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It wasn’t the response I’d expected when I’d phoned to book a post-new year
bolt hole last month. “We’re very busy around new year,” said the
receptionst, “but I could put you in the hut.”
It was, she hastened to add, a very nice hut — and as I’d heard very nice
things about Wallett’s, and liked the idea of nice walks along the cliffs by
Dover, I went for it.
It was, as Chris Tarrant might say, the right answer. The “hut” looked from
the outside like a garden shed on stilts beside the car park. But inside it
was a cosy double room with a small gallery with a comfy mattress for a
third person.
The “hut” is one of Wallett’s Court’s 17 en suite rooms, the majority being in
the main house — parts of which date back to the 11th century when William
the Conqueror’s half brother Odo was in residence — while some are in a
converted barn. The feel is rural-but-smart, great for a weekend.
Some rooms have four-posters with styles that range from tastefully antique to
contemporary Noughties. Inside the main house there are timber beams and
exposed brick walls, while on the first floor landing original painted
frescoes on the plasterwork date to the early 1600s and beyond.
Blowing off the festive season cobwebs was easy. After a good two-hour walk
past Second World War gun emplacements along the cliffs to Dover, with
France visible across the Channel, I was ready for a soak in the spa’s hot
tub and then for dinner.
My honeyed fig and Vulscombe goat’s cheese starter was bland, but the main
course of roasted loin of cod with tempura vegetables and chilli and ginger
jam filled me so sufficiently that I skipped pud, even though the glazed
coconut brûlée definitely had my name on it.
The next morning I had one of the best breakfasts I can remember, followed by
an hour’s reflexology massage (£25) in the spa, which was relaxing but could
have been a bit more forceful, although maybe that’s just my masochistic
side. I left full of beans and ready to face 2005.
Bottom line: Will Hide paid £99 for a B&B double.
Sampling the fare: Three-course dinner £35. House wines £15.
Access all areas: Sorry, no.
Need to know: Wallett’s Court Country House (0800 0351628, www.wallettscourt.com).
Room: 8 out of 10.
Food: 8 out of 10.
Service: 7 out of 10.
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