Loading...
Village Squire, 1980-10, Page 43SQUIRE'S TABLE Goderich's grand old lady on the square, the Bedford Hotel, changed hands recently and the new owners have been heavily promoting several specially priced meals. Yes, but how does the food taste?We at Village Squire have wondered. After a recent Sunday evening trip to the Bedford we can report fine, just fine, in fact quite a bit better than the last meal we had there a few years ago. There've been no changes, except perhaps a general sprucing up, to the hotel's spacious high ceilinged dining room. It's restfully decorated in soft green and white. Sunday's buffet night and our only quibble with the service is that the waitress who brought a basket with plenty of hot homemade rolls and scones didn't direct us to the anteroom where the food is laid on. However the dining room was almost full and the two waitresses were perhaps too pressed for time. However, we followed the crowds and found ingredients for tossed salad, several types of ready made salad, cold sliced meats and most notably delicious ripe black olives, devilled eggs and wilted cucumbers in sour cream. Another quibble...the tomatoes weren't ripe and there was no blue cheese dressing. The salad selection was excellent, and some of our choices really tasty (see above.) But it was the main course, and our second trip to the buffet tables, that will encourage us to drive to the Bedford for dinner again. A simple slice of prime rib of beef is just that but the Bedford's beef is tender, juicy and very, very good. Though we arrived in the buffet's dying half hour (it's served from four to eight) we were still able to get medium rare roast beef. The other hot choice. chicken legs and thighs, was quite bland. Mashed potatoes were okay, with adequate gravy but accompanying vegetables, niblet corn and beans and carrots were hohum. There's plenty of dessert choice at the Bedford's buffet, including cheese cake, a white cake topped with cherries, a chocolate and vanilla pudding parfait, assorted cheeses and fresh fruit. We tried the banana cream pie and found it excellent but badly in need of whipped Explore the character of Western Ontario Life in Western Ontario can be great. You can indulge in any interest, if you know where to go. VILLAGE SQUIRE is Western Ontario in print. Each month it brings you new restaurants that serve food just a little differently, profiles of craft - people who produce work you've never known about before, as well as regular columns and features. If you want to appreciate this interesting area we live in keep up to date with VILLAGE SQUIRE. $5.00 for 12 issues. cream instead of the pseudo stuff. The wine list is pretty basic, but good reading because it includes a short historical sketch of the hotel. It's on newsprint and you're invited to take it home. We admire the list's suggestion "Try a Canadian wine. You might be pleasantly surprised." We weren't, with a carafe of the house rose (Brights) at $2.50, but at that price, we hadn't expected much. You might think the same of a buffet priced at $6.75 per person, all included. But at the Bedford you'd be wrong. The Sunday buffet is excellent value for money, especially as long as that prime rib is included. The Bedford usually features a couple of items at a special price Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights, along with the regular dinner menu. And on Sunday from 11 to two the hotel has a crepe buffet. Sounds intriguing and it's a real bargain at $3.75. Children will be comfortable at the Bedford and the buffet costs $3.50 for them. Reservations recommended at 524-7337. ic�4 E w, he good We Museums your kids will lov A new school for London e Artistry in glass at Sommer:1in VILLAGE SQUIRE/OCTOBER 1980 PG. 41