Pages

Tuesday, 19 May 2015

Cromer and Sheringham Crab and Lobster Festival

We had a to-do list as long as your arm this weekend, but it had been a tough week for everyone so we decided to sack it all off and go out for some fun instead. 

The Cromer and Sheringham Crab and Lobster Festival was on this weekend and some advertising had caught my eye, so a trip to the seaside it was. We hurled buckets and spades and an empty cool bag in the boot and headed off on the rather mammoth drive. Predictably none of our ice packs were in the freezer, so I nipped into the supermarket and picked up a bag of ice, ignoring the Old Man's protests that it would never last - it did of course. Win to me. It worked perfectly but ugh what on earth do they put in that ice?! 

With The Kooks blaring out of the stereo and the car windows open this felt like the first day of summer. 

Do you want to go to the seaside? 

Hell yeah!


The festival is in it's fifth year and attracts over 20,000 visitors to the two towns.  There's so much going on with events over many venues including live music; trails; cookery demonstrations; children's entertainment and stalls.  In truth our whistle-stop tour of Cromer wasn't enough time to enjoy everything and when we go back next year we'd look to stay overnight.  Some of the evening events looked brilliant, the lifeboat museum had combined it with the national Museums at Night campaign for example and on the Friday night there was an opening concert on the pier.

First up we visited the guys from the Inshore Fisheries and Conservation Authority.  And they were indeed an authority, showing off native crustaceans from the Cromer coast and beguiling us with fascinating facts like how to tell a male and a female crab apart, and how female lobsters carry their eggs around on their underbelly for around 10 months - it's actually all very fascinating and you can read more about it here.


Female lobster carrying eggs


I have a love/hate relationship with crabs.  When I was a kid I remember swimming out in the sea with my mum.  It was one of those flat beaches where you could swim out for miles and still touch the bottom.  Well, this one day I inadvertently put my foot down right on top of a bloody great crab which then proceeded to go into attack mode and attached it's vice-like pincer grip to my instep.  It was pure agony, especially as the salty sea water came into contact with the puncture wounds and I had to lift my leg high into the air like a very inelegant synchronised swimmer with the crab fiercely attached so my mum could remove it.  As my leg went up, my head went under and I very nearly drowned.

My payback to these vicious crustaceans is eating them.  Preferably with a spritz of lemon juice in a nice crab sandwich - delicious!

We visited the demonstration area and were shown how to dress a crab (I've never understood that expression.  Surely undressing a crab would make more sense?!).  The Old Man was keen to have a go so he was given his own crab to wield a knife at, and although it's probably not the neatest ever dressed crab, he did a pretty good job and felt confident enough for us to buy a whole crab to bring home - that's currently sitting in our freezer, so I hope he can remember how to do it when the time comes.




As well as all the crab and lobster, there were tonnes of other local food stalls at Evington Lawns, right near the sea-front.  Real ales; local apple juice; freshly squeezed French lemonade;  local cheese; breads and pastries; cakes; fudge; honey; pickles and preserves all made for a scrumptious stroll, savouring the samples at each one.





This lavender cheese was just divine, made from local cow's milk by Norton's Dairy, it is flavoured with delicate lavender, chervil and rosemary for a sublimely fragrant soft cheese.  It certainly made it into my cool bag to bring home.

There were displays by the local beekeeping association, as well as lots of honey and honey-related products on sale and Ruby tried her hand at rolling a beeswax candle.



We'd sadly missed the paella and by the time we got there were greeted with what must be one of the world's largest paella dishes completely empty - some poor sod must have had the job of washing that up.  We made do with delicious crab sandwiches served up by appropriately dressed staff, and washed down with a refreshing bottle of local Bramley apple juice.



Everywhere and everyone was decorated to the theme and it was a really vibrant festival atmosphere. There was so much to see and do (and eat!) we could have stayed for hours, but sadly it was a five hour round trip so we had to cram in what we could.




We headed over to the pier, one of Britain's oldest with roots going back to the fourteenth century, although in those days it was more of a jetty.  The pier as you see today dates from 1901.

It's always a popular haunt for crabbing, but over the festival weekend competition hots up for the championship and there's always people happy to show off their catches.



After an obligatory ice cream and a go on some of the rides, we took a stroll along the beach, watching the seagulls and admiring the pretty beach houses.  




Just time for some fish and chips by the sea front from No 1 Cromer, before heading home.

It was a glorious day and we ended our foodie road trip with a pit-stop at a cute caravan by the roadside on the way home to stock up on some fresh local asparagus to add the the haul.  It combined rather nicely with the crab in a homemade quiche which we scoffed for tea last night.




We'll definitely be back to sample more of the delights that Cromer has to offer and will be making a date in the diary for next year's festival.


Linking up with Time Traveller.


26 comments:

  1. Ah I do love North Norfolk!! I can't wait to be back there in the summer having read this!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oooh lucky you! Where will you be staying?

      Delete
  2. Ahhhhhhhhhhh - we would have LOVED this! It's going in the diary for next year! In fact, I'm pinning it now so that I don't forget! We all love seafood - I prefer lobster over crab, and hubs is vice versa. The boy loves lobster, so yeah, a perfect day out for us! Just looking through the photos has made me really hungry! x

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yay fab! Sounds like it will be perfect for you!

      Delete
  3. I absolutely love this sort of foodie festival day out. I'd be in heaven. Fab photos!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Love foodie festivals, I'd even love this one and I'm a veggie. Local food really interests me and different types of food, like the lavender cheese. UK Summer events like this are the best! All those lobster eggs!!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Love local food and finding new things.

      Delete
  5. Oh this is why I love living by the seaside. I grew up in an age when my mum and dad would often find lobster or crabs crawling in the front yard after getting them as a gift for doing a favour for friends in the fishing industry.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh how fab Jen! I can imagine you running around the lawn to catch them!

      Delete
  6. aw no, see we love looking for crabs on our holidays and seaside trips , i dont think we could watch or do this but wow to the honey bees

    ReplyDelete
  7. What an interesting sounding festival. I would love to spend more time down by the sea. x

    ReplyDelete
  8. Ha ha I love your revenge tale! Crab is very tasty, though. As are those cheesecakes and quiche, by the looks of things. This gorgeous post is making me feel very hungry indeed!

    ReplyDelete
  9. We always find these events really enjoyable and mine would love to get up close to a lobster. Sadly I am allergic to shell fish

    ReplyDelete
  10. Your crab tale made me chuckle and I had to share it with the hubby! I'm not a fan of eating crab and I've never tried lobster but I'd still go just for the rest of the food stalls!

    ReplyDelete
  11. Ah, we were in Norfolk this weekend in Sunny Hunny but didn't make it that far - sounds good fun and you can't beat a Norfolk Crab Sandwich at the coast. #timetraveller

    ReplyDelete
  12. what a lovely day, i too wonder why they say dressing a crab

    ReplyDelete
  13. Oh I feel so hungry now reading that, that cheese sounds amazing! What a brilliant event and I'm not surprised you feel like eating crab after that experience, it sounds really painful

    ReplyDelete
  14. Oh wow, a crab and lobster festival - what a great idea! I wouldn't have touched those crabs though haha - ugh! I love the photos you took of the beach huts, really pretty :-) #timetraveller
    Sabrina x

    ReplyDelete
  15. Ooh what a lovely day , I love crab

    ReplyDelete
  16. Oh wow I love crab and lobster especial so fresh like that. I would have loved to visit that festival xx

    ReplyDelete
  17. What I wouldn't give for a Cromer Crab sandwich right now, and that pie, and a piece of that cake,and those fish and chips, and the quiche! Loved this post Lizzie, it looks like a fantastic day out, and your pictures are great! :) x

    ReplyDelete
  18. Nasty meeting with a crab there you had! I'd eat all the buggers too if that happened to me. As it goes I do like a crab sandwich.
    Cromer and Sheringham festival sounds fantastic, I'd love to go and I'd love to buy some of those products. Yum.
    Thanks for linking up to #time Traveller

    ReplyDelete
  19. Ooooh I am not sure about crab and lobster. i don't eat it, and hate seeing them alive waiting to be killed! Looks a great dayout though. Kaz x

    ReplyDelete