
Yemi Adelekan is a food writer and blogger who was a semi-finalist in last year’s BBC TV’s Masterchef competition. Every Saturday Yemi will be writing on the Stray Ferret about her love of the district’s food and sharing cooking tips– please get in touch with her if you want her to review a restaurant, visit your farm, taste the produce you sell or even share a recipe.
One of the upsides of British summer is the opportunity to go to festivals, and I love that there are so many food festivals in Yorkshire.
Each one has a different vibe, and you can never quite anticipate what the experience will be with Yorkshire weather. Luckily, this year, the weather was fantastic.
The RHS launched The Festival of Flavours in 2022 to celebrate the produce from its gardens and encourage us to grow some of our own food. It was a huge success and this year’s festival offered even more traders and chef demonstrations.
Both seasoned and amateur gardeners and foodies turned out in their droves for the event, which included children’s cooking classes, kitchen garden tours, live music performances and a wide variety of food to try.
The festival was backdropped by the colourful grounds of Harlow Carr and I was excited to be on stage cooking two dishes alongside many other local chefs.
Fig and raspberry clafoutis
A personal highlight for me was using seasonal ingredients; I used white currants as part of my sweet dish, which was fig and raspberry clafoutis, with a white currant and raspberry whipped cream. It was my first time using the berry and I was excited to learn about the flavour profile.

The clafoutis.
Traditionally made with cherries, clafoutis is a French classic that is a staple in many homes. Methods behind the dessert can be varied – some simple and others much more complicated.
The former calls for all ingredients to be mixed in a blender before pouring over the fruit in an oiled dish.
The more complex recipes, however, call for the egg whites to be beaten separately – to form soft peaks – before being added to the yolks which have been beaten with sugar. Melted butter is also drizzled into it before folding in the flour.
Having tried different recipes, I have concluded it doesn’t make much difference to the end result, so I would recommend keeping it simple!
I sometimes use brown butter (beurre noisette) to get a nutty taste and add some almonds for a bit of crunch.
The cooking stage
The cooking stage featured some incredible chefs, including 2022 MasterChef winner, Eddie Scott, and contestants Afsaneh Kaviani and Owen Diaram. The RHS’s own Joe Lofthouse was also there, as well Gilly Robinson from The Cook’s Place in Malton, Ian Wilkinson from Yolk Farm, and Bobby and Minal Patel from Prashad, Leeds.

(L) Yolk Farm’s Ian Wilkinson and Yemi
David Atherton, who won the Great British Bake Off in 2019, taught a masterclass on scones. I am still dreaming of his lemonade scone, but we still don’t know if the cream or jam should go first.
Lots of local businesses were also there, including the district’s own Harrogate Tipple and Jack in a Box, as well as The Yorkshire Pasta Company which is based in Malton.
How to reduce food waste
I left with some fantastic tips on reducing food waste. These include always writing a shopping list; never go shopping when hungry; avoid going shopping too frequently; do a weekly fridge raid; get creative to use what you have at home and store your ingredients in the right way to extend their shelf lives.
9.5 million tonnes of food are wasted annually in the UK alone – despite 8.4 million people being in food poverty.
We all need to try and grow some of our own food, have an appreciation for ingredients and reduce waste as much as possible.
Next week, I will be visiting Baltzersens Café and Coffee shop.
Read more:
- Yemi’s Food Stories: the Yorkshire distillery that makes vodka from apples
- Yemi’s Food Stories: A ‘sweet day’ at Bettys Cookery School
Easter weekend: Eight ways to keep your little bunnies entertained
While Easter egg hunts in the garden and eating chocolate eggs are always a nice way to spend the bank holiday weekend, your children may require something more to burn off the sugar rush.
From bunnies and forests, to dragons and the Mad Hatter, we have collated a list of eight Easter-themed activities taking place in the Harrogate district over the holidays that will keep you and your children hopping.
Free craft workshop at Fountains Abbey
If your child is looking to get creative, an Easter craft workshop could be for them.
Swanley Grange, at Fountains Abbey, is hosting a free workshop where you and your children can make your very own sheep badge.
The workshops will be held daily from 11am – 3pm, until Sunday April 16.
All ages are welcome. The event is free, but normal admission prices to Fountains Abbey apply.
Family tickets start at £27.
Find more information on the National Trust website.
Make decorations for free
Ripon charity, Jennyruth Workshops, is inviting visitors to Fountains Abbey to join them in creating an Easter decoration.
Jennyruth provides adults with learning disabilities with a variety of valuable skills, including crafts.
The workshop is free and welcomes families to drop in for some seasonal fun.
Join them at Swanley Grange on Wednesday April 12, from 11.30am – 2.30pm.
The event is free, but normal abbey admission charges apply.
Children’s entry starts at £9.
Click here for more information.
Mad Hatter & Friends Tea Party
If your children fancy a taste of wonderland this Easter, Rascal Entertainment’s Mad Hatter’s Tea Party is a good option.
The event will take place at the Crown Hotel in Harrogate on Good Friday.
Children can expect cookie decorating, on-stage entertainment, face painting and a visit from the Easter bunny – all under the same roof as the Hatter himself.
Family tickets start at £47.
The tea party will run from 12pm – 2pm.
Find more information here.
Mother Shipton’s Easter Bunny Tipi Trail
Mother Shipton’s Easter Bunny Tipi Trail is a place where “every bunny’s welcome”
Children are invited to follow the clues, peep inside the bunny houses and even discover giant eggs.
The trail will also include Easter stories, told by a storyteller, as well as the chance to plant spring seeds.
The trail will run every day until Sunday April 16, from 10am to 5.30pm.
Dogs on leads are welcome everywhere, except for the playground.
Admission prices can be found here.
Himalayan Garden & Sculpture Park: The Dragon Egg Quest
For those hoping for a mythical Easter, The Dragon Egg Quest at the Himalayan Garden & Sculpture Park in Ripon may be a good option.
Children are invited to help storyteller, Dragonella, find a dragon’s egg hidden somewhere in the Himalayan Garden.
The activity will weave a tour of the gardens with some mystical Easter fun.
The quest is suitable for children ages 4 to 10 – children must be accompanied by an adult.
Tickets cost £10.
Adventure walks at RHS Harlow Carr
Whether your children need to let off a little more steam, or simply enjoy the beauty of nature, the adventure walks could be a good solution for all the family.
Families can immerse themselves in a guided walk of the grounds of the RHS site, accompanied by the Garden Detectives.
The activity is included in garden admission and is suitable for ages 3+.
The walk will take place on Tuesday April 11 at 11am, 1pm and 3pm.
Click here for more information.
The Great Knaresborough Bunny Hunt
The Great Knaresborough Bunny Hunt is a family-friendly way to keep your little bunnies hoppy this Easter.
Ceramic bunnies are hidden in local business around the town centre for you to find.
Families purchase a map to find the bunnies for £3 and all profits go to Lauren Doherty Road Safety talks, New Beginnings and The Memory Lane Café, Knaresborough.
Bunny-finders can expect a sweet prize in return, as well as an entry to win a £50 voucher for event organiser, Painting Pots.
The event will run daily until April 16 and maps can be purchased from Painting Pots.
Find more information on social media.
Birchfield: Easter at the Farm
Birchfield Farm’s Easter at the Farm activities could be a good way to entertain your little lambs.
Children can expect lamb feeding, an Easter trail, and a bouncy castle.
The Easter bunny will also be making an appearance over the bank holiday weekend.
Farmer Tom will be offering farm rides to visit the outside animals, including newly hatched chicks and ducklings.
The family-friendly farm will be offering seasonal activities until April 16, from 10am to 4pm.
Prices start from £6.95.
Find more information here.
RHS Harlow Carr to pay Harrogate council to divert footpathHarrogate Borough Council has accepted an undisclosed sum to allow a footpath to be diverted at RHS Garden Harlow Carr.
The horticultural charity wants to divert the public right of way as part of wider plans for its Harrogate site. They include converting the former Harrogate Arms into a café and felling 33 trees to restore historic views.
A report to the council’s Cabinet this week says the local authority has accepted a sum, as landowner, to amend the route — however, the amount has not been released to the public.
The Conservative-controlled council is expected to ratify the decision on Wednesday.
The report says the ” relatively minor alteration” will be on land outside that presently leased to the RHS on which the footpath currently runs.
It adds:
“The RHS want the public right of way relocated in order to facilitate their preferred redevelopment scheme for the former Harrogate Arms public house which will create additional catering and teaching facilities on the site, relocation of the public right of way enables greater integration of this asset with their existing facilities.
“This represents an opportunity to generate an unplanned capital receipt which is financially beneficial and economically advantageous to the council.
“Should the opportunity be missed there is very little alternative potential to generate a similar payment for land in this area. This land offers no identifiable potential for long term capital appreciation aside from the current opportunity presented.”

The existing footpath

The new footpath
The report adds the public right of way will still be accessible from Crag Lane to Cardale Woodland and the changes will improve the footpath for walkers once work is complete.
It says the decision is “separate” to other RHS planning applications for the site but adds:
“Refusal could curtail RHS’ plans to develop a property (the former Harrogate Arms public house) that is currently derelict and which has been vacant for a number of years.”
Read more:
- RHS Harlow Carr to fell 33 trees as part of plans to reopen Harrogate Arms
- Police seek hit and run driver after scooter rider hurt in Harrogate
Andrew Willoughby, footpath secretary of Harrogate Group of Ramblers, said it did not object to the proposal. He added:
“In order to incorporate the old Harrogate Arms pub building into the RHS Harlow Carr garden site means moving the footpath away from the old car park at the front of the building, and walking around the back of the pub instead.“The path will then drop towards the beck and cross on a new bridge before continuing through the woods as it presently does. It won’t be the same, but I don’t think it will be any less convenient for people to walk on.”
Thirty-three trees could be felled as part of the Royal Horticultural Society‘s plans to convert the former Harrogate Arms into a café.
The horticultural charity was granted planning and listed building consent in 2019 to convert the pub, which closed a decade ago, into a café.
But a new planning application was submitted this month to landscape the surrounding area to improve the view between RHS Garden Harlow Carr and the Harrogate Arms
The plans include diverting a public right of way and felling trees such as ash, sycamore and beech.
According to an aboricultural impact statement submitted to Harrogate Borough Council to support the planning application, nine of the trees are classed as category B, 18 as category C and six as category U.
Category B trees are deemed to be of moderate quality with an estimated remaining life expectancy of at least 20 years; category C are said to be of low quality with an estimated remaining life expectancy of at least 10 years and category U trees are regarded as being in such poor condition that they cannot realistically be retained as living trees for longer than 10 years.
A spokeswoman for the RHS said:
“As part of our plans to re-establish the historic connection between the Harrogate Arms, Bath House and the garden it is necessary to remove 33 trees, primarily those that are of low quality, for example, young self-seeded trees, are in declining health or are suppressing other significant trees that we want to retain.
“Within the new landscape we will be replacing these with 37 new trees of equivalent amenity value as required by local planning policy plus an additional 45 trees, including beech, birch, hornbeam, oak and maple, providing a new generation of trees to enhance the landscape for years to come and making a long-term contribution to the habitat and natural character of the site.”
Read more:
- Harrogate College students devise menu for Harrogate Arms reopening
- Is Harrogate ice cream van the best in the country?
Pleasure gardens
Originally built in 1844 by then-owner of the estate Henry Wright, the Harrogate Arms and the nearby Bath House were set in pleasure gardens which are now part of RHS Harlow Carr.
The RHS said in a statement “reconnecting the landscape to the buildings” represents an important link with the garden’s past and the local heritage of Harrogate as a spa town.
The Bath House now serves as an exhibition and event space within the garden, while the former hotel will be converted for use as an RHS-run café. The statement added:
“A number of local stakeholders have been kept informed of the process, including the Harrogate Group of Ramblers, which has indicated no objection to the proposals to move the public right of way.
“The RHS has also collaborated with a local college to look at menu ideas for the new café, which will make use of fresh, seasonal produce from RHS Harlow Carr’s kitchen garden.”
Head of RHS Harlow Carr Liz Thwaite said:
Photo of the Week: Autumnal colours at Harlow Carr Gardens“We are delighted to be at the final stage of seeking approval of our plans for the Harrogate Arms.
“This project has been a long time in the making, as we wanted to create something fresh and exciting for our visitors that celebrates our rich heritage.
“We hope that our members and visitors will lend their support to our application.”
The Stray Ferret has launched our new Photo of the Week feature to highlight the beauty of the Harrogate district captured by talented local photographers.
Send your photos to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk for a chance to feature here. We are interested in amateur and professional pictures.

Building work to convert the former Harrogate Arms pub on Crag Lane into a cafe has moved a step closer.
The horticultural charity RHS bought the building in 2014 and received planning permission in 2019 to create a ground floor cafe and kitchen facilities to serve visitors of neighbouring RHS Harlow Carr.
It has now submitted a construction management plan to Harrogate Borough Council that gives details about how contractors will go about the conversion.
It says work will include the demolition of extensions, partitions, a boundary wall and low wall.
It will also involve the erection of three single-storey extensions and a boundary wall; reduction of floor levels; widening of entrance; removal of fire escape; installation of replacement doors, windows and fanlights; alterations to fenestration; formation and restoration of hard and soft landscaping.
Work on site will take place from 8am to 6pm Monday to Friday and from 8am to 1pm on Saturday. There will be no work on Sundays or Bank Holidays.
The council will now consider the plan.
Hotel, nightclub, restaurant and pub
The Harlow Car Hotel and Bath House was built in 1844 by two businessmen following the discovery of an ‘especially efficacious’ sulphur spring in the area.
The hotel was sold to Harrogate Corporation in 1915 and has gone through a number of incarnations since then, as a nightclub, restaurant and latterly a pub.

The building in 1930. Credit – Archant
Read more:
- Government gives Harrogate district private school £8m a year to educate army children
- Firefighters called to Knaresborough pub
Sustainable menu
When the cafe opens in 2023, hospitality students from Harrogate College will devise the menu.
The students have been asked to use their culinary and creative skills to come up with a concept for a sustainable menu.
Fresh produce grown at the RHS gardens will feature prominently in the dishes.
Strong winds set to hit Harrogate district todayStrong winds are set to hit the Harrogate district from early this morning and will continue for the rest of the day.
BBC Weather is reporting that gusts of between 40 mph and 45 mph are expected throughout Wednesday.
A weather warning for Storm Dudley has been issued from Wednesday until Friday evening.
Visitor attractions in the district including RHS Harlow Carr and Fountains Abbey have announced they will change their opening hours tomorrow due to the winds.
Read more:
- Harrogate district covid rate continues rapid fall
- Energy crisis could mean £796 increase for Harrogate district households
Due to the forecast of high winds, the woodland (including play area) and glasshouses will be closed Weds to Fri this week.
We apologise for any inconvenience, but the safety of everyone is paramount. We will continue to monitor the situation, please check for further updates. pic.twitter.com/2CBsh0gMVT
— RHS Harlow Carr (@RHSHarlowCarr) February 15, 2022
Man exposes himself at Harrogate’s RHS Harlow CarrIt's likely we'll be opening the mains site & deer park later tomorrow (Wed 16 Feb) to allow the worst of Storm Dudley to pass and make the site safe.
Our team will make a decision on opening in the morning so please check in with our website for the most up to date information. pic.twitter.com/Rltps8lVCC— Fountains Abbey & Studley Royal, National Trust (@fountainsabbey) February 15, 2022
Police are appealing for information and witnesses after a man exposed himself at Harrogate’s RHS Garden Harlow Carr.
According to a statement by North Yorkshire Police today, the man exposed himself to members of the public in the gardens at about 2.40pm on Tuesday last week.
The gardens are frequently used by children and families.
Police described the man as white, in his 40s and having a pale complexion. They added he has an athletic build with dark/grey cropped hair. They said:
“On the day of this incident the man was seen wearing a tight fitting baseball cap, blue baggy trousers or short and dark shoes.”
Read more:
- Calls for police in Bilton to tackle ‘yobs on bicycles’
- Police seize ‘substantial amount’ of drugs in Jennyfields
If you saw the man or have any other information, you can contact the police by emailing ryan.rudd@northyorkshire.police.uk or calling 101, pressing option 2 and asking for PC 791 Rudd.
If you’d rather remain anonymous, you can pass information to Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.
Quote reference number 12220022840.
Harrogate College students devise menu for Harrogate Arms reopeningHospitality students from Harrogate College are helping to devise a menu for the the cafe due to open at the former Harrogate Arms pub.
The horticultural charity RHS Harlow Carr, which owns the former inn, plans to open the cafe in summer 2023.
The students have been asked to use their culinary and creative skills to come up with a concept for the long-closed venue and a sustainable menu.
Fresh produce grown at the RHS gardens will feature prominently in the dishes.
The students, who are being led by seven Level 2 professional cookery students, recently visited the site to be briefed on their task.

Harrogate College students being briefed on their ‘design a menu’ challenge at RHS Garden Harlow Carr.
The initiative represents the start of a closer partnership between the college and Harlow Carr.
Jason Parry, the college’s cultural, contemporary and heritage studies programme manager, said:
“It ticks so many boxes for us in terms of the college’s values and aspirations — sustainability, ‘food to fork’, carbon reduction and seasonality — along with menu and service design, work experience and responding to a client brief.
“The project will be followed up throughout the year with Harlow Carr, who will do a progress check with the students in January.
“Ultimately it will end up with the students giving a Dragon’s Den style pitch to Harlow Carr staff, with small groups presenting their ideas around the menu, and the service, and showing how they have worked to meet the client’s brief.”
The college recently launched a sustainability pledge which sets out its commitment to becoming net zero carbon by 2030.
Read more:
- Harrogate College meets local firms to fix skills gap
- Harrogate Civic Society has ‘many concerns’ about Station Gateway
‘Care home of the future’ set to open in Harrogate in November
Vida Healthcare is preparing to open its third care home in Harrogate this autumn after construction delays partly caused by coronavirus.
The company has described Vida Court, which will cater for 100 residents living with dementia and employ 200 staff, as ‘the care home of the future’.
The home, near RHS Harlow Carr, will include a cinema, convenience store, hair salon, florist and coffee shop to provide residents with a little normality.
It was originally due to be completed in spring but the date has been pushed back to November 1.
Read more:
Interior design company Nanu Soda was hired to design the building, which includes sensory TV windows, walls and artwork that provide residents with opportunities to interact with different environments.

A computer generated image of one of the dining areas at Vida Court.
Learning from coronavirus, Vida has designed each bedroom with a large glass window.
Each bedroom has a large glass window and every house within the home has a garden room to help ventilation
James Rycroft, managing director at Vida Healthcare, said:
“We hope that Vida Court, which integrates the most cutting edge facilities and technology, will end the perception of care homes as a last resort.”