Headington & Marston e-democracy Forum

Thanks to Stephanie Jenkins of the Headington & Marston e-democracy forum for mentioning my twitter feed @TonyOX3, which is linked to this blog. I’m not a member of the Forum yet, but expect to join shortly. As I said in an earlier post I started the twitter account and blog as an experiment to see if it would achieve a critical mass. It hasn’t happened yet, but I’m happy to keep going.

Meanwhile, I’m not trying to compete with the e-dem forum. My tweets and blog are as likely to be personal as Headington-related. While I would welcome any comments you may post on the blog, I think the noticeboard format of the forum works better for fuller discussions. So when I’ve joined the forum I’ll post a message there when there’s anything relevant on the blog and discussion can continue on the forum. If you follow me on twitter you’ll get tweets about new blog posts anyway.

Waitrose – Must Try Harder.

Waitrose – where the middle classes do their food shopping when they can’t get to Marks & Spencer. But it wasn’t always like that. Before we moved to Oxford we were loyal and regular customers of our local Waitrose for more than 20 years. Over the time the store had its ups and downs (I remember a period of two or three years when their fresh fruit & veg  were definitely sub-standard) but in recent times they had got their act together and provided a good and friendly service.

Then we moved to Headington. We got to quite like Somerfields before it closed, but waited eagerly for Waitrose to open in May 2009. We’d imagined that for their first store in a prestigious city they would try really hard to get it running smoothly as quickly as possible. For the first few months we were frustrated by the poor levels of stock, and became tired of the mantra “We’re only a small store” when we queried yet another item with a “temporarily unavailable” shelf label. You manage a small store, surely, by restricting the number of lines you carry but making sure you keep these in stock. Conversations with various managers over specific problems never led to anything, even when we were promised a call-back or email.

Since then it’s improved a little, but still almost every time we go some basic everyday item is unavailable. Twice in the last month I’ve called in with a short shopping list of four or five items and come out with only one or two. It’s frustrating and depressing. While we used to spend over £100 a week in Waitrose we probably spend less than £30 now, with our business going instead to Marks and the Co-op. It’s Waitrose’s loss, but I wish it were different. I’d like to support my local store (and the Co-op does quite well out of us) but the M&S near the Mini factory has free parking and the one in town is handy when one of us is down there. Sorry, Waitrose, but you’ll have to try harder.

Coffee and Danish

I don’t want this to be a rantblog so I promise to limit myself to no more than one a week. Mostly.

The thing is, Mrs T and I like a good black coffee and a fresh Danish pastry somewhere with a pleasant atmosphere if we’re out around the town in the morning. It doesn’t seem too much to ask. But the number of places in Oxford where you can get such a thing is limited. For now, Blackwell’s Café Nero fits the bill though it can get a rather congested later in the morning. The Queen’s Lane coffee shop too has been reliable for a coffee and cinnamon Danish.

This morning we headed for the Coconut Café in Friar’s Entry which I mentioned in a tweet the other day. Sad to say, we didn’t stay because although they had various cakes and muffins the only thing resembling a pastry was some twisty thing smothered in icing sugar. And it was uncomfortably hot inside too. I’ve lived in Denmark so I recognise a Danish pastry when I see one, and although I’ve never had one anywhere else that’s as good as those you can buy in almost any local bakery in Denmark, I’m prepared to accept a good effort. So whatever the Coconut may be like as a café in general I’m afraid it doesn’t hack it in the coffee-and-Danish stakes.

On our way to Queen’s Lane we thought we’d look in at The Vaults (behind the church in Radcliffe Square). We’ve had afternoon tea there which has been OK, but whenever we’ve looked in the mornings they’ve had cakes but no pastries. Cake is for the afternoon: the morning demands Danish pastry. But Lo! Croissants and pains au chocolat! Two americanos and two pains au chocolat duly ordered and served.

And rejected (the p’s au c: the coffee was fine). Stale, hard, and burnt on the underside. The staff reacted with disbelief, giving the impression they thought we were being fussy. “How could it be?”, they said. The pastries had come from Gatineau in Summertown only this morning. (Gatineau is a place we’ve never shopped so can’t speak from experience, but it describes itself as an artisan patisserie and appears to aim at the affluent North Oxford market.) My suggestion that Gatineau had passed on yesterday’s left-over stock after a quick reheat in the oven didn’t seem to be thought helpful, but a refund was rather grudgingly offerred and willingly accepted.

So the search goes on. There are some other places which are, how can I put it, kind of OK but rather functional and dull. If anyone has any recommendations please let me know.