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Daily Mail
The Inspector, 3rd September 2007.
An Inspector Calls: Berwick upon Tweed
1 Sallyport has chic and comfy rooms.
Number 1 Sallyport has won all kinds of awards. Not so long ago, a national newspaper
made it Britain's bed and breakfast of the year, and I dare say it might have
repeated the honour several times over in subsequent years - except that it's
no longer a B&B. Nowadays, you can enjoy a superb three-course dinner cooked
by 1 Sallyport's indefatigable proprietor, Lizzie Middlemiss, who in the 1980s
used to run a restaurant here in Berwick upon Tweed called Funny-Way-To-Make-A-Living.
She's a sensational chef as well as being a wonderfully eccentric, warm character
- and it can't be long before her funky hotel picks up plaudits aplenty.
1 Sallyport is reached via a narrow cobbled lane once painted by L. S. Lowry. When
I arrive shortly after 9pm, it's like walking into a private dinner party, and
I feel embarrassed to disturb the contented throng. But Lizzie's manner is such
that any discomfort on my part is immediately banished into the nearby North
Sea.
'Leave your shoes at the bottom of the stairs, please,' she says - and Lizzie shows
me two different rooms, leaving me to decide on one of them.
I go for the attic option, which is called Manhattan Loft. It has a bit of everything
- and a lot more besides. At the end of the beautifully-dressed bed, bulging
with pillows, is a tray with all the usual tea and coffee-making paraphernalia
but there's also a plate of home-made shortbread. There's a massive flat-screen
TV with full satellite viewing and there's a mini-library of DVDs, a stack of
hardback books, a basket of magazines and plenty of mineral water.
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What I'm not clear about is whether the half bottle of pink champagne and packet
of chocolates - oh, and the Dolce & Gabbana scent - are gratis or not. Sitting
on the table is a small photograph album that has 'Information' written on it.
Here, Lizzie, in her own immaculate hand-writing, explains about her packed lunches
and where best to eat them: Holy Island, St Abbs Head, Bamburgh Beach. Berwick
itself is well worth exploring. It was once Scotland's greatest seaport, although
from the 16th century until 1836 it was an independent borough, neither in Scotland
nor England.
It's always rumoured that a combination of its ambiguous status and an administrative
error means that the town is still at war with Russia. In fact, today it's in
Northumberland - although the football team is in a Scottish league.
My bathroom is across the corridor, but is mine alone. It's huge - with a stand-alone,
rolltop bath in the middle of it. A walk-in shower occupies the far end of the
room. Candles are everywhere. It seems a shame to be staying here on one's own.
Seagulls wake me rather earlier than I had intended - and breakfast here officially
doesn't start until 8.30pm. But I smell the coffee and head downstairs. There
are two large communal tables and it isn't long before I'm joined by a couple
from Coventry. Unlike me, they had dinner here the night before and are still
purring on about it. In one of the dining rooms, a painting of Fidel Castro looms
large.
After a bowl of fresh raspberries, kiwi fruit, nectarines, plums and vanilla yoghurt,
I'm presented with Lizzie's full Scottish breakfast, complete with haggis. Don't
expect to eat for the rest of the day. 1 Sallyport restores your faith in paid-for
hospitality. It deserves all the applause it gets.
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ELLE
October 2007
Tiny lanes and cobbled alleyways sweep up to this l7th-century listed townhouse
in pretty, medieval Berwick. Step inside and you find surprisingly funky interiors.
Bedrooms are wild: a fire and huge plasma screen in one, a sleigh bed in another,
and even a white 'Manhattan loft' room. All come with DVD players, Bose sound
systems and fridges to chill your wine (no licence, so bring your own). Super-cool
bathrooms, most with deluge showers, have Fired Earth tiles and waffle bathrobes.
Owner Elizabeth will whisk up a feast for dinner (on request) or for communal
breakfast. A real find.
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BRITISH AIRWAYS HIGHLIFE
September 2007
Berwick-upon-Tweed, a historic red-brick town that sits on the Scottish borders
where the Tweed meets the sea, has a picturesque charm that is perfectly complemented
by the intimate 1 Sallyport. The name of this 17th century house comes from the
French term for waterfront, and though you can't see the sea from the rooms themselves,
views of the dramatic coastline from the town's medieval walls are just a minute's
walk from the front door of this award-winning B&B. While luxury is the name
of the game (the newest room, Mulberry, is a romantic suite with a handmade cast-iron
bath and soft furnishings from the upmarket fashion house of the same name),
there's a cosy home-from-home atmosphere thanks to the friendly but unobtrusive
service. Breakfast is a relaxed but divine gourmet affair (think waffles with
raspberries or craster kippers with poached eggs) and those with hearty appetites
can help themselves to home-made shortbread if they're feeling peckish. For dinner,
the new restaurant offers a sublime, daily changing feast of local produce.
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The Sunday Times
Walter F Stowy, 17th April, 2005.
Better and Better: The Top 10 B&Bs in England
This week, the shortlist for England's best bed and breakfast will be revealed
- but we've already sent our ruthless hotel inspector, Walter F Stowy, to see
if they're up to scratch.
No 1 SALLYPORT
Berwick-upon-Tweed, Northumberland
I was on my way to my room on the top floor when Elizabeth Middlemiss showed me
her suite, The Smugglers. Wow. I’d never seen anything like it in a B&B
before: a huge room, lit by big windows and home to an oversized sofa, a widescreen
television, a DVD player and all manner of artful flourishes. The curtains appeared
to be made of suede. Suede! “How much?” I cried. “Well, it’s
a bit more expensive,” she admitted, “£95 a night, including
breakfast.” “How much?” In London or New York, a room like
that would set me back £400. “Including breakfast,” Elizabeth
ventured. Now I know that in order to test the true mettle of an establishment,
a reviewer should check in to the cheapest room. But I’m sorry, readers.
I failed.
The bed: as much a throne as a place to sleep — home to a big leather headboard,
oversized pillows and expensive linen. The accompanying bathroom was a treat, too:
my morning shower was heavier than an Amazon rainstorm. 10/10.
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The breakfast: there’s a wide range of cooked dishes (I had eggs benedict)
as well as home-made bread and jams. 9/10.
The decor: the other rooms were also gorgeous. 10/10.
The service: easy-going and intelligent. Elizabeth knows when to leave you in peace,
too. 9/10.
The location: probably the best-preserved historic town in Britain, Berwick should
by rights be a Unesco World Heritage Site. Within three minutes of leaving Sallyport’s
front door, you’ll be standing on the medieval walls, looking out across
the mouth of the River Tweed. 10/10.
Do they do dinner? Yes, but not on the night I stayed there. The “rustic
Provençal suppers” cost £29.50 a head.
Value for money: 10/10.
Does it deserve its nomination? You bet — I thought I’d died and gone
to heaven, or at the very least to the top floor of a luxury Manhattan hotel.
The winner is ...
… No 1 Sallyport. Berwick is a criminally underrated place for a holiday — the
kind of history-drenched town you’d expect to find in Brittany or the Dordogne,
not England — and this is the perfect perch from which to enjoy it.
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The Which? Guide to Good Hotels 2005
Stylish Rooms and Good Food at a Bijou B&B in Berwick's Centre
Whatever Elizabeth Middlemiss does, she likes to get it right. Just a short stroll
from the River Tweed waterfront, her stone townhouse is a haven of comfy style
and fine food, liberally dotted about with eclectic bits and bobs to catch the
eye of anyone with a feel for contemporary style. That's not to say that this
is a soulless, minimal sort of place: the bedrooms (shoe-free, incidentally)
head straight for the comfort zone with touchy feely fabrics, big beds to sprawl
in and classy modern bathrooms with features such as terracotta or mosaic tiles
and monsoon shower heads.
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The vast leather sleigh bed, wooden floors and modular sofa in Smugglers will appeal
to style slaves, as will the clean-cut lines of the Manhattan Loft. The Master
Bedroom is a more traditional space that blends toile wallpaper with a gleaming
brass bed and black marble fireplace. By arrangement, Elizabeth cooks Provençal-style
dinners in a suitably rustic farmhouse kitchen where guests share a polished
table by a huge stone fireplace; breakfasts are a treat too - perhaps vanilla
waffles with fresh raspberries, local Craster kippers or a full Scottish breakfast
with haggis.
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The Times
Deborah King, 1st July 2004.
Home Comforts With Chocolates and Shortbread
BED AND BREAKFAST doesn't come much better than No 1 Sallyport, a 17th-century
house tucked away in an ancient alley near the quayside. Owner Lizzie Middlemiss,
a new entry in The Good Food Guide, encourages guests to remove their shoes once
inside, a fast-track way to treating the place like home.
The similarity can end there. My room, the Smugglers, was more of a suite than
a bedroom. The newest and easily the swankiest of the three guest rooms, it has
wood flooring, a huge sleigh bed and, through an arch, a separate lounge area
with stylish corner sofa and widescreen television. Also included were Crabtree & Evelyn
toiletries, homemade chocolates, vases of lilies and a guests kitchen stocked
with teas, coffee and homemade shortbread and cakes.
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Evening meals resemble a dinner party as guests sit together round a large wooden
table. My fellow guests, who tucked in to a feast of boeuf bourguignon followed
by pears poached in wine and honey, included a judge from Chester and a retired
couple who had just returned from the Falklands.
You choose your breakfast the night before from a huge list that includes Craster
kippers, fruit compote, homemade vanilla waffles and oatmeal porridge served
with cream and Drambuie.
A lot of thought has gone into the designer rooms and staying here is a decadent
and delightful experience.
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Guardian: 6 of the Best B&Bs
Elsie Dillard, Editor of the Good Bed & Breakfast Guide 2003
"No 1 is an atmospheric house dating from the 17th Century. Goose down duvets,
fluffy towels, white bed linen and fresh flowers all contribute to the feeling
that No 1 is somewhere special and all three bedrooms now have TVs, videos and
CD players. Guests have access to the kitchen where they can make their own cafetiere
coffee and help themselves to home-baked shortbread or fruitcake and drinks from
an honesty bar."
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