Featured

Welcome to Markenfield Hall’s Blog

This Blog will bring together all the findings of the Hall’s Archive & Research Group, newsletters past and present, and various random musings into one place – a place where we look forward to sharing all the goings on at Markenfield with you.

If you have any suggestions of topics you would like to see covered, do get in touch.

Coronation Chaos

When 6th Lord Grantley wrote his autobiography The Silver Spoon back in 1954, nothing was out of bounds – the book is both hilarous and outrageous – and touches on Mary Queen of Scots (less than flattering), his family (eye opening) and his University antics (incendiary – literally). But it is his recollections from the Coronation of the late King George VI that the standout episode in the book. Here is a small taster…

Before I settled down to Oxford the coronation of King George VI took place, and I was bidden to this function. I was luck enough to be drawn by ballot to be an usher for the seats which accommodated the eldest sons of peers, my responsibility being the rows for those whose names began with initials fron N to Z.

I went with my parents to the Abbey in the family state coach… One had to be at the Abbey at 8:00am, as the traffic congestion was appalling, and having taken leave of my parents resplendent in their robes – my step mother being literally smothered with jewellery – I commenced my duties of ushering my group of eldest sons of peers.

It seemed to me that the peerage must have been notable for longevity, for most of the eldest sons seemed to me to be far advanced into the sere and yellow. One old gentleman was so aged it did not seem possible that he could have a father alive, but I subsequently learned that the father was a nobleman of 98 summers, and the eldest son in question was 76.

Watching the arrival of the distinguished guests was fascinating. The uniforms, the jewels, the orders, and the brilliant colours everywhere dazzled the eye, even in the subfuse light of the Abbey. Mt duties as an usher… enabled me to get a near view of the arrival of various famous personalities.

Particularly do I remember the arrival of Lord Roberts. He was a diminutive man and I think must have hired his earl’s robes, as at both the front and back they trailed along the ground at such length that I feared, as I saw the poor little man staggering along, that he would fall flat on his face. He was in the stiff and glorious uniform of a field marshal and, carrying a marshal’s baton and his coronet and holding up his sword, he found it practically impossible to walk up the nave at all.

As he steered towards his appointed seat, someone trod on the back of his robe, with the result being that the tasselled ropes that hold these mediaeval garments were strained apart, and tore off several diamond-studded orders of knighthood with which the front of his body seemed to be entirely plastered.

I was quite near him at this moment, and saw him ineffectively stoop to try and pick up these various jewelled honours. In doing so he proceeded to let go practically everything that he had, including a squalid little packet of sandwiches, which light refreshment everybody had brought, in view of the fact that the ceremony lasted from eight o’clock in the morning till four o’clock in the afternoon.

In view of my proximity to this distinguished but distressed figure, I was able to pick up some of his various goods, and chattels, including the sandwiches, and hand them back to him. The last I saw of him was bravely making his way towards his seat, clutching in his arms the various posessions that I had recovered from him, in a less formal manner than the ocassion and his rank called for.

I bequeath thee a… what?!

A Unicorn and a Marine Unicorn – obviously

Following swift on the heels of the news that Robert Markenfield may have prepared the way for one of ‘the Princes in the Tower’ to move to Devon, where he may have lived out his life in relative obscurity, came another fabulous find.

This research, carried out on the cusp of the new year by Eleanor, really did bring a smile to our faces. Her email to us read as follows:

“Just as midnight New Year struck, I made a little, chance discovery relating to Thomas Markenfield III. I happened to be having a look at a will I’d seen at York, a will for William Yeresley of Bishopton, 1482. I’d downloaded the will some time ago because I noticed a court case on Waalt (the Wiki of the Anglo America Legal Tradition) dating from 1484. It was a dispute over debt between John Norton, Knight, Yorkshire, and the executors of William Yeresley. Among those executors were John Markynfeld and his wife, Alice, formerly the wife of William Yeresley. So John Markenfield had married William’s widow, Alice.

“Going back to William Yeresley’s will, he left Thomas a piece of coloured unicorn horn, blue-grey in colour. That, with my awful Latin, is how I read the line. I don’t think William could have left a pair of unicorn horns because that would be a stunning bequest, way more than I’d expect, and in any case, unicorn horns don’t come in pairs…

A Unicorn featured in a Bestiary in the British Library

“I have had a look online and pieces of unicorn horn do turn up in bequests but they don’t seem common and no-one appears to have picked up on this one before.” Eleanor continued her research, and her original Latin translation of unum par precularium was largely correct and the bequest was “a pair of beads”.  This was a bit more tricky, but it transpired that ‘a pair of beads’ can refer to a set of rosary beads.

“Overall, the bequest of the unicorn horn ‘pair of beads’ / rosary that William left to Sir Thomas Markenfield stands out as a very personal gift. In contrast, William left his wife, Alice, a Flanders chest, some coffers, four cows and an allowance.

“I think there can be no doubt that Sir Thomas would have know he was receiving something very special and rare with this rosary. He may well have seen objects made from unicorn horn and he would have been well aware of its symbolism. And no matter what the unicorn rosary was really made from, to William Yeresley and Sir Thomas, it would have been seen as being genuine unicorn horn.”

One of the The Lady and the Unicorn tapestries – Musée de Cluny Paris

Richard III, John Evans and Robert Markenfield

Who? You may ask. We certainly did.

Richard III is a famous, some may say infamous, name in this country; but John Evans and Robert Markenfield are somewhat more enigmatic. Robert wasn’t even mentioned in history books, and nothing was known of him save that he died without progeny. But that all changed on 28 December when we opened The Telegraph…

An article written by Bill Gardner brought these three historical figures together in the nation’s consciousness for the first time – but certainly not the last.

Below is a transcript of Bill Gardner’s article:

Exclusive: Richard III may not have killed young princes in the Tower of London, researchers say. Clues in a Devon church suggest that Edward of York, last seen in 1483, was sent to live in secret in the rural village of Coldridge

By Bill Gardner

28 December 2021 • 10:00pm

More than five centuries have passed since two young royals infamously disappeared from the Tower of London, apparently murdered by their evil uncle.

Yet Richard III may have been innocent of killing the princes in the Tower, according to a team led by the woman who found the King’s remains lying under a car park.

Researchers claim to have found evidence that the older boy Edward may not have been murdered, but instead secretly allowed to live on his half-brother’s land under a false name.

They have followed a trail of medieval documents to a rural Devon village, where royal Yorkist symbols have been found carved in the local church. Inside, an effigy of a mysterious man named ‘John Evans’ gazes directly at a stained glass window revealed to depict Edward V, the missing prince himself. The research suggests that Edward V and John Evans were one and the same, and that he may have even left clues inside the church for future generations to find.

Is this the face of a missing Prince? ‘John Evans’ effigy bears a mysterious scar on the chin, appearing to match a similar face holding a royal crown in the Edward V window. The four-year “cold case investigation” called The Missing Princes Project has more than 100 lines of inquiry including the possible fate of the younger brother, Richard of Shrewsbury. The team is led by Philippa Langley, who commissioned the dig that found the bones of Richard III under a Leicester car park in 2012.

“The idea of a missing prince lying low in Devon might appear fanciful at first,” lead researcher John Dike told the Telegraph. “With all the secret symbols and clues, it sounds somewhat like the Da Vinci Code. But the discoveries inside this church in the middle of nowhere are extraordinary.

“The evidence suggests that Edward was sent to live out his days on his half-brother’s land as long as he kept quiet, as part of a deal reached between his mother and Richard III, and later with Henry Tudor.

“Once you take all the clues together, it does appear that the story of the princes in the Tower may need to be rewritten.”

King Edward V and his younger brother Richard of Shrewsbury were aged 12 and nine when they were lodged in the Tower, in preparation for Edward’s coronation after the death of his father Edward IV.

But before the young king could be crowned the brothers were declared illegitimate. According to the narrative handed down by Tudor authorities, and popularised by William Shakespeare, their evil uncle Richard then had his young nephews quietly murdered before taking the throne for himself.


The broken shield bears the name ‘JOHN EVAS’. Researchers believe this may be a clue: EV meaning ‘Edward V’, and ASA, which translates to ‘in sanctuary’ in Latin.
The boys were last seen playing near the Tower in the summer of 1483, and scholars have argued about their fate ever since. No conclusive evidence has ever been found of their murder apart from a contested pile of bones discovered under a Tower staircase in 1674. These lie inside an urn in Westminster Abbey, but the Queen herself has reportedly refused three times to allow scientists to analyse the remains.

What is known is that on March 1 1484, the princes’ mother, Elizabeth Woodville, emerged from sanctuary at Westminster with her daughters after reaching a deal with Richard III, who was made king following the death of her husband.

She then wrote to her eldest son Thomas Grey, Marquis of Dorset, a rebel who was in France with the pretender Henry Tudor, telling him to come home as Richard had agreed to pardon him as part of the agreement. Curiously no mention was made of the Marquis’ two young half-brothers or their whereabouts.

Two days later on March 3, royal documents reveal that Richard sent a trusted follower named Robert Markenfield on an unknown mission from Yorkshire to the remote Devon village of Coldridge, which lay within Thomas Grey’s seized lands.

At some point afterwards, a mysterious person called John Evans arrived in the same village and was granted the titles Lord of the Manor and ‘Parker’ of the deer park behind the church, where ran 140 “beasts of the chase”. The grant does not appear in any official chancery documents, and no record has been found of Evans’ life before his arrival in Devon.

“This man John Evans was given these prestigious titles despite apparently arriving out of the blue, which is odd to say the least. It is possible that Edward was sent here to live in secrecy as part of the deal that we know was agreed between Richard and his mother,” said John Dike.

If Edward was indeed John Evans, then he kept quiet for years until around 1511, when he built his own chantry at the local St Matthew’s church, which looks much the same today as it did 510 years ago. Laden with symbolism and hidden meaning, it is here that the researchers claim Evans left multiple clues to his true identity.

The chantry was usually intended for prayers to speed the donor’s soul through purgatory and onwards to heaven. But the Evans chantry is instead overlooked by a politically-charged stained glass window depicting a saint-like Edward V, the deposed boy king thought to have been murdered 26 years earlier.

Only two other glass portraits of Edward are thought to exist, including one in the royal window of Canterbury Cathedral.

“Why is a royal portrait of Edward V in this rural church in the middle of nowhere? It simply doesn’t belong here. Evans appears to be sending a message,” Mr Dike said.

Above Edward’s head floats a large crown, with the Yorkist Falcon and Fetterlock motif carried by Edward’s grandfather, the Duke of York, at its centre. This large crown may have originally been over a royal coat of arms in the larger chancel window, researchers believe.

A closer look reveals that the ermine lining is dotted with pictures of 41 tiny deer. According to an inscription on the prayer desks, Evans built the chantry in 1511 when the real Edward V would have been 41 years old.

“The 41 deer in the crown points to a link between John Evans the deer parker, and the King in the window,” Mr Dike said.

In the corner of the window a small second face appears, more tightly drawn, as if from life. The unknown man is holding a royal crown rather than wearing it, with a scar apparently drawn on his chin.

A face in the corner of the Edward V window, thought to depict ‘John Evans’ with a matching chin scar and deformed mouth. But the figure is wearing an ermine jacket, only worn by royals, and is carrying a crown but not wearing it. Thought to be a symbol of Edward V, the boy king who was believed not to have been crowned CREDIT: Dale Cherry

John Evans’ effigy, wearing chainmail and gazing with a tilted head directly at the window above, appears to bear the same scar.

“Is this a second portrait on the same window of Edward V, but living in hiding as John Evans? Carrying the crown may symbolise that Edward was king, but only briefly. Was he the king crowned in Dublin two years after Richard’s death? We know that his real name was said to be John,” Mr Dike said.

Medieval graffiti on John Evans’ tomb appears to show the word King in inverted writing.

More possible clues can be found on the tomb itself. The name ‘John Evans’ is incorrectly spelt EVAS, with the last letter possibly broken off by vandals. Researchers believe that the name may hold a hidden significance, with EV standing for ‘Edward V’ and AS perhaps referring to “asa”, the Latin for “in sanctuary”.

Below the inscription, a medieval scrawl appears to show the inverted word KING. Nine carved lines beneath may symbolise 1509, the year that Henry VII died and Edward V could have reclaimed the throne if matters had been resolved.

Symbols linking the church to the House of York have been found surrounding the tomb and throughout the building. Rose of York motifs have been discovered in the floor tiles, while Yorkist emblems known as the Sunne in Splendour have been repeatedly carved into the wooden roof, the symbol of Edward’s father, Edward IV. Other hidden symbols include an upside-down picture of a Tudor woman with a snake-like tongue, perhaps a slur on Henry Tudor’s powerful mother Margaret Beaufort.

“To have all these symbolic details in such a remote and inaccessible church, which in 1500 would have only been accessed by cart track, and is right in the centre of rural Devon, suggests the presence of a person of importance,” Mr Dike said.

“An ideal location for Thomas Grey, with the probable agreement of Richard III or later Henry VII, to place his half brother out of the political arena.”

Last year a descendant of the princes was identified through their female line. However, proving the Evans theory through DNA analysis may prove difficult because the tomb is empty.

“It’s possible that the bones lie under the church floor but we need more evidence, and we would welcome anything that can shed further light on this mystery,” Mr Dike said.

“But our findings already seem to point in one direction – that Richard III was innocent.”

Ms Langley said: “A number of the specialist police investigators working within The Missing Princes Project have told us to always investigate when a coincidence occurs – and here, intriguingly, there are quite a number of them.

“We look forward to John and the team discovering more as their research continues.”


As do we…

Dr Richard Shephard

Dr Richard Shephard OBE DL

Dr Richard Shephard was a composer, whose fine and accessible church music was widely broadcast by the BBC and hose musical theatre for children – including The Wind in the Willows and The Selfish Dragon – was a delight.

For Markenfield Hall he wrote the choral setting of Alcuin’s poem to St Michael for its Chapel dedicated to the Archangel, and devised the text and music for Markenfield’s Carol Service in aid of a different charity each year.

Christmas at Markenfield in the Great Hall

Formerly a distinguished Headmaster of York Minster’s Choir School – Alcuin was his predecessor there in C8th – on retirement he raised the vast sum of money needed for the restoration of the Minster’s Great East Window.

image: York Glaziers’ Trust

This achieved, he became Chairman of the Ryedale Festival, working with people and with music; all of which gave him the greatest pleasure.

He had the gift of friendship, and will be much missed, much remembered.

DC.

The Grantleys of… Brimham Rocks?

A Blog post by our Volunteer Archivist Janet Senior

Cataloguing documents at Markenfield Hall brings me into contact with many fascinating items. A few weeks ago I discovered papers relating to the sale by the 5th Lord Grantley of the Brimham Rocks Estate. This was an astonishing find for me as I had no idea that this historic area had once been owned by the Grantley family.


A little while ago a battered tin trunk arrived at Markenfield Hall from Hutchinson & Buchanan, a firm of solicitors in Ripon. It was packed to the brim with papers relating to the Markenfield Hall Estate and the Grantley family stretching back to the late 19th century. Since then I have been slowly working my way through them. What a fascinating collection they are and they have added greatly to our knowledge of that period.

Though not many in number, the papers relating to Brimham Rocks are a case in point. Up until 1530 the Brimham Rocks area was in the possession of Fountains Abbey and the land was used for grazing. After the Reformation the lands reverted to the Crown and were eventually sold to Sir Richard Gresham, who also bought Fountains Abbey. In 1780 the Brimham Estate was purchased by Fletcher Norton specifically for the hunting rights. He built Rocks House in 1792 to be used as a hunting lodge. Later a tea room was added. From then until 1900 Rocks House was the home of the person who acted as “caretaker” for the rocks.

Postcard depicting Rocks House

One of these so called caretakers was William Brown. William was born in Ripley in 1852 – the Ripley registers record some members of the Markenfield family marrying Brown family members! He was a farmer at Maud Farm but lived at Rocks House. His farm, according to a summary of farms dated 1898 and found amongst the H & B papers, was one of the largest on the Estate. The entry for William says:

“Included in Wm Browns Rent viz £90 is the priviledge of shewing the Rocks at a charge of 6d per head to Visitors”

Postcard depicting charabancs at the rocks

When Lord Furness bought Gantley Hall and the Grantley Estate in 1900 he believed he was also purchasing the Brimham Estate. On realising this was not the case Lord Furness was not happy. The papers dealing with his purchase of the Brimham Estate are among those I have been cataloguing. The first asking price was £17,000. So in early 1910 Lord Furness sent his son to inspect the estate and form an opinion on what it was really worth.

Lord Furness

After hearing his son’s report Lord Furness offered £14,000. Along with his offer he lets slip the information that he thought Brimham was included in the 1900 sale and was not happy he had been misled. After a few weeks negotiation the price was settled at £15,000 – which would be approximately £2,054,079 today. Within weeks of his purchase Lord Furness was transporting rocks from the area to Grantley Hall for his Japanese Garden.

The Japanese Garden at Grantley Hall

A summary of the farms owned by 5th Lord Grantley, that comprised the Brimham Estate in 1898 can be found below.

From the Grantley Archives at Markenfield Hall

Janet Senior. July 2021

Once more unto the cutting room floor…

You may, or may not, have watched the recent Channel 5 drama about Anne Boleyn. Whatever your opinion on the casting – and trust me when I say we have heard it all, and indeed removed a small number of people from the Hall’s social media pages – you cannot deny that, for a production made at the height of the Pandemic, it was excellently acted and produced.

Our own small role (rendered somewhat smaller than expected, thanks to some surprising editing decisions… and indeed some re-writing of history) came on the Wednesday before Christmas. The day before a number of lorries arrived at the Hall and wonder and wonder was unloaded. By the end of the day, Markenfield’s small car park had been turned into a Tudor street market.

The day of filming dawned bright – and early. It was a 6:00am start for us, but the 50 cast and numerous crew members had an even earlier start when they were COVID tested at Ripon Race Course prior to filming. Their telephones were already pinging with the negative results as they arrived.

The organisation that they demonstrated was superb! They successfully parked 50 cars, numerous trucks and a Winnebago with minimal fuss. The cast and crew were fed and watered. The stars of the show huddled around the Undercroft fire all masked-up. It was simply the best day in… oh, maybe 700 years!

Here are a handful of our favourite photos…

The scene at the beginning of episode two, where Anne Boleyn is washing peasants’ feet in a Chapel was shot inside one of the farm buildings; as was the scene where someone was forcibly removed after spitting at her. This scene was shot a dozen times, and always resulted in profuse apologies and “are you alright? are you sure?” after each take.

It was incredible to see the cast dressed in authentic Tudor clothing (okay – ignore the glasses!) as would have been seen at the Hall all those years ago. If there are any Markenfields still roaming the place they must have been rather surprised to see flesh and blood contemporaries.

So, what of the controversy? Well… at the end of the day, whose stories do the history books tell? Those of the victors. And let’s face it, they could write precisely what they wanted. And Channel 5 subverted that – they looked at Anne Boleyn’s story from her point of view – not with Henry VIII’s slant on it, not with his Spin Doctor’s slant on it. They cast a strong actress as a strong female historical figure… and they gave Markenfield its 15 seconds of fame. and for that we thank them.

And the bit that was edited out?

That was towards the end of episode three. Anne Boleyn was supposed to be waiting in The Tower for the verdict. A small boy was supposed to run along the side of the moat, under the Gatehouse archway, across the Courtyard and up to the front door to deliver the message. Imagine our surprise (and distraught sadness) when we watched the final episode and saw the guilty verdict delivered in the court room. Ahem – really?

Let’s Get Real! No, really.

Earlier this year, Markenfield signed up to be a part of Culture 24’s Let’s Get Real 2021: how to evaluate online success.

This collaborative project will bring together 60 cultural organisations to not only help them to measure their “digital success”, but to establish what digital success means to them.

Since January 2020, the cultural sector has been thrown in at the digital deep end. Described as a Digital Renaissance, organisations reacted, jumped or were forced to shift to digital working at a speed of change that would have been unthinkable before – and Markenfield is a case in point. Never before have we created videos, let alone thought of having our own YouTube channel.

But who is watching? Is anybody watching?! And is there any benefit to the Hall? We’re about to find out. Markenfield will be the smallest organisation involved, alongside notable venues including the V&A, The National Portrait Gallery and the Francis Crick Institute.

There’s a lot of work involved, but they sent life-sustaining goodies….

The first stage is in the project is to devise an experiment. This is basically what you want to measure, how you want to measure it and what you think “digital success” might look like as a result. Our experiment will examine:

whether we can increase engagement with our existing social media audience, and attract new audiences, through the foregrounding of narratives presented by a multitude of voices?

or in more simple terms…

do our audiences like videos more than photographs?

and if the do…

do they react more to videos that contain different people?

Simples, right? Well, sort of. Now we have to coerce people into being videoed, telling the stories of Markenfield Hall. You have been warned!

Recipe of the month with The Dusty Miller: vegetable tagine

“The month of March announces the first glimpse of true Spring.  The frail watery sunlight offers optimism in the air and speaks of things to come.  So our diet beckons lightness and a change.

“Let’s go where the sun always shines – Morocco.”

SERVE 6-8

INGREDIENTS

400g/14oz shallots, peeled and rough chopped
2 tbsp olive oil
1 large butternut squash peeled and evenly chopped
Half a tsp ground ginger
Half a tsp ground cinnamon
450ml/15fluid oz vegetable stock
12 small pitted prunes (dried rather than tinned)
2tbsp clear honey
2 red peppers, deseeded and cut in same size chunks
3 tbsp chopped coriander leaf
2 tbsp chopped mint plus extra for sprinkling
1tbsp harissa paste
400g/14oz tin of chick peas, rinsed and drained
Handful toasted flaked almonds

METHOD

In a heavy based pan, sweat the onions in olive oil until soft and brown. Add the squash, stir for about one minute then add the peppers and stir again. Cover with the vegetable stock, add the spices, the honey and the prunes and simmer for 8 minutes. Transfer to a tagine if you have one and place in pre-heated oven 180c/350f, gas mark 5 for an hour. A Le Creuset-type pan with a lid is suitable if you do not have a tagine.

Add the chick peas and harissa 5 minutes before serving, to warm through. Throw in the toasted almonds and mint just before serving and then garnish with the additional mint.

Whilst the tagine can be served as a vegetarian dish, it pairs perfectly with lamb. Below is Brian’s recommended method for the perfect Moroccan Roast Leg of Lamb…

INGREDIENTS

1 leg of lamb, 1350g/3lbs
3tbs of butter
Two garlic cloves, crushed
½ tsp ground cumin
¼ tsp paprika
Pinch of cayenne pepper and salt

METHOD

Trim the lamb of excess fat and make several diagonal cuts in the meat.

Combine the butter, garlic, cumin, paprika, cayenne pepper and salt and it spread over the surface of the lamb, pressing the mixture into the cuts. Set aside for at least 2 hours or overnight.

Preheat the oven to 220c/425f/ gas mark 7, place the meat in a roasting tin and cook for 15 minutes. Reduce the oven temperature to 180c/350f/gas mark 4 and cook for a further 2 hours until the meat is well cooked and very tender. The butter will burn but the resulting flavour is delicious.

“Choose a earthy spicy Chilean red. Enjoy.”

Medieval Monday: The Gatehouse Arch

Markenfield is proud to be a member of Historic Houses – an organisation that supports and represents privately owned historic houses across the UK. Each Monday they set a medieval theme for their members to discuss, and this week the theme is arches.

The view through Markenfield’s arch

There is perhaps no more-iconic view of Markenfield than the one through its Gatehouse archway. It is the only entrance into the Hall, and therefore every single visitor to Markenfield Hall has passed through in the last several hundred years.

The view isn’t always as pretty as that…

Through the Gatehouse arch in the mist

This was the view in the post-snow melt mists last week. Different day, different direction, same mist…

The Farm Building through the arch

And yes – we have got things stuck under it before now. Most famously the dustbin lorry became firmly wedged underneath it one day, necessitating a rescue mission. The answer seemingly was to deflate all four tyres, reverse it very gingerly and blow said tyres back up. This unfortunate incident left the centre arch stone dangling like a very large wobbly tooth, resulting in an emergency visit from English Heritage and yet another project for the late John Maloney (Stonemason.

The arch in slightly prettier weather

Now to confess… those of you who know Markenfield well, or the historians, architects and all-round knowledgeable folk out there might be looking at this and going “but that’s not medieval” – and you’d be right. It’s a Tudor Gatehouse, built following the Turnpike Act that moved the old medieval road from where it ran, just under the battlements to the east of the Hall, to the route of the modern A61. But in our defence, it is an archway – and it does lead in to a rather magnificent medieval house and home – even if we do say so ourselves.

Recipe of the Month with The Dusty Miller: old fashioned beef stew & thyme-scented dumplings

Each month the fabulously talented Brian Dennison, of The Dusty Miller near Low Laithe, will be sharing one of his fantastic seasonal recipes with us. But what does cooking have to do with Markenfield you may ask. The Dusty Miller are our in-house caterers, and together Brian and his wife Elizabeth look after the gastronomic needs of our wedding couples.

Elizabeth Dennison. Image: Olivia Brabbs

And so, for the first of these monthly recipes Brian will talk you through how to make his one-pot beef with thyme dumplings – the perfect winter warmer for those cold snowy days…

“Beef beef glorious beef – what better way to celebrate this wonderful meat.  Rare breeds thankfully saved by the efforts of some of our farmers doing their bit to keep them.  Dexter, Belted Galloway, Aberdeen Angus, Highland, Red Poll, Longhorn, Shorthorn.  High in Omega 3 oils and hung on the bone for 28 days keep these doggies rolling.  

“The following recipe is a classic British dish, which is a total meal in itself.  You’ve got the meat, the vegetables and the dumplings in one.”

Ingredients

900g/2lbs braising steak cut into dice
Rapeseed oil for frying
Salt and pepper
4 large onions, chopped
1 garlic clove, optional
Sprig of thyme
6 carrots
6 celery sticks
4 large potatoes
350g/12oz button mushrooms
2 litres of good beef stock

225g/8oz SR flour
100g/4oz unsalted butter
1 onion finely chopped
Salt and pepper
Large tsp rubbed dried thyme
150mls/1/4 pint water

Method

1 Fry off the beef in a thick bottomed casserole using a little of the oil until brown in colour. Season well with salt and ground black pepper.

2 Add the chopped onion, garlic, and thyme cook until softened. Cover with the stock and simmer on the stove or in pre-heated oven 180c/350f/gas mark 4, for 1 and 1/2 hours to 2 hours with foil or a lid on the casserole.

3 Remove from oven and cut the vegetables into even sized pieces and add to the stew. At this point check the amount of liquid and add more stock or for a more extravagant stew a glass or two of good red wine. Replace lid and return to the stove top or oven and cook for a further 20-30 minutes.

4 Whilst the stew is cooking, begin to make the dumplings. Place the flour and seasoning in a mixing bowl. Rub the butter into the flour to a sandy texture. Add the onion, thyme and water.

5 Remove stew from stove top or oven and remove the lid. Divide the dumpling
dough into 6 even sized pieces, place on top of the stew and place in hot oven 200c/400f gas mark 6 for 20-30 minutes until evenly browned.

Serve in large soup bowls with dumplings on top.

Choose a quaffing type light red to accompany this dish such as a young Rioja-Crianza or Jumilla

Enjoy!