Gull About Town – Nov 2024

As winter approaches, it’s a time to batten down the hatches, put a head under a wing and settle in for the dark nights ahead. It’s not a good look for most restaurants, but wait, what’s this? Your gull has spotted has spotted a new dining experience coming out of hibernation. 

Amari is the reborn Amarillo, the partnership headed up Mo and Ali from Halisco and Michelin-starred former Murmur chef, Ian Swansain who has been feeding his delicious morsels for private hires and pop ups while simmering ideas for his new Spanish diner in Baker Street. Sourcing local fish and British pigs from farms where they’re positively encouraged to run around and have a good time, the vibe is definitely Latin. With excellent pickings for the finer palate, the Serrano and Iberico hams will come from the best Spanish producers while his Halisco fans will still find his legendary tacos on the table. The culture though is more modern British; the suckling pig will have had a longer life than its local Spanish equivalent, and Ian will be proudly breaking down the beast to make sure there’s zero waste. 

Hovering over Hove, your gull finds herself in a renovated Victorian terrace with best friends, Lauren Mullany and Ben Smith, also staying at home with their monthly lunch club, The Sunday Joint. Word had already reached the ears of your gull about this lovely little supper club in May this year; the young gulls in the family, disillusioned with work and lack of work life balance, had heard of this Millenial chef who wanted to prioritise the things she truly enjoys, such as cooking, recipe development and helping people to bond over shared culinary experiences. And so your gull happily flew over to peck at the windows. Spotting a cheffing certificate from Ireland’s Ballymaloe Cookery School on Lauren’s kitchen wall, your intrepid bird spent a fine Sunday afternoon pecking at the exquisite leftovers, particularly enjoying Lauren’s home brews for a little winter well-being boost. 

Over in Portland Road, your gull’s sticky beak happened upon a renovation at The Spice Circuit where Kanthi Thamma, the former Chilli Pickle chef and co-founder of Palmito, has just opened the smallest restaurant in town. At the back of a cocktail bar, he invites just four people to a South Indian feast at a table in his kitchen, a home from home. Cracking open the idea that South Indian food is all about dosas, each menu represents his best finds from the five different states in south of India, each with completely different cuisines. The Jaffna black pork, a rich and fragrant slow-cooked curry with black pepper, coconut vinegar and pandan combined with dark roasted curry powder from Sri Lanka is a gull favourite, and also available from Uber Eats.

Hopping on a thermal to West Sussex, your gull finds herself at home at Four. Tucked away in his own home in residential Worthing, former Smoking Goat chef and single dad, Aaron Dalton is putting food on his own table while his kids sleep upstairs. Your gull followed the aromas of local mackerel and Sussex beef to peck at the windows of his purpose-built kitchen with gull-friendly outside smoke-house and barbecue, and to taste some of the locally sourced slow braised, home-smoked dishes she’s scavenged.

As your bird glides home, the sun sets on a glassy sea. The curtains are closed early across town but for a food fan, it’s going to be a cosy few months ahead.

Puck Cafe – by Ceri Barnes Thompson

Having thought Puck was the sum of its tiny frontage,  I quickly found out when I went to have a chat with the owners  Ralph and Zoe, that it’s actually a warren-like oasis offering what Zoe describes as “a living breathing authentic place where people feel like it’s theirs, enriching their lives”. Ralph laughs. “Yeah, just like you discovered, you just don’t know what we are till you come in”. 

The musician and artist couple took it on just over two years ago, Ralph having worked there for the previous six years since arriving from north England to realise a dream of creating a space that brought together the things that they most care about – music and art. 

Puck is a fully and genuinely independent café/space/gathering spot. I’m nervous to just call it a café as Zoe’s very clear that she doesn’t think of it as that – it’s also a community space where artists who she feels are under-represented in Brighton can lay their hats, exhibit work, come and have creative conversations, or for customers to just be. 

Certainly it serves the most delicious cup of coffee in Brighton (so The Guardian said, and I have to agree). Having a cuppa can be an artistic act for Zoe – crucially it’s not just a transaction. Ralph agrees. They know the regulars not just by name but by their drink – think caffeinated Cheers. There’s no distinction between drink-in or take-away prices, single use paper cups are the norm there. There are porcelain cups too, but reader – this is an ‘if you know, you know’ situation – I was astonished to see hung up neatly in the kitchen the cups of around 70 local regulars who can walk in and expect to be served in their very own cup. 

So why Puck? For Zoe ‘Puck’ represents the mischief of the character from Midsummer Nights Dream. She loves the role of disruptor, messing with the routine, curating as much as she can once Ralph’s morning and afternoon residence is over, thinking of ways to offer anything from Pudding Nights to Art residences and market events for the local community. Her lovely character design graces the limited edition T shirts draped over a mushroom, for example. Indeed functional mushrooms powders to add to drinks are available from Jardin Collective and savoury and sweet snacks are locally sourced too. 

A “puck” is also that hard disc of grounds you get when you’ve pressed hot water through a coffee-machine. Ralph only uses locally sourced ‘Pharmacie’ single origin coffee. The limited batches mean the coffee will change, taste wise, over the weeks, but the brew you are served will always be good. For him the quality is measured in the sound of the drop, the colour and literally the feel of the drink in his hands. If he’s not happy, it’ll be discreetly disguarded and he’ll start again.

A “puck” is also the lump of plastic which is the starting point of every vinyl record – some of which are for sale in the shop upstairs. For Ralph, music is his life – he plays, writes and collects and curates music. From Pink Floyd’s Atom Heart Mother (which was his lullaby as a baby) to the monthly playlists he makes and describes as being “like sourdough starters”, it’s about suggesting new things to listen to. He curates the albums on offer for sale and knows that customers are very likely to come across something they didn’t know they’d like. 

The emotional connection to music is clear. They tell the stories of life in bands and venues in the north and of the past life of Puck – a TV repair shop where the back room, now a gathering place with seats and tables and board games, was then a pirate radio station, broadcasting to the Brighton area. Music is art, coffee is art, cups are art, conversation is art, everything is connected. Spend your money in Puck. Be a Puck Pal. They’re creating a scene and I want to be in it.

Sian Berry – Nov/Dec 2024

Since being elected in July, alongside three amazing new Green MP colleagues, I’ve been very, very busy in Brighton and in Westminster, with lots of great Green ideas to put forward, and lots to challenge in my first days as an MP, working across the chamber from a new Labour government.

So far in Parliament, I’ve personally asked 32 written questions, put questions to ministers in the chamber and spoken in debates 11 times, proposed three amendments to Bills, and signed 76 Early Day Motions (EDMs). Green MPs teamed up to propose a King’s Speech amendment as one of our first tasks, and we’ve written to ministers jointly on topics ranging from healthcare to community energy, to taxes and the Budget.

Green MPs worked together to table the first Early Day Motion of this Parliament on bringing water companies back into public hands.

With Carla Denyer, I have also raised concerns about healthcare for young trans constituents directly with Wes Streeting. Many residents have written to me about this issue too, and I’m pleased to have taken action.

Here in Brighton, I have an amazing constituency team and since July, we’ve already dealt with over 500 cases from constituents, held weekly surgeries, visited residents and projects to see problems for ourselves, and written to the council about issues ranging from school closures to planning applications. Issues brought to me by residents in West Hill and North Laine have ranged from anti-social behavior in Zion Gardens, to supporting residents in emergency accommodation and with delays in housing repairs. I’m also in contact with traders in the North Laine who are experiencing long standing issues with theft and shoplifting. On fire safety issues in West Hill and North Laine, I’ve been supporting residents in the New England Quarter and City Point and joined them on ITV calling for action.

At my Parliament office I have been lobbied so far by five constituents in person, and via email I’ve received messages related to campaigns, world events and policies more than 4,000 times on more than 240 different issues. It’s so valuable to get a clear picture like this of what matters most to so many of the people I represent! I’m taking action, supporting campaigns, attending events and writing back to people with the results as quickly as I can while I build up my final Parliamentary staff team.

In the voting lobbies, I have voted ‘AYE’ or ‘NO’ 18 times (abstensions are not recorded). We’ve supported the first stages of several of the Government’s Bills, and are preparing to make amendments to improve them, including on the Great British Energy Bill and the Renters Rights Bill. But seeing the Labour Government vote down two very sensible motions and amendments to get rid of the two-child benefit limit and keep the winter fuel allowance for pensioners was bitterly disappointing.

As four Green MPs we are able to share out the main ‘shadowing’ duty on different departments and each focus on changing particular policies. My main responsibilities are currently to challenge social housing policy, police and criminal justice, work and pensions, culture, media and sport, disabled people, transport and clean air. I have started work on each of these already, and I am also taking up individual issues where Brighton needs action, such as sewage and pesticides.

I was very happy to introduce a Private Member’s Bill, devised by Pesticide Action Network, that would stop public bodies using harmful chemical pesticides in public spaces, streets and gardens and I’m looking for cross-party support to take this issue further.

On housing, I have been pushing for investment in buying not just building council homes, action on the fire safety crisis, plus the need for transparency from housing associations – an area I have challenged the Prime Minister on directly.

On media and culture, I have challenged the council to do more to reduce gambling (and advertising for gambling) in the city, and I’m also doing lots of work supporting grassroots music venues under threat, including the Prince Albert in the North Laine, and working closely with the Music Venue Trust.

On transport I’m making it my mission to address the long standing accessibility challenges at Preston Park Station. I’ve asked questions and have already tabled more coming up. I have already been pushing for an extension to the £2 bus fare cap and, ahead of the Budget, I’ve asked ministers and the Chancellor for more long-term investment for local active travel.

On climate and nature, I’ve met with local Greenpeace members to sign their pledges to keep up the pressure on the new government to bring climate solutions. All four Green MPs are fully behind the newly tabled Climate and Nature Bill.

Throughout all this time, all Green MPs have been pushing for peace, human rights and justice in Israel and Palestine. Locally, after a strong campaign, I was pleased that Brighton’s war plane part manufacturer L3 Harris had its planning decision refused by the council, but there is still no export ban to Israel on parts for the F-35 fighter, and I have been asking questions about why not, working with Campaign Against the Arms Trade.

I was the only MP to join the local response on our streets to the summer’s far right riots and was so proud of Brighton’s clear and positive defence of potential targets in the city and our refusal to accept fascists on our streets. In my maiden speech I praised the young people behind Citizens UK Brighton and Hove and joined them to celebrate their victory in winning a city-wide counselling pilot in Brighton recently.

And finally, a Green on BBC Question Time is historically quite rare, but in July I was asked to go on right after the election, alongside fellow Brighton and Hove MP, Peter Kyle. Carla Denyer was also asked on the programme two months later – which we hope is a good sign for future chances to talk about Brighton on the national stage.

Peter Chrisp on Club Silencio

For the last nine years, Club Silencio has been staging extraordinary shows in various Brighton venues. I remember seeing my first one in a sex dungeon in Kemptown and feeling as if I had walked into one of the transgressive early films of John Waters. The next time I saw them they’d built a giant television set in the Phoenix Art Space, where they performed a surreal version of Blind Date, in which a water phobic contestant won a date with the Creature from Hove Lagoon. Then they turned the Arcobaleno bar into a pool party set in hell.

You can see Club Silencio yourself this December, in the Latest Music bar in Manchester St, performing My Bloody Pantomime (“Pantomime characters are quaking in their stilettos as a serial killer is picking them off one by one”). We are promised “gags, gore and a giant eyeball in this pantomime of epic proportions.” Stuart says this is the first Club Silencio show to feature panto characters: “However, most of them are dead!” 

I asked Stuart how it all began. “Silencio was created back in 2015. I’d been spending some nights at Subline, at the time Brighton’s only men-only sex dungeon, with my friend John Tovey. We loved it down there and saw loads of possibility for the subterranean space. The idea was to subvert the space by making it a very classy night. Dressing up in fancy clothes was encouraged, and the space was dressed with frilly lamp shades. We had a toilet attendant, who recited poetry, and a gimp in a tuxedo who walked around with doughnuts on a silver tray. I booked friends – mostly female folk singers – to play, as they brought something unique to the dank and seedy space, and I dressed up as a clown, and sang songs between the acts. For the first show I didn’t really have many acts, so I made up sketches involving puppets, and got friends to wear masks and lip-sync to weird audio clips.”

As for the Silencio name, Stuart says, “I had been to Paris that year and really wanted to go to David Lynch’s nightclub, Club Silencio, named after the club in his film Mulholland Drive. However, it was very expensive to get in and I couldn’t afford it at the time. So, irked by the exclusiveness of it, when it came to picking a name for my own club night, I chose that as a bit of a screw you to David, because Brighton’s Club Silencio was going to be a cheap and more subversive space.

John was my chief in command, and he was brilliant at dressing the room. My friend Joe worked with me in a kitchen at the time, and I persuaded him to be the gimp for the night. My friend Louis was the toilet attendant, and Juno was happy to DJ. Another friend, Ralph, ate doughnuts slowly to a weird advert for Krispy Kreme I’d made (the joke was they were our sponsors). I loved the idea that anyone who wanted to get involved could. After that lots of amazing performers, musicians, actors and creatives have come and gone over the nine years that followed, but John, Misha, Kit, Damian, Tommy, Jon, and Juno, have been at the core of Silencio.”

Alongside Stuart, the main writer is the novelist and actress Juno Dawson. Juno played Dorothy in Club Silencio’s wonderful musical, Return Again to Oz, a hit show in last year’s fringe. You can listen to the songs from the show on Bandcamp.

The regular club host is Jon Griffin, who does an uncanny impression of Death from Ingmar Bergman’s The Seventh Seal. Jon writes his own satirical monologues for the shows, and is so good at being Death that he has since taken the character into stand-up comedy clubs. He’s a composer, like Stuart, and they co-write the songs for the shows.

For Pride in 2019, to mark the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall Riots, Stuart and Juno created Equality of the Daleks. Juno, author of several Dr Who related books, got to play the doctor in a time travelling investigation of how the brick that started the riots was thrown. The brick thrower was a sexually confused dalek.

I wondered if the shows are a reaction to the way Brighton Pride has become corporate and mainstream? “Well, I thought the gay scene was crap, and Pride was just an extension of that. It had nothing to offer me and made me feel unwelcome because I didn’t conform to the idea of what a gay man should be like. I rejected it, and thus was an outsider from my tribe, so in the end I made my own tribe. Now queer outsiders are very in vogue, and there’s loads of great nights that cater to them.”

For the last nine years, Club Silencio’s magnificent sets, props and costumes have been made by Kit Yellery (Odd Fabrication on Instagram). Stuart says, “Kit is incredible and one of the things I always loved was arriving at the venue and seeing what amazing things she’d made. She really is a genius. Last year was her final show with us, and it feels very strange not to have her involved now.”

Club Silencio shows are inclusive, welcoming and immersive. Audience members are encouraged to dress up and take part in surreal games and competitions.  There’s usually an interval, when the actors pose for life drawing sessions, with prizes at the end. 

Next year will be Club Silencio’s tenth anniversary, and Stuart says he has big plans for the celebration: “I can say no more but it will be something special.” Meanwhile, we have My Bloody Pantomime to look forward too – guaranteed to be a highlight of the festive season. 

l http://www.outsavvy.com/event/22586/club-silencio-presents-my-bloody-pantomime

l http://www.instagram.com/clubsilenciobrighton

l https://iamelliotlee.wixsite.com/stuart-warwick

l https://www.jonhgriffin.com

l http://www.junodawson.com

l http://www.instagram.com/oddfabrication

l https://clubsilencio2.bandcamp.com/album/return-again-to-oz-original-cast-soundtrack

Everything you ever wanted to know about life in Brighton (OK, and Hove)