Headington Headlines #40

Headington’s Christmas lights have been funded entirely by local businesses and voluntary organistations. The Council turned down an application for support, but local Councillors have chipped in from their discretionary ward budget.

In an event organised by Churches Together in Headington on Friday children and a donkey walked from St Andrew’s Primary School through Headington to All Saints Church knocking on inn doors. The donkey was later spotted being led down the main road.

Pickets were out at @Oxford_Brookes on Wednesday morning as part of the public sector workers’ strike over pensions, and protestors later joined the parade through the city centre.

Road works and diversion signs obstructing cycle paths and causing cyclists to ‘swerve’ into the road or onto pavements got surprisingly wide coverage and attention. Well, I was surprised anyway.

A taxi driver was robbed in Osler Road early on Monday morning, having been threatened by a group of men who got into the taxi at the Shell garage on the London Road. @TVP_Oxford appealed for witnesses and on Friday announced that six men had been arrested and bailed.

Bad feeling between Lord Mayor Elise Benjamin (@EliseDB)and John Kelly (ex Oxfordshire CC emergency planner) broke out again over the Mayor’s attendances at the repatration tributes near the entrance to the JR Hospital. Mr Kelly’s complaint has been rejected.

There was a complaint about deliveries in the middle of the night to the Keraleeyam Stores (London Road).

A planning application 11/02584/FUL to convert two retail units at 293 London Road (near Northfield Road) to hot-food takeaways was refused.

News broke that another pub is to close – The Crown & Thistle in Old Road.

Active topics on the Headington & Marston e-democracy forum this week:

  • Thornhill Park and Ride….again
  • Northway Pharmacy
  • Headington Car Park
  • Renaming places
  • Keraleeyam Stores
  • Crown and Thistle
  • Church Bells in Ferry Rd, Marston
I try to cover news from the OX3 postcode in Headington and out as far as Barton, Sandhills and Risinghurst (see map). To feed into next week’s summary you can comment on this article, or tweet either with the hashtag #ox3 or @mentioning @TonyOX3.

The Coach & Horses, Chiselhampton

I’ve been for lunch to The Coach & Horses twice recently. It’s a place that probably doesn’t register on the Oxford foodies’ radar, but both times most tables have been full so they’re clearly doing something right.

The pub is furnished and decorated in the traditional style, with patterned carpets, horse brasses and prints. On a weekday lunchtime the clientèle is, shall we say, not young. The atmosphere though is warm and welcoming with friendly and efficient staff. There’s a small bar and several rooms each set with a few tables, so despite the number of customers you don’t feel crowded. For times of better weather there’s an outside terrace.

The food on offer is also traditional, in the sense of being straightforward and with no concessions to fashion. No sharing platters here; nothing in a jus or enrobed in a light chilli foam; no exotic vegetables. Just plain, well-cooked food served in generous portions.

On the à la carte menu starters include pâté, smoked salmon, parma ham, and goat’s cheese salad. Several dishes are available in starter or main course portions. There is a short grill menu (steaks and lamb cutlets), fish (including fish of the day), and a meaty menu of main courses. Vegetables and chips are included. There are four vegetarian/pasta choices. As well as the à la carte menu the restaurant offers a specials board which on my recent visit included fish and chips, Cumberland sausage and mash, and confit de canard. They offer a Sunday lunch menu alongside the à la carte, and a seasonal Christmas Vegetarian Party menu.

Knowing the portion sizes the four of us declined starters, happy to make do with the fresh white and multi-grain bread and butter which came automatically. You’ll get the idea by now – bread with butter rather than oil and balsamic vinegar. A bottle of Rioja between three of us doubled as apéritif and accompaniment to the meal.

J and E both chose slow-braised lamb shank which came as generous but not oversized joints, perfectly cooked, served in a port and redcurrant sauce on a bed of mashed potatoes. J declared it to be one of the best she’d had. B opted for the confit de canard from the specials board – a leg of tender duck which came easily off the bone – while I chose half a Gressingham duck in orange sauce. Again, it was cooked just right (the skin could have been crisper but I don’t eat the skin anyway). Vegetables were served in individual side dishes, the same selection for each of us: carrots, broccoli and new potatoes. A large bowl of chips put in the middle of the table was a challenge we could only half complete!

The desserts are towards the rich end of the spectrum. J and E both declined: I considered the crème brulée but opted instead for the cheese (unusually at no extra charge – another break with current fashion), while B challenged his waistline with a chocolate mousse. Despite it being HUGE he managed to polish it off with what I took to be complete satisfaction. There were three cheeses on my plate of cheese and biscuits – cheddar, brie and a blue cheese (possibly Oxford blue – I didn’t ask). We finished with coffee all round. The bill for four main courses, two desserts, four coffees, a bottle of Rioja and a bottle of mineral water came to £74-something before service.

The food at the Coach & Horses may seem to be in a time warp but other restaurants might well ask themselves if there might be something in their unpretentious approach and excellent value for money. For a pub/restaurant several miles from the City regularly to be busy at mid-week lunchtimes shows there is a market for what they offer. I don’t know if this success is carried over into the evenings, or how their customer profile might differ later in the day. I hope they do just as well.

Headington Headlines #36

Here is my round-up of local news for the week 31 October – 6 November —

As world leaders at the G20 summit in Cannes struggled to keep the Eurozone intact, here in Headington we seem to be having a spate of burglaries. There was a series of them over the last two weeks of October and @TVP_Oxford has issued a request for information and set out advice to householders to help prevent their property being targeted.

Churches have also been hit. Burglars broke through a window into the United Reform Church in Collingwood Road, Risinghurst and damaged cupboards inside the church, stealing money and The Royal British Legion Poppy Appeal collection pot, totalling £11. Again, @TVP_Oxford are appealing for information.

Another church, St Nicholas the Wonderworker, the Russian Orthodox Church in Ferry Road, Marston was burgled on two consecutive nights. A brass-plated steel cross from the church’s roof was stolen on Saturday, October 22, and irreplaceable religious relics were taken the following night. Members of the congregation have started sleeping in the church to prevent further intrusions.

On a lighter note, members of St Nicholas’ are getting together for informal social evenings on the first Tuesday of each month in the Victoria Arms, Old Marston, and Headington Baptist Church celebrated the fifth anniversary of its new building on Saturday with coffee, cakes, games & fun.

Four men (from Wembley & High Wycombe) were charged with robbing a taxi driver in Headington early on Sunday morning and a woman had her handbag snatched in Gardiner Street in the early hours of Thursday morning.

In other news (as they say) the Oxford Radcliffe Hospitals and the Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre merged to become the Oxford University Hospitals NHS Trust.

Oxford Ink (@OxfordInk) opened a new tattoo studio on Roundway (by Headington Roundabout), but Caffé Toscano on the London Road closed.

The Masons Arms (@TheMasonsArmsHQ) launched their shiny new website and @BigBangMax (aka @BigBangPopup) re-emerged as a pop-up sausagery at @Oxford_Brookes‘ Gypsy Lane Restaurant, open from Thursdays to Saturdays.

The campaign to recognise the “Final Turn” into the JR Hospital was reported in the Oxford Mail.

The postponed Barton Bash, a mix of facepainting, bouncy castles, and a host of arts and crafts workshops, will be held in the refurbished Neighbourhood Centre, due to be completed in time for the event on Saturday, November 19.

And finally (as they also say) the Internet and twitter triumphed in identifying the location of ‘the stinky’ in Marston, which was mentioned in one of the police reports. It turns out to be the copse/nature reserve just off Copse Lane opposite the old Cavalier pub. It only remains to know why it earned that name, and whether the developers building flats on the Cavalier site will recognise this local tradition in the name of their development.

My favorite Headington-related tweet this week:

Active topics on the Headington & Marston e-democracy forum this week:

  • Disused Cricket Ground Barton Road.
  • Road works at Rock Edge
  • Bus Defiance Clogs Headington
  • Smoking at JR Hospital
  • Oxford University Hospitals NHS Trust
  • Headington & Barton bus service
  • Quarry Gate Pub
  • Thames Valley Police messages
I try to cover news from the OX3 postcode in Headington and out as far as Barton, Sandhills and Risinghurst (see map). To feed into next week’s summary you can comment on this article, or tweet either with the hashtag #ox3 or @mentioning @TonyOX3.