Courtyard Café, Chessell Pottery Barns

Spring has definitely arrived on the Isle of Wight, and your reviewers are wasting no time in enjoying the pleasant weather. After an afternoon spent in a field deep in the rural West Wight, Matt and Cat felt the call of a cream tea. Luckily, that is one commodity that is not hard to obtain over on the west side of the Island, and so they set out for the little cafe at Calbourne Water Mill, of which they had heard good things. On arrival they were a little nonplussed to discover that entry to Calbourne Water Mill - including the cafe - was £7 per head. Good value for a day's entertainment, but not for just a cream tea. So on they drove, until the next cream tea-serving establishment came over the horizon a few minutes later: Chessell Pottery.

Review continues:

A long-standing tourist attraction, the Pottery is sometimes viewed a bit warily by locals - perhaps they think it's more suited for visitors. If so, they'd be wrong. Any such preconceptions were rapidly dispelled when Matt and Cat strolled into the pleasant courtyard of the barns, which appeared to be a delightful location for anyone looking for a light snack en route around the Island. In the sizeable cafe Matt and Cat swiftly ordered the standard cream tea for two, found a corner table and settled down. The rest of the menu included some good light lunches and other snacks, but M & C had eyes only for the cream teas. These were soon delivered, and looked impressive. Two large home-made scones each, two separate pots of Fairtrade tea and plenty of milk. Some of the crockery, predictably enough, was of local origin, indeed the whole establishment had a commendable emphasis on Isle of Wight information and produce.

On diving in, the scones proved to be every bit as good as they looked. Unusually, no butter was provided. Cat was considering asking for some when she started experimenting with the jam. This tasty preserve looked home-made, was served in a saucer, and was runny enough that it might serve in the place of butter - and so it proved. Individual pots of Isle of Wight clotted cream were provided, and there was plenty of both jam and cream for all four scones.

As the afternoon sun crept over the weeping willow in the courtyard, Matt and Cat relaxed and sipped tea contentedly. The Courtyard Cafe had done its job: it proved to be both good value and good quality.


 
 

Visit the website: http://www.pottery-cafe.com/chessell/index.html

PermalinkPublished: 8th April 2007
3463 views
Categories: We like, Cafes, Family friendly, West Wight, Tea shops

7 comments

Comment from: Karen Palmer-Cunningham Email
We decided to once again take your advice yesterday and gave the Courtyard Cafe, Chessell Pottery Barns a visit. It was a great idea, thanks! We had a quick wander around the pottery barn and then ordered our lunch. I had a toasted wholemeal mature cheddar and chutney sandwich, which came with a smallish, but lovely, side salad and some parsnip chrisps. It was really tasty and the only fault that I have is that the bread was clearly from a ready sliced loaf, and that is not the worst thing in the world! Bill had ham and cheese on a 'rustic' roll, also with the side salad and chrisps, it too was tasty, well presented and we both had some sharon orchard apple juice, which we both love. Sitting in the lovely sunshine we ate alone, after the family who where there when we arrived, left. I can't understand why people queue to get a burger in Newport, when they could drive five minutes along the road to sit in the sun in peace and quiet, have freshly made and tasty food for a good price.
We are planning to go back soon and paint some pottery before we eat!
22/04/07 @ 20:57
Comment from: Wendy
Had lunch at Chessell Pottery's Courtyard Café today with my son, to fuel us up ready for a hard afternoon's pottery-painting! I chose the first thing I saw chalked up on the blackboards which was leek & potato soup. My son opted for the children's lunchbox, though he really had his eye on the large chocolate cake on the counter. The soup was good, fresh and tasty and served with a warm baguette and butter (though when I checked the menu I could have had one of the freshly baked cheese scones with it and kind of wished I had as they looked really good). The lunchbox contained tuna sandwich, apple, raisins and fruit juice. With my pot of green tea it all came in at under a tenner. My son insisted he had room for the chocolate cake afterwards, so that also went down the hatch, with murmurings of approval.
27/10/08 @ 21:44
Comment from: David D. Ballard Email
Morning coffee or afternoon tea... the perfect stopping-off point with visitors straight from the ferry in Yarmouth. Never fails. Then on to the Military Road for the approach to Freshwater Bay. Wonderful.
11/04/10 @ 17:22
Comment from: Nick Churchill Email
We visited twice last week. The first time Nicky and I went we decided to have the savoury scone tea, this consisted of a cheese and tomato scone that was so large I am convinced it had its own gravitational field served with a couple of slices of excellent Gallybagger cheese, some tomato chutney and a pot of tea, a very satisfying tea it was too!

For our second visit we decided to try the 'Ultimate' Cream Tea and while it was a good cream tea, and included butter, we both felt that for content and presentation the claim that it was the 'ultimate' fell short. Having had a cream tea at Dimbola Lodge, just down the road in Freshwater Bay we were able to make comparisons.

The scones although freshly made that morning were cold, in comparison Dimbola's were warmed a small thing I agree but it makes a big difference! The clotted cream was served in plastic tubs, portion control at its ultimate but it would have been nicer to have the cream in a bowl as at Dimbola, the jam was rather runny in comparison to Dimbola's and there was no hot water pot supplied for the tea.

Our other observation in comparison was that the crockery at Chessell was not matched, instead it was a mish mash of pattern and style, at Dimbola it is all matched, considering Chessell is a pottery you would expect matched crockery.

While Chessell's cream tea was very good our opinion was that it fell short of the accolade of 'ultimate'.
31/10/10 @ 16:06
Comment from: sue jolliffe
Visited the tearooms on 29th August.. Waited a good 15 mins for t for two.. a coffe and 3 slices of cake.. not impressed that the pot of tea for which i was charged £3.60 only had one teabag in it.. cakes are excessivly overpriced sorry but i wont be returning
30/08/11 @ 01:32
Comment from: David H
Chessell cafe could be great - but the service is painfully slow and at times, shambolic. I've been three times this summer, ploughman's is fab, perhaps the best on the Island, but waiting for over 30 minutes for anything to arrive, even a pot of tea is just not good enough. I only returned as it was so nice. I would say avoid if you have high blood pressure.
11/09/11 @ 16:56
Comment from: David H
OK, so some people never learn. But only because the food is so nice and the location close-by, I tried yet again to eat here. Last few times, the wait was unbearable, this time, the food ordered was unavailable - 'we're too busy' the excuse, and this after waiting hopelessly by the counter for five minutes, as I observed three women chatting, in the kitchen, apparently over the washing-up. The actual customers seemed few and far between. They didn't really say why they were too busy, it was around 3pm, a good while before their claimed closing time. When I said over my shoulder; 'the service here is the worst on the Island, according to online reviews' they were extremely rude! I will never return to this dreadfully run establishment. Some places just don't get it, this is one of them.
02/10/11 @ 21:26

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