MENU dorset #01 | Page 3

MENU W elcome to the first issue of Menu. The campaign to bring back dewbit starts here. What’s dewbit you ask? Well it’s old Dorset dialect for the first meal of the day, eaten before breakfast. Which is a great idea. But that’s just the start. It turns out Dorset dialect is as full of words for meals as the inuit’s is of words for snow. Once we’ve got dewbit reinstated, we demand nuncheon, cruncheon, nammet and crammet, more brilliant sounding meals which the average Dorset farm hand managed to eat in the fields between breakfast, lunch and supper. It suggests they were as obsessed with food then as we are now. Maybe it comes from living in a county that is blessed with such plenty, also the name of our seasonal produce section starting on page 7. It’s this love of local, seasonal food, the people who produce it and the chefs that cook it, that we want to share with you in this mag every month. We know, like us, you’re always thinking about your next meal, about what you want to cook tonight (p.25) and where you want to eat out (p.41) at the weekend. And when you find a dish that you love, tell us all about it (p.42) and let’s celebrate Dorset at its most delicious. It’s time to Robin Alway get stuck in. Enjoy your Menu! Group Editor Contributors Miriam Philips is an award winning journalist and editor. When she’s not writing for the Guardian or chasing after her two young children, she helps organise the Dorset Foods and Art Festival in Poundbury. She loves meeting producers and chefs and is passionate about local organic veg and meat which she cuts up on her own butcher’s block, a money saving tip from one of the River Cottage courses she’s attended. Russell Brown is the acclaimed chef and owner of Dorchester’s Sienna. His 20 year career has taken him from commis chef to holding the only Michelin Star in the county. His new venture is Creative About Cusine, a showcase for his teaching, writing and photography. We’re proud to have him writing for Menu every issue. We can’t think of anyone we’d rather have tell us how to cook the best of Dorset’s produce (p.33). Tom East started out cooking Findus crispy pancakes for the family (hey, it was the 80s), before upgrading to roasts and cakes. Giving up dreams of being a pro chef after being yelled at during work experience in a manic restaurant, he moved into writing. He still loves to cook at home, using seasonal, local ingredients and has added to his culinary knowledge with cooking courses in Thailand, India and Mexico. www.menu-dorset.co.uk Sophie Atherton What she doesn’t know about beer isn’t worth knowing. As if writing for the broadsheets and numerous TV and radio appearances didn’t keep her busy enough, she became the first woman in the UK to be accredited as a beer sommelier. In fact, the All Party Parliamentary Beer Group made her Beer Sommelier of the Year 2013. Check out her first round of beer and matching food for us on page 57. issue one Dorset 3