Kieran Falconer
Stories and Songs on today's free French CD, with The Times

The ABode Canterbury is part of a new chain of four-star, stylish but not overpriced hotels with properties in Glasgow and Exeter, and two more to come in Manchester and Chester.
At first glance, it is a slick operation. The lobby opens up into a large champagne bar to the right and reception in front. Aubergine carpet is interspersed with Paul Smith-like multiple lines of colour throughout the building. Walls feature photographs of Canterbury at drunken angles.
On arrival I am held up by staff dealing with a backlog of restaurant bookings. But I am pleased to be given an upgrade — admittedly from a small to a not quite so small room.
It is the coldest day of the year and there is no warm welcome in the bedroom as the sash window has been left open. I have to rely on a fan heater to ease the chill — and there is no heating at all in the bathroom.
The bed is good, wide and comfy. However, the flat-screen TV is bizarrely at bed height so you have to have feet the size of a doll’s to watch it if you are lying down. The bathroom is quite bland and uninviting, but the toiletries are from Arran Aromatics — grapefruit soap, coconut body lotion, bergamot and ginger hand cream — all quite lush. In essence the bedroom is adequate, but the meagre heating is not good enough for the published price of £125.
You can warm up in Canterbury’s first truly chic restaurant. This is a Michael Caines franchise with a fine chef, Mark Rossi, overseeing the kitchen. The open design provides 74 seats with a glass wall dividing the main restaurant from a private dining room.
Three courses for £30 is good value when you remember that there is also an appetiser and a predessert. Joel, the maître d, is extremely jolly and puts guests at their ease instantly. I let him guide me to an excellent Australian pinot noir Dromana Estate 2003 (though, at £25, I felt it was overpriced). The house wine (red Rhône or South African chenin blanc) is a reasonable £16.50.
The food is fantastic. The breads — olive bread, crunchy mini stick, fluffy roll — are all made from French flour. The homemade grissini and taramasalata appetiser has a delicate, authentic taste. My starter is pan-fried veal sweetbreads, which are succulent, juicy and crispy, and then I hunt down a sublime pithvier filled with pheasant and chestnuts and surrounded by mushrooms. This is bliss.
All in all, come along...but bring your thermals.
Bottom line: Kieran Falconer paid £125 B&B.
Sampling the fare: Good service in the restaurant with a delicious
menu.
What we think: Perfect for a good night out.
Worst thing: The 3am trip to the bathroom when my toes froze to the
floor tiles.
Access all areas: Two rooms, plus restaurant and bar, wheelchair
accessible.
Room: 6 out of 10.
Food: 9 out of 10.
Service: 8 out of 10.
Need to know: ABode Canterbury (01227 766266, www.abodehotels.co.uk), High Street, Canterbury.
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i recently travelled on a first great western train service from trowbridge to salisbury. the condition of the toilets on this train was SO poor that I felt compelled to take photo's of them, I would love to be able to email them to you so you can show your viewers..
David Settle, Swindon,
Stayed for three nights (via Superbreak) last November. In contrast to review, room was insufferably hot for sleeping, and incredibly noisy for much of the night when the windows were opened to try to cool things down. Our double room was reasonably large and attractively styled, but with more emphasis on appearance than practicality. As described, flat screen TV was so sited as to be almost unwatchable, but the bed was large and comfortable and the toiletries excellent. Can't comment on the evening meals because I like to know what is on offer before booking a table, and reception resolutely refused to provide any details - and the posted information was at least a week out of date. Excellent Italian restaurant across the road, though!
Kevin Taylor, Leatherhead, Surrey
Had a weekend at the Abode in Canterbury a couple of weeks ago (obviously not such a cold weekend) The room was lovely and warm, in fact we had to open the window! The food was really good the night we had in the restaurant. However, if you have two nights as we did, do try the "Goods Shed" down at the station - strange surroundings, but the best food I have ever eaten.
Lynne Dobbins, Gt Yarmouth, Norfolk
On a blustery early January day in Canterbury, three of us on a daytrip from London to see the Cathedral decided that a warm and leisurely lunch would be just the thing. After wandering around a bit and knowing nothing about it, we took a chance on the dining room at the ABode Hotel. What good fortune! The food, service, and ambience surpassed anything we'd been experiencing in London. Not to mention the value. I spend a couple of weeks in London every year and have my favorite dining spots there, but I will be sorely tempted to make the journey to Canterbury next year in hopes of repeating this experience.
Robert Johnson, Lexington, USA/Virginia