The Cafe Cour du Miracle | |
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The cafe interior is bright and fresh. The walls are a perfect gallery for collections of photographs, lino prints, and hand made glass ornaments all made by local artists and available for purchase. | |
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Food and Drink | |
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Now we approach the cooler autumn and winter days it makes sense to have a warming, satisfying meal at lunchtime. Why not pop into the cafe and try something off our new Winter Menu? We have three new pies, all home made with top quality ingredients; Beef cooked in a rich Guinness gravy, steak and kidney and Chicken, leek and ham pies all cooked in a light and crusty pie pastry. We also have a vegetarian option cooked in a traditional pastie case. Another warming option is Paul's Chicken Curry - any of you who have been to one of our curry nights knows that this is a wonderful tasty curry - based on a Balti recipe it comes served with rice and mango chutney - a sure winner on a cold winter afternoon. We also have our firm favourites; Chicken and Mushroom Cobbler served with vegetables; Lasagne served with a side salad or fried potatoes (after many requests they are now firmly on the menu!); Chilli con carne and Vegetarian Chilli, both served with rice, taco chips and guacamole. All our main meals are now served with real mashed potatoes (not from a packet..) or fired potatoes and vegetables, just let us know your choice when you order.
For those of you wishing for something lighter we also have Omelets with a side salad; Jacket Potatoes with a selection of toppings such as cheese and bacon, chilli or tuna, also served with a side salad and of course our full range of burgers (single, double, cheese or bacon and cheese), baguettes and sandwiches, including the BLT and Breakfast Banjo. There is sure to be something to wet your appetite!
We still have our full list of hot, cold, alcoholic and non-alcoholic drinks on offer and our range of artisan ice creams. Paul makes a splendid "Chocolat Gourmande" - hot chocolate with marshmallows and chantilly cream - just the thing after a walk round the ramparts or by the river on a cold afternoon. Keep an eye out too for specials too such as the mulled wine in the weeks coming up to Christmas. And don't forget, if you would like us to cater for an event or would like us to hold an even in the cafe for you, just ask and we will do all we can to make your occasion special. ? |
Events and News | |
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2 February 2012 Hello everyone! Here I am sitting at the computer looking out at a very cold and grey landscape - oh so cold! We are pretty lucky here as the snow seldom lasts long so when it started to fall on Monday I was sure that it would be be gone by Tuesday - and it was! However I think there will be more on the way and it is promising to be very cold here over the coming few days - please wrap up and keep warm everyone! Paul is putting the mulled wine back on the menu for the weekend so that should keep us warm and cheery! Well we have had a quiet month this past January, not so for everyone though. You may remember we were wishing John and his sons well with their Kilimanjaro climb, well I am very pleased to report that they made it and have the photos to prove it (see a copy in the cafe). Well done on the climb and for making lots of money for the Prostrate Cancer charity. We had a brilliant evening on Saturday at our Curry Evening Quiz - the winning and second place teams were only separated by one point. The winning team "Rocket 88" were first time players at the quiz evening and won with a very respectable score of 83 out of a possible 100. The runners up "The Weakest Links" were only one point behind with 82 points. The wooden spoon went to another team of quiz first timers (also the team with our youngest members!) - the "Lone Wolves", let's hope that that has not put them off and that Matthew and Callum bring Mum and Dad back with them again next time! Our next quiz will not be until the first weekend in March - Saturday 3rd March. The meal this time will be Lasagne with garlic bread and the evening will start at 7.30pm. As usual, tables of four can be booked with Paul behind the bar. Tickets will be 10 Euros each (including the quiz and meal) and your table booking can be secured by a 10Euro deposit. We look forward to seeing you! We will be taking a break this month for a rest to get ourselves ready for the spring and summer seasons so here are some dates for your diary: The cafe will be closed from Monday 6th February and will re-open on Saturday 25th February. We will then be back to our usual opening hours - i.e. closed Monday and Tuesday each week and open from 11.00am until we close around 6.00pm. We hope you all have a lovely Valentine's Day and look forward to seeing you all again soon in the cafe!
Kind regards Paul and Karen Braun Cafe Cour du Miracle |
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Previous updates can be found at our archives page. |
history | |
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The renown of the Lusignans was such that, two centuries later, it inspired Jean d'Arras. He took Eustache Chabot, the mother of Geoffrey the Big Tooth, as the oracle for his Melusine who, with three apronfuls of Stone and a draught of water covered Poitou with towers and stout walls. One evening in the forest of Coulombiers, at the end of a long day's hunting, Aimeri, the Count of Poitiers and his nephew Raimondin set off in pursuit of a wild boar. They far out-distanced their attendants and arrived at the outskirts of the Forest de Cé, near Lusignan. There, during the excitement of the kill, Raimondin accidentally dealt his uncle a fatal blow. Overcome by deep sorrow, aghast and contrite at this action the young man was on his way back to confess what he had done when, at a bend in the road he caught sight of three maidens dancing in a glade by the light of the moon. One of them smiled and spoke to him. Her name was Mélusine. She was a fairy, daughter of Elinas, King of Albania and the fairy Pressine. |
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A terrible curse lay on her. Pressine had punished her for her bad behaviour towards her father by condemning her to a sad immortality unless she married a loving knight who was not inquisitive and who agreed never to see her on Saturdays because on that day she had to bathe and watch her beautiful long legs turn into a horrid scaly tail, and if her husband saw her like this, she would never again take on human form. Raimondin was attracted by the young girl's intelligence and beauty and asked her to marry him. He swore he would never try to see her on a Saturday. Mélusine was delighted to find a husband and accepted. She suggested that he should provide the lands and the castle. But Raimondin, who was not wealthy, wondered what lands and what castle? Once back at court, Raimondin who was very happy, but very sad also, tried to solve his problem by blaming the boar for the death of the Count. Then, during the ceremony of homage to the new Count of Poitou, on Melisine's advice he asked for as much land as would fit into a deerskin. 'How stupid' said the assembled lords. However, to everybody's consternation, the deerskin was cut into narrow strips and laid end to end and marked out an enormous area. 'Never mind' said the lords, 'he still hasn't got a castle'. Their complacency was short-lived for in one night, right in the middle of the territory with three apron-fuls of stones and a mouthful of water Mélusine build the splendid castle of Luisignan. Moreover, so that her husband might be the most powerful lord in the region, she amused herself on certain nights by studding the surrounding hills with mighty fortresses. However, so much good fortune gave rise to unkind comments and covetousness. Where did Mélusine's fairly-like beauty come from? Why was it that each of the ten children of Raimondin and Mélusine, all boys had some strange physical characteristics? One had only one eye and that was in the middle of his forehead. another had a lion's claw on his cheek; another one enormous ear; and yet another Geoffroy, Mélusine's favourite and it was said the most wicked had a huge tooth protruding from his mouth. And why did Mélusine shut herself away every Saturday? Raimondin followed the advice of a jealous brother, to try to solve this secret of his wife's. He surprised Mélusine in her bath, combing her long fair hair and swishing her horrible fish tail. Hardly had he taken this fatal step than the fairy screamed and with a great noise like the flapping of wings she flew out of the window voicing a terrible curse on the castles she had built. 'I swear that Pouzauges, Tiffauges, Mervent, Chateaumur and Vouvant shall perish by losing one stone a year.' But she came back to suckle her last child, and some say that on certain nights she still comes to haunt the ruins of her castles. | |