Reviews
So near, so spa
A short break at a luxury hotel is becoming increasingly popular. Jenny Needham and Peta King sample three of the best in the region
IT'S a bitterly cold, blustery day in
March, the sort that reminds you
that winter still has a sting in its
tail. In the Spa at Middlethorpe Hall
Hotel, just outside York, the temperature
is touching the tropical.
There's something satisfyingly sinful
about spending a lazy Sunday afternoon
in a health spa, and combining a pampering
day with a night at this beautiful
hotel is about as good as it can get.
The Spa at Middlethorpe is set, somewhat
surprisingly, in an Edwardian cottage
in the grounds. Walk up the brick
path to the front door, which opens onto
a cosy room with a blazing fire where
meals and drinks are served, and you
begin to wonder how they've fitted in the
treatment rooms, a swimming pool,
sauna, whirlpool spa bath, steam room...
The answer, of course, is that the cottage
has been sympathetically extended
at the back, leaving the facade untouched,
but it's still a snug fit.
The Spa also has three beauty salons
where therapists offer treatments including
facials, hot stones massage, reflexology,
waxing and bronzing, using
Clarins, Molton Brown, Caci Quantum,
Decleor, Jessica and E'spa products.
And if you're planning a special occasion,
the Spa beauty days are a perfect
way to prepare. Ranging from a full body
massage, a massage and facial followed
by a champagne afternoon tea, or a facial
and massage for the man in your life, the
full or half-day treatments make a great
present.
Middlethorpe Hall, one of only three
Historic House hotels in the UK, is a stunning
example of a William and Mary
house. Set in 26 acres of gardens, it is
within sight of the grandstand at York's
Knavesmire racecourse. And although
the racing fraternity are known to drop
in by helicopter onto the lawn, the hotel
is also conveniently accessible by road -
just off the A64 outside York.
The beautifully restored house is furnished
with antiques and original paintings,
giving it a feeling of an elegant
home, and the staff have perfected the art
of being almost invisible until they appear
at precisely the right moment.
Built in 1699 for Thomas Barlow, a
wealthy Sheffield master cutler, the
house had a chequered recent history,
being converted into flats, then a nightclub
and left in a dilapidated state. Acquired
by Historic House Hotels in 1980,
it opened as an hotel four years later, its
restoration a remarkable achievement.
THE bedrooms in the house are individually
decorated in period style.
Ours was sumptuously comfortable,
the generous tub in the pretty bathroom
just right for some deep clean therapy,
while the view across the sweeping
lawn to the ha-ha was reminiscent of a
bonnets-and-breeches television drama.
There are a further 17 bedrooms in the
courtyard, a garden suite and two more
suites in an adjacent cottage.
We enjoyed a pre-dinner drink and
canapés in the intimate, oak-panelled and
candle-lit dining room as we studied head
chef Nicholas Evans' menu.
I chose smoked salmon rillettes with
crab salad and seared tuna carpaccio, followed
by poached pigeon breast in
braised lentils, pancetta and hazelnuts
with mushroom ravioli and fondant potato;
Peter roast quail with caramelised
shallot tart and shallot purée, followed by
pan fried mullet with bolangère potatoes,
broccoli purée and fine beans.
Puddings were milk chocolate and praline
mousse with roast banana ice cream
for me, and hot passion fruit soufflé with
blood orange and mint salad and dark
chocolate cream for Peter.
With coffee and chocolates in front of
the fire in the beautiful drawing room and
a lazy browse through some glossy magazines,
it was simply the perfect end to a
wonderfully relaxing day. PK
■ Room rates at Middlethorpe start at
£260 for a luxury double, including
continental breakfast and the use of
the Spa. Three course dinner is £43.
Health and Beauty Spa Days start at
£60 for a half day and from £140 for a
full day, including lunch.
Middlethorpe Gift Cheques are
available for dinner, spa treatments,
lunch or afternoon tea.
Middlethorpe Hall, Bishopthorpe Road,
York. 01904-641241
www.middlethorpe.com
City chic
IF location is all-important to a
business, then the Grey Street
Hotel in Newcastle has hit the
jackpot. Once a derelict eyesore besmirching
the street voted the best in
Britain by listeners of Radio 4's Today
Programme, the boutique hotel is now
the perfect pad for launching partygoers,
culture vultures and shoppers into
the heart of this vibrant city.
It opened in December 2004 and has
50 rooms (while still retaining an intimate
feel) and conference facilities for
up to 100. Behind the modern facade,
the original grandeur of the Grade IIlisted
building (formerly a bank) has
been retained and we were shown up a
grey marble staircase to a modern
room on two floors, which proved a
bright and comfortable sanctuary from
the busy city streets. Towering Victorian
windows shed plenty of light on
the contemporary suite with huge bed,
black veneered desk, white leather
chairs and flat-screen TV.
To start off the evening we took a
short walk to the Quayside into the
Pitcher and Piano, which was abuzz by
6pm. Then it was back up the hill for a
cocktail in the uber-cool hotel cocktail
bar before dinner. Meals are served in
The Living Room restaurant next door,
which has dark walls, potted palms and
bold, gold-framed paintings. Service
here was superb - Britain's best waitress
on Britain's best street? - and the
food was too. My prawns tempura with
sweet chilli sauce and wasabi were
truly scrumptious.
We adjourned to the bar next door for
some people-watching before retiring.
Trouble is, being so central makes you
feel you're missing out, and after a
short discussion about being old, and
boring, and early nights, we poured
ourselves back onto the street for another
dose of the Toon at night.
Breakfast (£12.95 for a full English)
was served in The Dining Room next
morning before we headed two minutes
up the street to the shops, then back
down to the Baltic art gallery just five
minutes' walk away. Then it was on to
South Shields to buy a cut-price coat
from the Barbour factory shop before
testing it on the wild and storm-lashed
harbour walls. Which, as a way of getting
rid of a Newcastle hangover, I'd
thoroughly recommend.
BARKING: The Grey Street Hotel
offers a dog welcome pack of a doggy
bed, doggy do not disturb' sign, bowl
and biscuit. No charge. Just let the
hotel know in advance.
PARKING: Guests can park in Dean
Street car park 100 yards away from
4.30pm to 9.30am the next day for £5.
Pull up outside the hotel, collect your
voucher and drop off your luggage,
then park. Contact 0191-230-6777.JN
* Standard double room £145 .
Prices include VAT but exclude
breakfast. 0191-230-6777;
www.greystreethotel.com
The hotel is offering a two-for-one
three-course meal at lunchtime on
production of this article.
Trot along to this classic winner
HOTEL du Vin has added to its
stable of classy hotels with the
opening of their York venture.
Once again, they've taken a heritage
building and given it a twist, modernising
without taking out any of the
history or character.
And once again, it's a great success.
In Oxford, they restored a 17th Century
sugar warehouse; in Harrogate, a
row of eight Georgian-style houses. In
York, they've taken a Grade II listed
Georgian property which has had
many incarnations, even - briefly - as
an orphanage in the First World War.
Now the 44-bedroom Hotel du Vin -
HdV to its friends - exudes understated
luxury. At reception there's a
tongue-in-cheek nod to the city's history
with stone-effect wallpaper, but
this place is more Villeroy than Viking.
Black is big as the interior revels in
the dark side, but it's moody rather
than gloomy, with cosy snugs and tartan
carpets. Upstairs, the theme continues,
offset by exuberantly patterned
wallpaper on a feature wall.
Our bedroom is the perfect retreat,
a deep purple cocoon with huge sleigh
bed, crisp sheets, comfortable pillows,
flat-screen wall TV, chaise longue and
deep roll-top bath. For those who prefer
to scrub up in private, there's a cavernous
wet room with monster monsoon
shower-head.
Extra luxuries, which cost little but
mean a lot, are fresh milk for the tea
and coffee and an invitation to help
yourself to any Arran Aromatics shower
and bath goodies you've opened.
Before supper we negotiated the
hotel's slightly confusing geography -
crossing the grassy courtyard where al
fresco meals will be served in the summer
- to sample the bar and a perfectly
icy vodka and tonic supplied by staff
who were friendly and attentive.
The bistro offers a menu rooted in
classic European cuisine with a contemporary
edge. In the few months the
hotel has been open, it has obviously
become a magnet for York residents
and was buzzing the night we stayed.
The standard of food explained why.
The decor is fairly traditional, dark
wood and leather, but with quirky
touches such as the life-size mural of a
jockey, stable girl and horse. For a hotel
which is just a short canter from York
racecourse, it seemed appropriate.
Trot along the Mount - an elegant
street lined with some of the city's
most beautiful townhouses - in the
other direction and you're through
14th Century Micklegate and just a few
minutes' walk from York city centre.
They really do try to make everyone
comfortable at Hotel du Vin even society's
new pariah, the smoker. While
others puff away in car parks and
hastily erected shelters, the HdV offers
smokers somewhere a lot more sophisticated
for their post-prandial puff.
The Cigar Shack, situated at the back
of the hotel, resembles an open-sided
rondavel, but smokers can sit back in
the comfort of leather armchairs and
enjoy underfloor heating and a wallmounted
plasma fire. And as we left
after our night at the hotel we peeked
in to see the ashtrays overflowing with
big fat cigar stubs.
And after a surfeit of good food and
wine the previous evening, I have to
say it's rather nice to enjoy a guilt-free
blow-out sometimes. JN
* Hotel du Vin & Bistro, 89 The
Mount, York YO24 1AX. Tel: 01904-
557350. From £99 for mid-week stay,
£120 for weekend getaway.
www.hotelduvin.com
9:17am Saturday 3rd May 2008
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