Island Life Magazine Ltd August/September 2008 | Page 103

FOOD & DRINK It was Louise’s great-grandfather, Charles Griffin, who began this family’s long association with dairy farming at Briddlesford, when he arrived as a tenant in 1923 with his 12 cows. The family have ridden the sad decline of the industry thanks to sheer hard work. Her father, Richard, bought the farm in 1986 and has built it up from 130 to 280 acres, and now runs it with his son Paul and daughters Louise and Izzy. Thanks to Louise’s vision of excellence for the shop, customers will find supermarket goods a poor second. Having skilled butcher Paul Murphy as part of the deal is just the next piece of the jigsaw in Louise’s scheme. Planning permission for a Café and Education Centre has recently been granted and they hope to open by the autumn of next year. She is passionate about supporting producers of Island goods, and her shop reflects this: it has to have one of the widest ranges of Island products on offer in any one place. You only have to look at Paul’s counter to see the quality of his meat. His beef is rich and dark, showing it has been hung for longer to develop its flavour and tenderness. He, too, looks the part. Large and avuncular in his butcher’s whites, he is happy to give advice on cuts of meat depending on purpose and pocket. “I use Andrew Hodgson’s beef and lamb, Les Morris’s Lamb and I soon hope to have a continuous supply of Island pork,” says Paul. He is delighted to be part of Briddlesford Lodge Farm, having established a firm following by taking his meat to www.wightfrog.com/islandlife farmers’ markets. Not that having a settled outlet for his goods makes him any less ambitious. He makes, he says, 58 varieties of sausage. That’s one more than the famous Heinz 57. Maybe for Paul its Briddlesford Lodge life today, tomorrow the world . . . Open Mon – Sat 10am – 6pm, Sun 10am – 4pm Briddlesford Lodge Farm Shop, Wootton. Tel: 884650 E-mail: [email protected] 103