TWO pop-up restaurants will be serving customers on the River Thames near Henley this summer. The Lockdown Lodge, which traded upstream from Hambleden Lock for .
Maarten Geschwindt to head the food offer at Hertfordshire s The Grove Maarten Geschwindt, former executive sous chef at The Savoy, has been appointed executive chef of the The Grove.
Geschwindt, who replaces former executive chef Stephen Wheeler, will be in charge of the menus at all five dining venues at the Hertfordshire hotel: The Glasshouse, The Stables, The Lounges and pop up restaurants in partnership with Madhu’s and Jimmy Garcia. As well as looking after the restaurants, he will also lead the entire corporate and event catering operation.
He will oversee the internationally-inspired, ‘estate-to-plate’ menu served at The Glasshouse serves and at the more sustainably-focused The Stables as well as at Madhu’s at The Grove, a south Asian pop-up restaurant created in collaboration with caterer to the royal family, Madhu’s.
By Brian Mudd
Protecting The Palm Beaches, A Tribute To Fallen Police Officers
Bottom Line: This weekly feature is designed to recognize those who ve paid the ultimate price to serve their communities and to serve as a reminder of what our police risk to keep us safe. Here are the harsh realities regarding the rise risk in society for law enforcement.
307 LOD’s in 2020, including 16 in Florida
Last year was the deadliest for law enforcement since 1932. We’re in an especially dangerous moment in our country’s history due to the effort of political operatives to politicize law enforcement. Officer involved shooting deaths are 35% below average, however line-of-duty deaths have reached record levels. The facts simply don’t meet the anti-police narrative. We’ve lost these heroes since the previous update.
James Blunt and Madness among artists performing at Henley Festival this year readingchronicle.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from readingchronicle.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
In his own words, Gabriel Ruelas looks back on his boxing roots, his career and the tragedy that effectively ended it
“I was 12 years old when I started boxing and I started because I was no good at listening in school and didn’t listen to my parents, either. They told me I had to get a job if I didn’t do well or graduate from high school, so I thought the only option was to fight. My older brother, Juan, used to be a fighter, and he taught me more than the basics in terms of fighting. He was good enough to where if I came across kids in school or on the street, I’d be able to beat them up real quick.