The Pig at Bridge Place review: Rustic luxury with a touch of rock'n'roll in the Kent countryside

A new Pig Hotel has been added to the litter, and less than an hour from London, it’s a modern-classic rural retreat
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Tracy Ramsden7 June 2019

One of the first to put the kitchen-garden concept on the radar of mini-breaking foodies, the chic, unpretentious Pig Hotel chain has long dominated the south-west UK, with outposts in Bath, Devon and the New Forest amongst others.

Now, they’ve finally migrated east, which spells good news for Londoners looking for a mid-week overnighter or a slow weekend in the countryside.

The Garden of England’s newest resident brings its winning formula of fresh-from-the-earth food, stylish interiors and serious relaxation to the historic Kent village of Bridge, just outside Canterbury. Set in five acres of rolling green hillside, the red-bricked country manor is steeped in genteel aristocratic history, with a reassuring touch of rock ‘n’ roll.

The lowdown

The Pig hits that sweet spot of discrete, bite-sized luxury, where nothing is pretentious or overblown. Quiet luxury, if you will. Less than an hour from Kings Cross St Pancras, the boutique hotel hosts 29 rooms and two self-contained lodges.

The Pig

A mash-up of traditional wood-panelling and eccentric curiosities, inside the red-bricked Grade II-listed building you’ll find deep velvet sofas nestled in cosy nooks, epic fireplaces and achingly hip details.

Posters in the loo hint at the building’s debauched past, when it operated as a scandalous VIP nightclub during the sixties and seventies (framed invitations from the era state: “Ladies may come unescorted if they wish. Many do.”) The rock ‘n’ roll club also played host to Led Zeppelin and The Kinks, amongst others, so every intentional crack in the floorboards seems to tell a rich tale of glamour and hedonism.

None of this is evident when you step out into the genteel gardens, all Peter Rabbit veggie patches and Insta-worthy potting sheds. Tucked away behind the main house is a wood-fired pizza oven and terrace, and the Pig’s famed Potting Shed treatment rooms – imagine the chicest garden shed on Pinterest and you’re almost there. I went for the mum-to-be treatment (£85 for 60 minutes of utter shed-based bliss).

The rooms

The Pig

The Pig interiors are renowned for being a perfect storm of cosy and chic, thanks largely to the gifted eye of Judy Hutson, the hotel co-owner, along with her husband Robin (both are also responsible for the wonderful Limewood in Hampshire).

Hutson trawls antique markets in France and South-west England to hand-source everything from the beautiful ‘70s coloured glassware that lines the shelves in the bar to the antique curiosities hanging up in the potting shed treatments rooms.

For maximum escapism, opt to stay in one of the private lodges, where the kitchen’s stable door opens out to rolling hills and the William Morris wallpaper will ace your Insta game. There’s a cosy log burner for winter nights and a terrace for summer barbecues.

The food

The Pig

East Kent’s burgeoning foodie scene recently saw The Good Food Guide nodding to the area with props to its fresh, locally-sourced seafood, cheesemakers and organic farmer’s markets, led largely by Stephen Harris’ Michelin-starred pub The Sportsman in Whitstable, and Dan Smith’s Fordwich Arms in Britain’s smallest village, Fordwich.

The Pig at Bridge Place looks set to trot closely behind, thanks to chef, Kamil Oseka, who along with a number of other key staff was relocated from other Pig hotels. Keeping it in the family clearly works, because when you know, you know. And these guys know their food.

The Pig

The fresh-as-it-gets ’25 mile menu’ is named so because all ingredients – if not grown or reared on site – are locally-sourced within a 25 mile-radius. It is, of course, a meat-eaters’ dream (the clue’s in the name) but vegetarians won’t be disappointed with delicious offerings such as seasonal asparagus with homemade vegan herb mayo, spring pea risotto with mint oil and thyme-roasted beetroot.

After an aperitif of local fizz, one of the famous sharing platters is an essential starter – we went for the meaty option: crackling and apple sauce, bacon jam and captain’s crackers (basically posh smoky bacon crisps and utterly moreish) and hock eggs with mustard. For mains, we opted for the chargrilled Brogdale pork tomahawk with garden greens – roughly the size of one’s head and succulent to the bone.

The Pig

Tuck in to generous dishes in the buzzy, open kitchen, with the best spot in the light, airy orangery, all potted herbs and reclaimed wood tables, with a relaxed vibe that feels reassuringly chill as opposed to overly-formal.

Things to do

In Bridge, you’re only 30 minutes from Margate, which has rapidly become an overspill for culture-hungry east Londoners, thanks to the Turner Contemporary and some big love from Tracey Emin. The town retains much of its faded seaside glamour (hello, Dreamland theme park) but tucked away down narrow side streets you’ll find vintage clothing shops, artists’ studios and pop-up food and cocktail bars.

For serious Pig devotees, this summer sees the return of Smoked & Uncut, the popular food and music festival which hits The Pig-near Bath, The Pig New Forest, and sister hotel Limewood, from 15th June. Angela Hartnett will be serving up seasonal Italian deliciousness in her pop-up field kitchen and Mark Hix will be dishing out home cooked curries at his Ruby Murray House. There are crab shacks, BBQs and some seriously tasty vegan offerings, all to the soundtrack of live performances from The Vaccines, Kaiser Chiefs, Sister Sledge, Professor Green and Rob da Bank. Glamping never tasted - or indeed sounded -so good.

Rooms at The Pig at Bridge Place start from £145

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