...
FORAGER’S PICKS..
All our hotel kitchens love to make the most of seasonal wild produce. Over the years we’ve got to know a great network of brilliant foragers who bring us the best wild goodies they can find. Here’s what to look out for yourself this summer.
JUNE
Wild greens including Douglas fir, oxeye daisy leaves, sorrel, sweet gale, wild chives and wild garlic. Wild flowers and elderflowers
JULY
Wild greens including sea beet, sea purslane, wild fennel tops, wild mint and wood sorrel.
Wild fruit and berries including bilberries and cherry plums
AUGUST
Wild greens including horseradish leaves and roots, marsh samphire and rock samphire. Wild fruit and berries including blackberries and rowan berries
Held in the grounds and surrounding fields of THE PIG-at Bridge Place, Canterbury, Kent and Lime Wood in the New Forest, the Smoked & Uncut festivals offer so much more than just (excellent) live music. This year – our 10th anniversary – will be one to remember. Alongside some stellar acts, including an all female line-up at Lime Wood, expect festi-food stalls, bars, shopping, the Field Spa, the Den kids’ area, and chef-hosted feasts with Angela Hartnett, Nathan Outlaw, Lisa Goodwin-Allen and THE PIG’s James Golding. Find out more and buy your tickets at smokedanduncut.com
Notes from the Kitchen Garden
Our Kitchen Garden supremo Ollie shares a summer update from the veg bed
Summer means the Kitchen Garden teams are busy maintaining and harvesting the last of the crops that were in the ground over the winter, such as broad beans, garlic and onions. We’re also starting to harvest some of the faster-growing spring plantings, including beetroot, salad onions and spinach.
To maintain high levels of production, we reclaim and replant our beds successionally once a crop has finished. For example, we sow beetroot seedlings at our nursery HQ about three weeks before the previously planted crop is at its prime. Once that crop has been harvested, the new seedlings are planted out in the same turned-over beds. In this way, we can produce three or four crops in a year.
Tomatoes are also very managementheavy. Each PIG has about 200 tomato vines in polytunnels, and each vine needs to be pruned and managed weekly to produce an abundance of fruit in varying colours, shapes
and sizes – including our popular big beef tomatoes, like Steak Sandwich and Orange Wellington, and the delicious Sungold and Apero cherry tomatoes that are always a hit with the chefs.
Much of the rest of our time is spent weeding and watering to ensure the produce is in its prime when it reaches the chefs. We constantly monitor all the plants, ensuring we spot the first signs of any pests or diseases that could spread. When problems strike, we use cultural, biological and organic control methods, such as placing netting over the crops or introducing predatory insects.
Our kitchen gardeners are also working on a pop-up garden for the RHS Hampton Court Palace Garden Festival from 4th to 9th July. It is the 10th anniversary of our first RHS show garden this year, and if you happen to be going, do come and say hi to the team. You’ll find us in the community allotment area.
☞ STARSTRUCK
We are excited to announce that in spring 2023, THE PIGs were awarded a three-star Food Made Good rating from the Sustainable Restaurant Association, which promotes positive change across the industry, and supports more than 10,000 restaurant kitchens globally with the tools they need to source and serve sustainable food.
Since we opened our first PIG in 2011, we have been obsessively focused on sourcing locally. We work closely with valued suppliers and strive to operate responsibly – growing our own fruit and veggies, rearing our own livestock, bottling water on-site, cutting down on food waste and packaging, seeking out sustainable suppliers and charity partners, getting into beekeeping and improving our composting skills. The rating reflects all of our teams’ hard work and commitment to creating restaurants that are a force for good in the world.
[Back page answers: A; Led Zeppelin ]
☞ BEST FOOT FORWARD
You’ll now see our PIG frontof-house teams proudly wearing Cariuma sneakers. These stylish trainers have comfy cork insoles, an ethically tapped rubber sole and a design we love. Plus, for every pair sold, the brand plants a pair of trees in the Brazilian rainforest. So that’s 800 more trees from us!
HOTEL INFORMATION, ROOM GUIDE, POTTING SHED TREATMENT MENU, THE BEST OUTINGS, LOCAL HEROES AND THINGS TO DO.
Hot buzz
ONE OUT OF EVERY THREE mouthfuls of our food depends on pollinators such as bees, according to the World Wide Fund for Nature. The trouble is, this isn’t just an observation about how helpful these busy little critters are. A quote attributed to Albert Einstein is perhaps more matter of fact in saying, “If the bee disappeared off the face of the Earth, man would only have four years left to live.”
We’re not quite there yet, but it’s fair to say that factors such as climate change, pesticides, parasites and habitat loss are making life increasingly difficult for our poor old bees, whose numbers are falling year on year. Estimates suggest it would cost UK farmers an incredible £1.8bn a year to manually pollinate their crops. And while manual pollination might sound like a far-fetched dystopian nightmare, it’s already happening in China.
The good news is there are folks out there doing everything they can to save our bees, a few of whom we can count as our own.
Jo Macina joined us 11 years ago. At the time, she was living on a narrow boat in Hackney, working in the arts, but she’s a country girl at heart. She came to THE PIG, in Brockenhurst, looking for a job in the kitchen garden, and while we couldn’t give her one that day, we were happy to hire her to join our restaurant waiting staff.
It wasn’t long before a gardening job came up, and Jo was in her element. One of the first things she did was install a couple of beehives. A nice addition, we thought, unaware that for the budding horticulturist it was the realisation of a lifelong dream.
“Bees fill me with a sense of wonder,” says Jo. “My grandfather kept bees when we were young and I have fond memories of summers spent scooping fresh honey onto sourdough crusts. His apiary was under lime trees – Tilia cordata – so the honey had the most beautiful fragrant flavour. I always wanted my own hives but never had the opportunity until then.”
A year later, as head gardener at newly opened THE PIG-on
the beach, Jo installed another 10 hives. Fast forward to now, and between them, THE PIGs have more than 100 hives. We’ve just finished building a dedicated honey-extraction room at our head office near Brockenhurst in the New Forest, and Jo has put together a team of expert beekeepers to help keep the little fellas happy. Her star signing was Sonia Salva from Argentina, an apiarist by trade who chooses not to wear gloves while tending to her hives, and has quite rightly earned the nickname Queen Bee.
“Last year we made over two tonnes of honey,” Jo says proudly. “Each hotel goes through about a tonne a year so we’re still just contributing to that, but we’re adding more hives all the time. Our honey is put on the breakfast tables and any left over will be used for puddings. We are also about to start bottling some to sell.”
Given their different geographies, each PIG has its own distinct honey. At THE PIG-on the beach, the bees feast on gorse flowers and heather, giving their honey a jelly-like consistency with notes of caramel and stone fruit. At THE PIG-at Combe, they love the red clover, dandelions, blackberries and horse chestnuts, while in the South Downs, surrounded by woodland and meadows, the honey is imbibed with a light and summery floral flavour.
“It always gets me when I open the hive,” muses Jo. “The outside world disappears, worries don’t matter – I’m transported. I’m in love with the buzz; the collective buzz of this one superorganism, the colony.”
Sounds idyllic – but it’s certainly not all roses. One winter, Jo decided to feed her bees without wearing a beekeeper’s suit and was stung more than 50 times. “That was a nasty hive,” she says, grimacing. “That’s what happens when the queen mates with the wrong drone: the whole hive goes mad and starts attacking people. Fortunately, that’s where Sonia comes in. She’ll remove the angry queen and ‘re-queen’ the hive. It’s her job to make sure our bees are nice and pleasant to be around.” Sounds like quite the responsibility – but she wouldn’t have it any other way.
a dinner or two, we hatched a plan”
HERE’S CAUSE FOR A TOAST. We’re taking THE PIGs’ collaboration with Sugrue South Downs – the Sussex-based winery founded by Dermot Sugrue and run together with his wife, fellow winemaker Ana Dogic – to the next level. The couple will now be joined by THE PIG’s founder, Robin, in a wider collaboration that will enable exciting new ventures – including cultivating our own wine.
Dermot is one of the UK’s most awarded winemakers, and has had successful tenures at Wiston Estate and Nyetimber. Having planted the first Sugrue South Downs vineyard in 2006, his English sparkling wine The Trouble With Dreams won a host of prizes, including The Decanter Trophy for Best UK Sparkling Wine in 2014, coming first out of 102 UK wines.
As for the name, it comes from an Eels song, as Dermot explains: “The line was, ‘Trouble with dreams is you never know, when to hold on and when to let go.’ Story of my life really!”
ROBIN I’ve got to know Dermot over the past few years, and am so excited by what he and Ana are doing. Their wines are at the vanguard of the industry right now. After a dinner or two, we hatched a plan together. I will now be personally involved as an investor-director, working with Dermot and Ana to help them fulfil their ambitions for the business.
DERMOT I started Sugrue as a labour of love really, so I could make my own wine, rather than just making wine for other people. I planted a small vineyard in Storrington, West Sussex, for a monastic order of Catholic priests.
RH We first met at the pre-opening of THE PIG-in the South Downs in 2021, although I already knew Dermot by reputation.
DS Robin became our neighbour when THE PIG opened in Madehurst, just down the road from us. When
he showed us around the kitchen gardens, Ana thought he was either the head sommelier or head gardener!
RH My favourite people in life are those with an infectious passion for what they do. Dermot and Ana are unbelievably talented in their field and have a passion for winemaking that is off the scale. We instantly hit it off. When we started talking about business, it became clear there was a natural fit: they needed investment, for sure, but perhaps equally they needed some help to shape the business for the next phase. While we want to stay at the boutique end of the wine scene and maintain our high-quality reputation, we want to grow the business steadily, too. We have secured long-term leases on two vineyards that Dermot has been working with for some years and have just acquired our first freehold vineyard in East Sussex, where we will create the winery and cellar-door facility.
DS Robin getting involved immediately allows us to become a grown-up business. For the first 15 years, it was just me. When Ana finished teaching winemaking in 2021, she became Sugrue’s first employee and absolutely transformed the business. Now, with Robin on board, we have real focus and direction. The fact
that he is almost as obsessed with wine as we are is a massive bonus.
RH Dermot and Ana will be making wine from the vineyard at The PIG-in the South Downs. With some luck from the weather gods, we will be making our first vintage of still wines from our own vineyard in 2023.
DS At that little vineyard beside the hotel, the terroir is ideal – perfect South Downs chalk soil. Alex, the head kitchen gardener, is first-rate, and along with Luke, the resident Head of Wine, has shown it a lot of love. We’re eager to get some fruit from it this year – however you've got to be patient with young vineyards, as they need time to establish themselves.
And finally … favourite wine for a Friday night?
DS I taste English wine all the time, however I love European red wines. I need the tannins!
RH Quite often it will be a glass of English fizz on a Friday night, not always a Sugrue – I love to taste the creations from other producers. Find out more at sugruesouthdowns.com. Watch this space for news of our wine, Alpaca Block ‘Field Blend’.
When our founder, Robin Hutson, met award-winning boutique winemaker Dermot Sugrue, they enjoyed a glass or two and started to plot THE PIG’s own wines
“After
“Robin is almost as obsessed with wine as we are”
DERMOT
ROBIN
INFO & GOINGS ON
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~ KENT CALLING: THINGS TO SEE AND DO
~ THE INSIDE STORY OF THE PIG’S FIRST WINES
THE PIG - AT Welcome to
IT’S FITTING THAT THE FIRST OWNER of Bridge Place should have been known for the good table, good wines and good company he kept. Bridge Place was built in about 1638 by Sir Arnold Braems, the first manager of Dover Harbour. It was a society attraction – the Dutch painter Willem Schellinks visited in 1661 and reported that Sir Arnold kept a princely table and had many visits from knights and high-born gentlemen and ladies. Second only to Chilham Castle in east Kent, it was painted by society artists Jan Siberechts and Adriaen Jansz.
By the early 18th century, the house was falling on hard times and was sold to neighbouring landowners who pulled down much of the property – the current building is just one wing of the original. Glory days returned in the 1960s, when it became a much-loved music venue. The arched wooden door to the sitting room was once the entrance to a nightclub where Led Zeppelin, The Kinks and The Yardbirds all played early gigs. The rural location meant there were few neighbours to disturb.
Today, we also use this idyllic Kentish location to nurture our Kitchen Garden, accessed via a bridge and practically on its own island. Here, you will find productive raised beds brimming with vegetables. Walk through the Alitex Mottisfont greenhouse to reach our Garden Oven – a perfect spot for a summer lunch or early evening tipple.
Today, the knights and rock stars have departed – or not, depending on who your fellow guests are. But with plenty of lovingly refurbished, original features to soak up, a stunning countryside setting and THE PIG’s emphasis on the best local Kentish produce, this remains a very special house where the good times always roll.
BRIDGE PLACE
Stages of life
Travel writer Gabriella Le Breton on growing up with THE PIGs – and good times at Smoked & Uncut festivals, now with two new miniature fans in tow
PERHAPS IT WAS HAVING SPENT ALL DAY in the sun – or the fact I’d been keeping hydrated with Hambledon rosé – but, as I belted out Pumping on Your Stereo with Supergrass, I had one of those epiphanies that can accompany such moments. Looking at my husband and two daughters, and the 2,000-odd midlifers bouncing around in the lush grounds of THE PIG-at Bridge Place, I realised that THE PIGs and I had effectively grown up together.
When the first PIG burst into life in the New Forest in 2011, I was footloose and fancy-free, popping my porcine cherry with girlfriends amid raucous gossiping and too much rosé (actually, the love of rosé has been a constant). The intervening years have seen PIGs host my first weekend away with the man who would become my husband, our older daughter, Mathilde’s first stay in a hotel and both our daughters’ first music festival. You find us now at our first Smoked & Uncut festival as a four, our litter expanding together with that of THE PIGs, all aging disgracefully together.
Life changes unalterably when you become a parent, with much of the fun you once took for granted relegated to the distant past. As devoted parents themselves, the founders of THE PIGs both recognise and refute this, encouraging families to embrace the fun of music, feasting and revelry together. Four-year-old Mathilde is a shining example of the success of this approach. As we arrived at Bridge Place promptly at midday (she’d been asking every half hour since 5.30am if it was time to leave yet), she remembered precisely where we needed to go to get our “money bracelets” and where the ice-cream stand was.
Equipped with her own money bracelet, Mathilde darted straight to the glitter stand to have her face adorned with pink sparkles before diving into the dedicated kids’ area to make a flower crown. Eleven-month-old festival virgin Amalia was equally at home, crawling about on an oversize blanket covered with toys in the dappled shade of towering specimen trees.
Set in rolling Kentish countryside on the banks of the Nailborne, by the sleepy village of Bridge, THE PIG-at Bridge Place boasts an intriguing backstory. The dollhouse-like Grade II* listed manor was owned by the eccentric entrepreneur Peter Malkin, who operated a notorious nightclub in the 17th-century mansion, hosting the likes of Ben E King and The Kinks in its 1960s heyday.
☞ 3 minutes
Browse our much-loved pickle wall in the restaurant.
☞ 30 minutes
Watch the sunset over the Kitchen Garden, preferably with a glass of fizz in hand – or how about a Greenhouse Margarita, made with homegrown 'Tinkerbell' chillies?
JOIN US AT OUR 2023 FESTIVALS
8 July
Smoked & Uncut at Lime Wood, New Forest, with headliners Kelis, Gabrielle, DJ Harriet Rose and guest DJ Melanie Blatt.
12 August
Smoked & Uncut at THE PIG-at Bridge Place, with headliners Razorlight, John Illsley of Dire Straits, DJ Harriet Rose and guest DJ Kimberly Wyatt. Both festival days are from midday to 11pm.
Find out more and buy your tickets at smokedanduncut.com
As PIG aficionados will know, founder Robin Hutson’s wife, Judy, is the genius behind the brand’s fabulous interiors. What you might not know is that she hails from Bridge and that the couple married in the village church, whose flint tower and shingled spire can be glimpsed from the hotel. This intimate knowledge of the area, plus their lifelong passion for music, has seen the Hutsons embrace Bridge Place’s rock’n’roll past, imbuing the hotel with a distinctly sultry air and making it the perfect fit for the S&U festivals.
Having grown from a one-man acoustic performance held in THE PIG at Brockenhurst more than a decade ago, the festivals have flourished into sell-out summer events held at Lime Wood and assorted PIGS with performances from stellar artists including Jools Holland, Lulu and Sister Sledge.
We fuelled up for our music fest with signature PIG dishes served at the vast timber Feasting Tables set beneath canvas on the lawns that stretch from Bridge Place manor house to the main stage. Guests can enjoy a three-course lunch whipped up by PIG apprentice chefs and washed down with Kentish wines, creating more of a lavish Tuscan famiglia vibe than your typical festival veggie burger.
The sunbaked afternoon passed in a music-infused blur of dancing, singing, eating, crafting, browsing for pretty floaty dresses and snoozing with Amalia. Then the husband popped home to deposit the children with granny, I secured us a bottle of sparkling wine and we toasted our first evening à deux in more than a year. Making our way to Harriet’s House Party tent, we danced unashamedly to Professor Green before gazing at the guests cosying up by the fire pit in the Glamping Village. Next year, we promised ourselves … We adore our girls, but there’s a bell tent for two in those Kentish pastures with our names on it.
☞ 3 hours
Choose a highlight to explore in one of the nearby towns, from Canterbury’s Cathedral to Folkestone’s Harbour Arm for artisanal food and drinks, or the famous Wheelers Oyster Bar in Whitstable.
GET EXPLORING...
From the loveliest bike rides to the best local pubs (and we’ve tried them all), ideas for outings and more, we love to share our local intel. See our curated list online and ask at Reception for our map of local walks.
ABOVE, FROM LEFT: SOAKING UP THE FESTIVAL ATMOSPHERE; GABRIELLA’S DAUGHTER MATHILDE; CHEF ANGELA HARTNETT
“Embrace the fun of music, feasting and revelry together”
Useful info for your stay
HAVEAQUESTION?
Just call Reception by dialling 0
DIALLING OUT
To call an outside line please dial 9, wait for the change in tone, then dial the area code and number required.
Potting Shed Treatment Menu
To activate, just select “THE PIG Public” on your wi-fi settings and away you go!
COMPLIMENTARY WI-FI
BREAKFAST,LUNCHANDDINNER
All served in the Restaurant.
To find out our Restaurant opening times, please call Reception by dialling 0.
ANTI-AGEING RESTORATIVE FACIAL - £115
TREATMENTS
To book a treatment in our Potting Sheds, please call Reception by dialling 0.
CHECK OUT
Check out is at 11am.
Wander through the walled Kitchen Garden
... past the raised beds, alongside the river and into our warm rustic retreats: the two Potting Shed treatment rooms, quiet and calm and designed to help you escape it all.
Take inspiration from the garden surroundings and experience deeply relaxing full body and facial treatments using products by VOYA, made only with natural and organic ingredients and accredited to the highest standards by the Soil Association. VOYA is an Irish familyrun business that shares our ethos of authenticity and wellbeing. The brand’s seaweed-based products and results-driven treatments use top-quality botanicals and aromatherapy oils, and are all created using sustainable processes.
Inspired by the breathtaking natural beauty and longstanding traditions of Ireland’s northwest coast, three generations of the Walton family have harnessed the healing properties of seaweed to create VOYA’s organic beauty products and treatments from the sea.
This treatment is suitable for all skin types. For those in search of anti-ageing results, the restorative facial uses VOYA’s finest organic ingredients combined with antioxidant algae complexes and a restorative blend of aromatherapy oils. It is this mix of seaweed and botanical ingredients that helps to stimulate collagen production and reduce the appearance of fine lines and wrinkles, resulting in instantly firmed and tightened skin with a natural and more radiant glow.
RESURFACING RADIANCE FACIAL - £115
This highly effective resurfacing facial targets congested, lacklustre and dull skin. Using a combination of seaweed extract and naturally derived glycolic and lactic acids blended with pineapple fruit enzymes, this facial will give your skin back its natural radiant glow.
UPPER BODY UNWIND - £115
A tailored and luxurious treatment that starts with a warm exfoliation of the back, followed by a soothing back, arm and hand massage. The treatment finishe* s with a facial oil specific to your skin. We use blended oils to feed your skin, leaving you completely relaxed and nourished.
MUM TO BE - £115
This massage treatment is tailored to suit the specific needs of a mum to be, and provides a peaceful and uplifting experience for mother and bump, which also helps to relieve fatigue and aches at the same time. Suitable for those in their second and third trimester of pregnancy.
HOT STONE MASSAGE - £115
A deeply indulgent body massage, using aromatherapy oils and volcanic stones, which help to simply melt away any tension you may be holding on to. The treatment helps to ease stress and improve blood circulation at the same time. It is said that one stone movement is equivalent to ten hand movements.
BESPOKE MASSAGE - £115
We tailor this massage to make it truly unique and personal to you. Using blended natural oils, the treatment can help relieve any aches and pains, and totally relax the body and mind.
SHED MEETS SPA
Old tobacco tins, gardening tools, balls of twine … Unlikely as it may seem, the decor of our Potting Shed treatment rooms was inspired by Beatrix Potter’s grumpy gardener, Mr McGregor. “I fill the shelves inside the sheds with the sort of things I’d imagine Mr McGregor would have,” says Judy Hutson, THE PIG’s interior designer. “Oil lamps, vintage bottles, old mugs, garden tools – and, of course, no shed would be complete without a few potted plants. And the massage table is dressed with a big picnic rug.”
HOGWASH \ SUMMER
In good spirits
Our new drinks partner, Sapling, is a sustainable brand that started life with two friends experimenting in their kitchen
A TREE-PLANTING PROJECT in Scotland led two childhood friends into starting Sapling – a truly sustainable drinks brand.
In their early twenties, Ivo Devereux and Ed Faulkner decided they wanted to start a business together. At the time, Ivo was working in music and Ed in food and drink, but neither felt particularly fulfilled. “We were both passionate about sustainability and the impact we have on our planet,” recalls Ivo. “But we were both aware that the rhetoric at the time was turning people off the conversation, rather than galvanising support for it.”
In search of inspiration, they volunteered for a tree-planting project on the west coast of Scotland. More than 130,000 trees needed planting, a Herculean effort for even the most ardent environmentalists, so the boys set about rallying the locals. Drawing on their expertise, they brought in a sound system, built a makeshift cocktail bar and threw a treeplanting party. “Quite simply, we changed the narrative from, ‘do this amazing thing for the planet,’ to ‘come and have an amazing time with us,’ and it worked a treat. More than 80 people turned up to help.”
It was a eureka moment. The following year, they set up The Island Festival, a three-day music event on Eilean Shona, in an effort to “make sustainability fun”. Every aspect of the festival was carefully conceived to have some kind positive impact – apart from the booze, it turned out. “We just couldn’t find anything that really existed for sustainability,” says Ivo. “It always felt like an afterthought, something to add value to a brand’s narrative.”
And so Sapling was born in Ed’s kitchen in Peckham in 2018, built on the promise to plant a tree for every bottle sold. More moonshine
than the desired potato vodka, the pair’s first homemade batch came out blue, but, unperturbed, they continued to experiment with different recipes, and started working their way round countless distillery tours, soaking up every word. Then they met Charles Maxwell, master distiller at Thames Distillers (and the first inductee to the Gin Magazine Hall of Fame), who quickly convinced the pair to move to a wheat base. “If you’re drinking a potato-based vodka with a meal, it can be a bit harsh or overpowering,” explains Ivo. “You want something smoother and creamier and more biscuity, which is exactly what we’ve achieved.” With Charles they struck gold. Sapling’s award-winning vodkas and Wildfarmed-wheat gins are so good that we’ve decided to use them across THE PIGs as our house pours. We’ve even started working with Ivo and Ed on a couple of new recipes (but that’s all we’re saying for now) and if they turn out anything like Sapling’s new raspberry and hibiscus vodka – made from “wonky” raspberries to further cut down on waste – we’ll be delighted.
“The key thing for us as a business was always to lead the conversation around sustainability in spirits, so what was deemed best practice back in 2018, for example, could be very outdated now,” says Ivo.
Indeed, while Sapling has already planted 110,000 trees and saved 74,224 bottles by offering refills, the boys have quickly come to realise they won’t be able to rest on their laurels. “One of the trickiest but most important parts about being B Corp certified is that we now have to show improvement every year,” grins Ivo. “We’ve got plenty of ideas in the tank, but that is definitely going to keep us on our toes.”
Find out more at saplingspirits.com
“Sapling was built on the promise to plant a tree for every bottle sold”SAPLING FOUNDERS AND KINDRED SPIRITS IVO DEVEREUX (ABOVE) AND ED FAULKNER (ABOVE RIGHT)
If you’ve enjoyed a Sapling cocktail while staying with us, why not make one for yourself at home. Cheers!
Rosemary Bee’s Knees
• 60ml Sapling Gin
• 20ml lime juice
• 15ml British honey
• 4 rosemary sprigs
• a crack of black pepper
Add all the ingredients (setting aside one rosemary sprig for the garnish) to a cocktail shaker, and muddle the rosemary. Shake and double-strain over ice.
Serve in a rocks glass or tumbler and garnish with a sprig of rosemary.
Garden Bay and Chilli Highball
• 35ml garden honey, bay and chilli syrup
• 50ml Sapling Gin
20ml freshly squeezed lemon juice
• FeverTree soda water to top up (approx. 90ml)
• 2 bay leaves to garnish
For the garden honey, bay and chilli syrup
• 12 large bay leaves
• 250g honey
• 8g chilli flakes (we have made our own from dehydrated, then blended, chillies from the garden last year)
Finely chop the bay leaves and add to a heat-resistant bowl along with the honey and chilli flakes. Add 500ml boiling water and stir until the honey has dissolved. Leave to infuse until the syrup is cold, then pass through a sieve to remove all solids. (For more clarity, we have strained the syrup again through a v60 coffee filter.)
To finish the cocktail, shake all ingredients (except soda) in a cocktail shaker and double-strain into a highball glass over ice. Top with soda water and garnish with 2 bay leaves.
Broad bean & English mozzarella salad
Podding broad beans is endlessly satisfying – the feel of your thumb running along the edge of the pod and then that perfect pop revealing the emerald green jewels inside their velvet overcoat. When they’re fresh and in season, you really don’t need to do much to prepare your beans, leaves and pods – they’re tender and delicious enough just as they are, uncooked. Add soft, fresh cheese – try an English mozzarella such as Buffalicious, which is made with milk from a water buffalo herd – and lots of minty dressing.
Serves 4 as a starter or side dish
• 150g broad beans, podded (shelled weight)
• a few broad bean leaves
400g fresh young broad beans in pods
2 x Buffalicious mozzarella balls, roughly torn salt and pepper
For the garden mint dressing
• 50ml white wine vinegar (infused with 6-8 leaves mint)
• 2 tablespoons Dijon mustard
100ml rapeseed oil
• 8-10 leaves mint, finely chopped a little honey or sugar to taste if needed
For the dressing, infuse your vinegar with mint at least 2 weeks in advance. Place the bruised mint into a jar with the vinegar, seal and leave for 2 weeks.
On the day it’s needed, remove the leaves and mix the minty vinegar and mustard to a smooth paste. Whisk the oil into this and finish with the mint. (Otherwise blend the vinegar and mustard in a small spice grinder, add the oil and mint and blitz.)
Depending on the vinegar you use and your personal preference, you might want to add a little sugar or honey to take the acidity down a notch.
Blanch the podded broad beans for 1½ minutes, drain into a sieve, run some cold water over them, then pop them out of their skins. Pick the leaves off the stalks. Finely slice the young beans in pods.
Combine in a bowl with the mozzarella, salt and pepper and the mint dressing. Toss together and put onto your plates. If you have any cornflowers to hand, add a few petals on top.
IT’S A PIG THING
TO BE THE FUTURE OF CARING AND CONSIDERED HOSPITALITY
AT HEART, THE PIGs are restaurants with rooms where everything starts with the Kitchen Garden. Our gardeners and chefs work hand in hand to create menus brimful of the freshest seasonal flavours. What we can’t grow ourselves, we source from our local heroes – the best farmers, fishermen and foragers we know, who are the foundation of our 25-mile menu. We are obsessive recyclers and restorers: from vintage fabrics and china to DIY onsite smokeries and upcycled chicken sheds, we love anything homemade and ultra-local. Each of our eight PIGs is totally different – we always go with the grain of the place, taking our lead from the spirit of the building to create somewhere that feels lived-in and well loved. The bedrooms are pretty comfy, too!
Rooted in some of the most stunning parts of the English countryside, the places that we are lucky enough to call home are pretty special –with endless things to do and see, tight-knit communities and loads of talent all around. It’s important to us to play a positive role, whether it’s providing employment, sourcing local ingredients, forging links with nearby schools and charities or simply being the go-to place for our neighbours to celebrate their special moments. It’s a privilege to work so collaboratively with all of these local heroes that we count as friends and to play our part in these strong, supportive local communities.
Our PIG people are what really make us tick. We think of the team of almost 1,000 talented colleagues working across our hotels – chefs, kitchen gardeners, waiting staff, bar teams, housekeepers – as a bit like an extended family. From the youngest apprentice to the most experienced manager, they are what make THE PIG a happy place to be and the reason our guests enjoy their time with us. We couldn’t be more proud of them – and you couldn’t be more welcome here!
A CLEAN START
We’re always on the lookout for clever new ways to reduce waste, and when we heard about Clean The World, we knew it was our sort of thing. We already worked with local artisan soap producers to create smaller bars, to minimise our environmental impact, but throwing away used soap between guest stays still bothered us. Our new partnership means our housekeeping teams now collect used bars at the end of your stay and send them to Clean the World. There they are sanitised, ground into soap ‘noodles’, lab-tested and formed into new bars. That soap is then distributed to vulnerable communities internationally, who really need it. Learn more at cleantheworld.org.
Paul is fundraising for our chosen charities
ACTION AGAINST HUNGER
A world without life-threatening hunger is possible. That’s the view of Action Against Hunger, a charity that works internationally to deliver life-saving care and to lead research on how to prevent and treat life-threatening hunger.
HOSPITALITY ACTION
Hospitality Action was established in 1837 and has since offered vital assistance to all who work, or have worked, within hospitality in the UK. From physical illness or mental health issues to financial difficulty or family problems, this charity offers help, advice and support whenever times get tough. .
Paul Trifanov
Our colleagues get up to some amazing things in their spare time, none more so than THE PIG-at Harlyn Bay kitchen porter Paul Trifanov. After developing a taste for running during lockdown, Paul decided to take on the extraordinary challenge of running the Montane Dragon’s Back Race, often dubbed the toughest mountain race in the world, a 380km, six-day ultra-race across the most rugged Welsh terrain. It's all in aid of two of THE PIG’s chosen charities – now that’s what we call going the extra mile. Here he explains how it all came about.
I STARTED WORKING at THE PIG-on the beach in 2015. I had just finished college and heard about the role from a friend of mine who was a waiter here, and I thought it sounded like a great opportunity. The locations are so great – so far I’ve worked shifts at Beach, Harlyn Bay, Combe, Brockenhurst and Bath. I also enjoy the atmosphere in the kitchen – it can be stressful, but we help each other out.
I HAD BEEN A RUNNER BEFORE COLLEGE, but not competitively. When I moved to the UK and started working I was looking for a way to quit smoking and be more healthy, so I started running again at THE PIG-on the Beach in 2016 but I wasn’t strong enough. Then, during lockdown, I started running again and have done so consistently since the last lockdown in January 2021.
I LOVE THAT the Cornish coastline has such varied scenery. (I’ve also come to love Cornish pasties and Cornish beer. But in moderation – at least until I’ve run the Dragon’s Back!)
IN 2021, I RAN IN THE HOSPITALITY ACTION CHALLENGE with colleagues. I enjoyed looking at the daily leader boards – it definitely inspired my competitive spirit! Then, last year, I set myself a target of running 700 miles in one month, which I’m pleased to say I achieved. Teams across THE PIGs aimed to raise £40,000; in the end, we raised £53,996.
I FIRST HEARD about Dragon’s Back from our head chef here, Adam. Robin Hutson’s trainer, Shaun, told him about it and Robin knew I enjoyed running, so got in touch with Adam. Initially, I thought it was a race along the coastline, but after I found out it was across mountains I thought, “This is what I’m looking for.” I’m very excited - I like challenges – and this one is extreme. I’ll be running with Shaun.
THE CHARITIES WE’LL BE FUNDRAISING FOR are Action Against Hunger and Hospitality Action. I’ve worked in hospitality for nearly eight years now and it’s a great way to support people working in my industry who might find themselves in difficult circumstances, while also doing something I love.
I HAVE MY EYE ON a race called Cape Wrath Ultra in the Scottish Highlands – maybe that could be my next challenge?
FAMOUS PIGS OF HISTORY
Spotter’s guide: swifts
Swifts are among the loveliest signs of summer, swooping through the skies from early May until they depart in August for warmer parts. They appear black in flight, but are actually sooty brown with a white throat, and are recognisable by their forked tails and curved, scythe-like wings. With declining populations, they are a less common sight than they used to be... so make sure to enjoy the view when you spot one.
BEFORE IT WAS A PIG...
Which legendary rock band was paid £100 to perform at Bridge Country Club (the building that's now home to THE PIG-at Bridge Place) on 13 December 1968?
Clue: on the night they played Communication Breakdown.
[Answer on page 3]
As a matter of fact
Mother Ivey’s Bay, Cornwall, is named for a witch who put a curse on a local man when he wouldn’t share ... what? a) His unsold fish b) The best spot on the beach C) His secret recipe
[Answer on page 3].
PIG HACKS NO. 1
How to make a coffee table out of an apple crate...
To help support birdlife, we have installed 149 nesting boxes across our PIGS.
THE PIG IN NUMBERS...
33,418
kg of fruit and vegetables harvested at THE PIGs in 2022
07/2011
Calling all upcyclers! We love a design hack at THE PIG, and this has to be one of our favourites.
1. Find yourself a nice old wooden apple crate.
2. Decide whether you want it sideways-on as a coffee table or end-up as a taller bedside table.
3. Get a glazier to cut you a piece of glass to sit on top. Voilà!
date the first PIG opened, in Brockenhurst
715 trees planted by THE PIGS since 2011