
At the weekend, whilst travelling, I stopped for my midday meal at the
Fountain Inn at Parkend in the
Forest of Dean. The meal was very enjoyable and tasty, but didn’t quite live up to its billing on the
menu. I went had the steak and ale pie, ‘A rich, old-fashioned pie, topped with puff-pastry.’ Well, rich, yes, though a little runny — it would have benefited from the gravy within being a little thicker. It’s also true to say that it was topped with puff-pastry, but that’s the problem, it was only topped, no sides nor base. For me, ‘old-fashioned’ when applied to pie construction implies that the pastry encases the filling, not just tops it off in modern mass-catering style. It was very tasty, freshly prepared stuff, but more like chunky steak-and-carrot soup with a puff-pastry lid on than a real pie.

The inn clearly does plenty of business from the local
railway and the welcome was friendly and the
beer good. It’s well worth a visit, just don’t expect the food to be as authentically traditional as the website menu suggests.
2 warblings:
Oh my God, I know that pub well! My wife and are frequent visitors to the Forest and always make a point of eating at the Fountain Inn.
Our meals there have always been exceptionally good and to be honest, if the menu says 'topped with puff pastry' I wouldn't be too upset to discover that was actually an accurate description.
It’s a pet irritation for me. If it had been described as ‘meat filling topped with puff pastry’ I wouldn’t have minded. But it definitely isn’t an ‘old fashioned pie’!
As I said, the food was tasty and the staff friendly. If I pass that way again I’ll happily eat there again… but when it comes to pie construction I’m thoroughly traditional.
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