Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Over 20 blends of white, green, black, tisane and oolong tea flow into fine china as egg and truffle, roast beef and curried chicken savouries are brought out for sampling.
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Dobbies Garden Centre, Aberdeen. The business was founded in 1865 by James Dobbie, who created a seeds business named Dobbie & Co. in Renfrew, Scotland.After being awarded the Royal Warrant for Gardeners and Nurserymen to the Royal Household, the company expanded into a seed catalogue business, where it built up a customer base of 50,000 over the following century.
Woodcote Green is an area in the London Borough of Sutton, located in the south-east of the borough south of Wallington. [1] At the 2011 Census the population of the area was included in the Beddington South ward of Sutton Council.
Woodcote Park is a Grade II* listed stately home and estate of about 350 acres (1.4 km 2; 0.5 sq mi) near Epsom, Surrey, England, currently owned by the Royal Automobile Club. It was formerly the seat of a number of prominent English families, including the Calvert family , Barons Baltimore and Lords Proprietor of the colony of Maryland .
Woodcote was first documented in 1109, when it was a dependent settlement of South Stoke, which in turn was a possession of Eynsham Abbey. [5] [6] At the time of the Hundred Rolls in 1279, Woodcote had 14 freeholders and 20 tenants. [5] Woodcote's population grew thereafter but then declined, perhaps as a result of the Black Death. [4]
The Thames Foyer serves breakfast, morning coffee, light lunch and supper, as well as afternoon tea, accompanied by the hotel's resident pianist. [101] Also part of the hotel buildings is Simpson's-in-the-Strand, featuring classic British style cuisine. Its specialties are aged Scottish beef on the bone, potted shrimps, roast saddle of lamb and ...
Bewley's Oriental Café on Grafton Street. The company has operated a café on Dublin's Grafton Street since 1927. [3] Sometimes described as a "Dublin landmark" [8] the building shows influence from the Art Deco movement, with its façade decorated with an Egyptian Revival mosaic, a style rare in Dublin.