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Harrison Bros butchers

99 Park Street, Salisbury

Harrison Bros butchers are the best butchers in town. Hidden away from the main run of shops in the city centre, you will find Harrisons on the corner of College Street and Park Street (where the entrance is). As you jingle through the chain door curtain you are not greeted by a clinical high glass or perspex counter and unsure looks from teenagers doing their first job, but a proper butcher’s block, well hewn from the daily shave it gets to ensure its clean and level for the next day. You are face to face with either of the Harrison brothers and their polite countenance and attentive manner make shopping here a joy. Their meat is well-provenanced and the butchers are knowledgeable about the proper cuts needed for your recipes.

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Photos of Salisbury

Salisbury CathedralIf you have arrived here looking for photographs of Salisbury, you must check out the Salisbury Flickr Group. From pictures of the cathedral, rivers, grafitti, underpasses - the pretty bits and the grotty bits - there is an ever-growing collection online taken by residents and visitors alike.

See Salisbury as it really is…

And if you have any photos of your own, why not sign up for a free Flickr account and add yours to the group?

Bardi dancers at Stonehenge

Bardi dancers, StonehengeOn Wednesday 7th we attended our second Salisbury International Arts Festival event, the Bardi aboriginal dancers at Stonehenge. The Bardi are salt-water people from Western Australia’s Ardiyooloon community. Elders and future leaders performed a story about getting lost at sea, facing peril, coming home again and meeting the ancestors through dance, mesmeric chant song and gentle rhythm beaten on boomerangs. It was an amazing but surreal affair. The audience were roped off behind one of the paths that take you around the stone circle while the dances were on the other side, hiding then emerging from the giant sarsens and blue stones. In amongst the squeezing-fup sounds of opening and closing wicker picnic basics and the rustling of carrier bags was on the one hand the drone of traffic on the A303, and on the other the baa-baaing of sheep from the adjacent fields. Very English too was the polite applause in between each stage of the dance and story. Still, it all created an occasion which was truly unqiue.

More info on the performance can be found on the website of Australia’s “The Age“.

The Anchor and Hope

The Anchor and Hope, Winchester Street, SalisburyThe Anchor and Hope, 59 Winchester St, Salisbury, Wiltshire, SP1 1HL. Gmap (shows it on the wrong side of the road!).

The Anchor and Hope is a proper pub. In the words of a local, after asking us what we thought of the place: “It’s a proper working class pub, no pretention, but you won’t get no trouble here”. There are several areas within the pub, from comfy sofas, to tables, a pool area, and a decked beer garden.

Getting down to business, the Anchor and Hope sells real ale generally from Moles Brewery, as well as Black Rat scrumpy cider, pulled straight from the barrel. This week it’s had St Austell Tribute, and Sharp’s Doom Bar, two fantastic Cornish beers, in really good condition.

If you’re hungry, rather than trying to be a gastro pub, the Anchor and Hope focusses on one thing when it comes to food: pizza. 6 different pizzas are on offer, and are available all the time. There’s no restaurant area, just eat your pizza with your beer (or cider!) wherever you’ve settled down in the pub.

It’s a cosy, friendly pub. The bar staff smile and make you feel welcome. If you leave later into the evening, the landlord thanks you for stopping by. This is a gem of a pub, and there aren’t many like it.

If you’re in Salisbury, it’s well worth a visit. If you’re travelling to Salisbury from abroad and you want to see a real English pub, you won’t be disappointed.

Salisbury Farmers’ Market

Salisbury Farmers' MarketSalisbury’s Farmers’ Market takes place every 1st and 3rd Wednesday of the month, from 9am-2pm in the Market Square. This isn’t the most convenient of times to have a farmers’ market if the whole household are usually at work. However, I managed to catch it yesterday. A few farmers’ market stalls do make an appearance at the bi-weekly Charter Market with one stall each of trout (smoked and fresh, brown and rainbow), vegetables, home-made pies, English wine, bread, cheese, and meat (usually bacon and sausages). The Wednesday farmers’ market is a completely different affair. There are a wide variety of meat stalls proffering free range rare breed British Saddlebacks from the Pigman, handsome organically reared chickens (and their bones for stock for just 50p!), and even English bison, locally grown fresh-out-the-ground vegetables that smell amazing - yes, it’s amazing, vegetables have a wonderful scent if they’re grown properly and haven’t travelled hundreds of miles, garlic from specialist Isle of Wight growers the Garlic Farm, and cheese! Continue reading ‘Salisbury Farmers’ Market’

Reeve the Baker

Whilst looking around the blogosphere for blogs that talk about Salisbury, I came across an enthusiastic review on daggle.com of Reeve the Baker, a small bakery chain that operates in Wiltshire and Hampshire.

Danny Sullivan, the author of daggle.com, discusses the merits of their shops, best times to visit them, and the wonders of the Wiltshire Pasty:

If you’re struggling among the many great things Reeve’s sells, go for the Wiltshire Pasty. It’s a great blend of potatoes and meat and carrots all baked within a bread crust. Served warm, it also stays warm if you take it to go for a picnic elsewhere. Hands-down, it’s the best thing Reeve’s has, in my view.

He’s an ex-pat American living near Salisbury, and I’m sure he’ll be writing more about the area in between his commentary on technology related issues.

Walk to Odstock

The walk from Salisbury to Odstock via the beautiful footpaths through fields of oil seed rape and wheat is thoroughly recommended. It doesn’t take long to be on your own as you leave Harnham. At Harnham, stop off for picnic supplies at the excellent East Harnham Deli (the shop’s hoarding says A. Hand and Sons Grocers, 1 Harnham Road). We armed ourselves with a home-made scotch egg (one of the best I’ve had), a broccoli and cheese pasty, two slices of lemon drizzle cake and two bottles of proper Dandelion and Burdock. In a very civilised way they are open from 10 - 3.30 on Sundays, ideal for anyone wanting to take a Sunday lunchtime walk. The round trip is about 8 miles. The highlight is meeting the River Ebble (and its cows). Odstock is nice ok though our impression was slightly marred by our hopes of getting a nice cool pint dashed. When we arrived at the village pub, the Yew Tree (about 2.30pm) it was closing and we were turned away. Not very good for hot and thirsty walkers!

Polly Tearooms

Cream tea at Polly Tearooms, SalisburySt Thomas Square, opp. St Thomas’s and St Edmund’s church
Monday - Friday - 8.30 - 5.00, Saturday - 8.00 - 5.00

Last Saturday afternoon, after a hard day’s wandering, we finally managed to go into Polly Tearooms rather than walk past wistfully. I ordered a traditional cream tea, consisting of a pot of tea (enough for at least two cups), a sizeable fruit scone (choice of fruit or plain), strawberry jam (choice of strawberry, raspberry, apricot) and clotted cream (or whipped if preferred but why would you?), while my partner-in-tea went for a cream slice (slice is far too diminuative for what it was). As you enter, you can’t stop coveting the array of beautiful cakes and confectionery to choose from: gateaux, meringues, eclairs like you’ve never seen such things. Which one? Which one shall I have?? Continue reading ‘Polly Tearooms’

Abbey Stores

Abbey Stores shop sign30 Salt Lane

Open Monday to Saturday - 8am - 7pm

There is so much to say about Abbey Stores that I can hardly contain myself to write properly. This has been my fourth attempt to write a review and every time it makes me so desirous to just dash down there to see what new things they might have in, that I never finish what I want to say. Abbey Stores deserves more than one review anyway so for now I shall be content in just saying a fraction of the amazing things I wanted to.

Abbey Stores is everything a good shop should be. In fact, it’s not just a good shop, it’s a magnificent emporium of first-rate food and drink and other useful household things. How is it possible that we can go in and take so long choosing which cider we want to drink and whether to go for bottled or draught take-out (choices in both) with our free-range local sausages and craft cheeses? Is it possible that we will ever get through the range of condiments, sauces and chutneys called (as it should be) Tracklements (made locally in Sherston, Wilts), or ever do without them again? Continue reading ‘Abbey Stores’

Pubs in Salisbury

Wig and QuillAccording to a friend, there are nearly 60 public houses in Salisbury. So far, we’ve managed to sample about 18 of them. The pubs vary from plush modern bars, to large chain pubs serving lager and football, to real ale pubs with beams and tankards. There’s a pub for all tastes.

This page will be updated as we visit more.

In our minds, we have some basic requirements that a pub has to meet if we will go back to it for another drink. The may well not be the same as yours, but they go as follows: Continue reading ‘Pubs in Salisbury’




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