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Seasonal Notes from Mull’s Ninth Wave Restaurant

The Isle of Mull has a thriving food scene. Nowhere is this more in evidence than at the highly acclaimed Ninth Wave restaurant near Fionnphort, on the Isle of Mull’s west coast.  Here Carla Lamont cooks up a storm, while Jonny battles one, to bring you the freshest seafood!  Produce from the croft is brought to the plate with a style and flavour that embodies dining at its best.

We caught up with Carla and asked her to give us her seasonal highlights, along with a delicious dish to go with each of the four seasons of Mull.

Spring

A faint flush of light green appears under the winter-bleached paleness of the tussock grass across Mull’s landscape. The smell of hope and astringent daffodils are on the air. Still-bitter winds and many frosted mornings rule: spring comes late to Mull. Wee toy-like lambs frolic in the fields, creating a perfect photo opportunity. Unbelievably, its time to dig trenches for the tatties while the fresh smell of Nordic snow still lingers over shy primroses.

At the end of April, puffins fly past our shores, following the glittering paths of sand eels to Staffa and Lunga. In May there is a quick fluorescence of bluebells in the island’s wooded vales and hills, before they are overwhelmed by eager hoards of bracken.

A tender new growth of seaweeds are here: sea lettuce, dulse and pepper dulse. Groggy hedgehogs and charming pied wagtails herald warmer weather. For the cooking pot, there are ramsons (wild garlic leaves) and a harvesting of young nettle leaves for blanching and use in soups and sauces.

WILD MULL SEA TROUT AND SHISO CEVICHE

Wild sea trout is such a rare treat we like to serve it this way to preserve its integrity. These Asian flavours also work well with salmon or freshwater trout. Serves 2

  • 230g/9oz sea trout fillets, skinned and boned
  • small handful of washed rocket
  • 20g/¾oz diced mouli
  • 1 small shallot, peeled and finely chopped
  • 2 wild garlic leaves, chopped finely
  • zest of a lime
  • juice of a lime
  • 1 tsp soft light brown sugar
  • dry flaked sea lettuce
  • 1 radish sliced
  • 80ml/3fl oz of rapeseed oil
  • basil or land cress to garnish

METHOD

Dice the trout into 1cm cubes.
Place all the ingredients except for the trout and rocket into a non-metal bowl. Whisk well until the sugar is dissolved. Taste and add more salt and pepper if desired.
Add the trout and mix well into the marinade. Leave to rest for 10 minutes, covered, in the fridge. Mix in the mouli and drain off the excess marinade.
Serve in martini glasses or bowls on top of rocket leaves. Garnish with radish and lime wedges.

Summer

Purple heather-covered hills and days that seem to last forever define summer on Mull. The opalescent shoals of stunning mackerel arrive, so get the barbecues ready.

July sees our lower field swaying with the fragrant fronds of meadowsweet. Its delicate blond fronds are used to flavour syrups, custards and our after-dinner chocolates. Dolphins herald the summer and love to follow the fishing and tour boats around Mull, adding magic to any day.

Otters pup in August and can be seen regularly, playing on the shoreline rocks. Drifts of delicate jellyfish are rife, wearing their pinkish-purple four clover emblems and leaving behind stinging legacies on mooring ropes and rocks.

Although gorse blooms many times during the year, the summer blossom seems to be the most potent. The acid yellow blossoms taste and smell enticingly of coconut and are ideal for ice cream, and making liqueur. Beware of the inch-long thorns though!

Elderflower flushes in summer and gives rise to many a cordial, posset, and dessert.

NEW TATTIES AND GARDEN HORSERADISH WITH FRESH MACKEREL

Sweet, creamy-fleshed new potatoes contrast with the crispy mackerel skin of the seared mackerel fillets to produce a very more-ish dish. The horseradish and dill add sharpness and herbaceous notes to this symphony of summer taste. Serves 4

  • 8 mackerel fillets (pin bones removed)
  • 1 tsp dill, finely chopped
  • 2 tbsp rapeseed oil
  • 4 tbsp plain flour
  • ¼ tsp sea salt black pepper
  • 30g/1oz broad bean or pea shoots to garnish
  • 2 sprigs of dill for garnish
  • 80g/3oz garden broad beans
  • 480g/1lb new potatoes, cooked with skin on
  • 2 tbsp rapeseed oil
  • 2 tbsp sour cream
  • 2 tbsp fresh horseradish, grated
  • 1 large shallot, minced
  • 1 tsp sugar dissolved in 1 tsp white wine vinegar
  • 1 tbsp spring onion, finely chopped
  • sea salt and black pepper to taste

METHOD

Blanch the baby broad beans in a pan of salted boiling water for 1 minute. Drain and peel off the outer skin if desired.

For the potatoes, bring a large pan of salted water to the boil and boil the washed potatoes for 10 to 15 minutes, or until tender. Drain. When cooled slightly, cut them into quarters. Transfer the potatoes to a mixing bowl. Stir in the sour cream, vinegar, horseradish, shallots and broad beans and season to taste with salt and pepper.

For the mackerel, diagonally score the skin three times on each fillet. This will keep the skin from shrinking too much when searing. Rub the mackerel fillets with the chopped dill. On a plate, mix the flour, salt and a few twists of ground black pepper together. Coat the mackerel fillets all over in the seasoned flour. Shake off the excess flour.

In a very large frying pan, heat the rapeseed oil on medium high and place the mackerel fillets skin-side down. Fry until the skin is crispy and the fillets move easily in the pan, about 2 minutes. Turn over and fry for 1 to 2 minutes until the fish is just opaque.

Divide the tatties between four warmed dinner plates and top with the pan-seared mackerel fillets. Garnish with dill and broad bean shoots.

Autumn

As the haunting calls of the stags float across the russet landscape, seasonal treats like Beech mast, hazelnuts and sloe berries abound.

In the garden it’s potato lifting time. Broccoli, cabbages and other brasicas are ready. Geese and swallows gather, getting ready for their annual migrations. Hedgehogs can be glimpsed at roadsides and in gardens, frantically feeding, to stock up before winter hibernation.
This is the perfect season for foraging mushrooms in the woods of Mull: ceps, chanterelles and wood bluets are amongst the gems.

SMOKED HADDOCK AND TOBERMORY TERROR CONSOMME

This elegant soup is uniquely flavoured with an Isle of Mull beer. It takes a while to make, but the divinely-tasting clear broth you end up with is well worth it. Serves 4

  • 1 tsp butter
  • 380g/14oz carrots, sliced
  • 180g/6½oz celery, chopped
  • 140g/5oz white onion, chopped
  • 100g/3½oz fennel bulb, chopped
  • 30g/1oz shallots, sliced
  • 1 tbsp coriander seeds
  • 1 tsp cardamom
  • 1 tsp turmeric
  • 1 tsp cumin seeds
  • ½ tsp fennel seeds
  • 550ml/20fl oz Tobermory Terror beer (or Guinness)
  • 350ml/11fl oz water
  • 1 tbsp dark soy sauce
  • 5 fillets of Mull smoked haddock
  • 3 egg whites
  • 40g/1½oz  buna shimeji (or other) mushrooms
  • sprig of tarragon
  • blanched julienne of carrot

METHOD 

Dry fry the spices in a medium-hot pan for two minutes, being careful to shake them lest they burn.

Place the butter in a large pot on medium low and add the carrots, celery, onions, shallots and fennel. Stir while gently cooking for 10 minutes, without colouring the vegetables.

Add the spices, beer, water and dark soy sauce and continue to simmer for 35 minutes.

Skin and debone four of the smoked haddock and save the best of the fillets for later. Add all the skin, bones and trimmings, plus one whole haddock fillet, to the vegetable mix in the pot. Simmer for 20 more minutes.

Strain the mixture and allow to cool. Refrigerate for an hour when cool. This will allow you to remove the solidified butter from the top of the stock once it has chilled sufficiently.

When all the solid butter has been removed or strained off, place the stock in a large clean pot. Beat the three egg whites to the soft peak stage and add them to the pot of stock. Place the pot on high heat while whisking the egg whites constantly. Bring to the boil.

Turn down and simmer for 10 minutes. The liquid should now be clear and the egg white raft will have absorbed all the impurities.

Strain the soup through a muslin cloth and discard the whites. Season with sea salt to taste.  Bring a small pot of water to the boil and poach the four fillets in the water for two minutes. Drain.  Divide the clear consommé between the four serving bowls, placing a smoked haddock fillet in each bowl.

Garnish with sautéed mushrooms and thin strips of blanched carrots and a twist of black pepper.

Winter

Jonny the fisherman mends his creels while the relentless, horizontal rain and wind rattle the windows. An earthy smell of wintering grasses pervades in the hills. Slim silhouettes of hazel and birch shine red and silver through the sea harr, when travelling the quiet roads.

The startling velvet-white flourish of the barn owls is often seen above our croft at night.  I have to don a large pair of wellies (that can accommodate 2 pairs of socks) and an old pair of oilskins, to face the quagmire that was once the veg garden. Still, there are brussel sprouts, spinach, kale and root vegetables to be found.

After a day’s fishing or mending the croft fencing, a warming dish of comfort is what’s needed most (besides a wee dram of whisky by the peat fire).  Winter is the best season for lobster and crab fishermen here. At Christmas prices are high as the Spanish market demands seafood for their festive celebrations.

MULL FISH CHOWDER WITH PEPPER DULSE

This chowder is rich and creamy and is a great way to use odd scraps of various fish that you may find in the freezer. You can buy great dried seaweed mixes from Mara Seaweed on the internet. Serves 4

  • 600g/1½lb mixed fish, e.g. hake, haddock, pollock, gurnard, skin and bones removed, and cut into 2cm cubes
  • 1 tbsp butter
  • 5 shallots, peeled and diced
  • 2 carrots, peeled and diced
  • 1 small bulb fennel, about 180g, diced
  • 1 tbsp plain white flour
  • 90ml/3fl oz chardonnay wine
  • 600ml/20fl oz cooled fish stock
  • ½ tsp sumac powder
  • ¼ tsp Worcester sauce
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 1 tsp dried seaweed flakes: dulse, kombu or sea lettuce
  • 350ml/12fl oz double cream
  • sea salt and crushed black pepper to taste

METHOD

Heat a large heavy pot over a low heat. Add butter and, stirring constantly, sweat the shallots, fennel and carrots until the onions are translucent. Add the flour and mix well with a balloon whisk. Continue cooking and stirring over medium heat until the flour/butter mixture has turned a light nutty brown in colour.

Add the wine and cook for a minute, while whisking until all the flour lumps have dissolved.

Add the cold stock, seaweed, sumac, Worcester sauce and the bay leaf. Turn up the heat and bring to the boil while stirring occasionally so that the bottom of the pan does not burn. Turn the heat down and simmer for 8-10 minutes. When the carrots are almost tender, add the fish cubes and season. Cook over a low heat until the fish is done – 2 to 4 minutes.

Remove the pot from the heat. Gently stir in the cream and season again if necessary. Heat gently to scald, not boiling and serve with plenty of bread or crackers.

Be sure to dine at Ninth Wave Restaurant on you next visit to sample some of their delicious food!  Contact: enquiries@ninthwaverestaurant.co.uk|01681 700 757

See our full listings of Restaurants on the Isle of Mull

Large Holiday Houses on Mull: 5 of the Best!

5 of the Best Large Holiday Houses on Mull

Wildlife, beaches, historical attractions. Awe-inspiring mountains, gorgeous glens and breathtaking lochs. Walking, cycling and kayaking – few islands can rival Mull in offering so much to its visitors.

The range of activities to enjoy, as well as the range of places, makes Mull the perfect place for a group getaway or family holiday. With that in mind, we’ve rounded up some of the best large holiday houses on Mull to help you plan your next adventure.

Best for luxury: Gorsten House

Set at the end of a private driveway and boasting a beautiful lochside setting, Gorsten House is the perfect choice if you’re looking for large holiday houses on Mull that have that something special. The only buildings that feature in your view are a castle and lighthouse, and with enormous glass windows to make the most of them from, you’ll enjoy the picturesque landscape at its best.

Inside, the treats continue, with a sauna, steam room and clawfoot baths welcoming guests with warmth and indulgence. The living spaces themselves are appointed and furnished to the highest standards by the property’s artist owner, with playful lighting and patterns to surprise.

Gorsten House sleeps eight people. Available from £1,200 per week.

 

Best for big families: Macquarie House

With flexible accommodation for up to 10 people, a kitchen diner, large dining room and multiple sitting rooms, the charming stone Macquarie House makes the ideal choice for families looking for large holiday houses on Mull. There’s also a convenient utility room for coats and boots after a busy day exploring the scenery around Loch Ba.

There’s no need to worry about entertaining the kids on rainy days, either. Inside, you’ll find a pool table, table tennis, board games and books to keep everyone having fun. And if you do head outside, in the summer months both salmon and sea trout fishing, as well as boat trips, can be arranged.

Macquarie House sleeps 9-10 people. Available from £995 per week.

 

Best for sea views: The Old Ferry House

Grasspoint is a truly beautiful spot on Mull – you’ve probably driven down the narrow tracks to reach it yourself if you’ve visited the island before. But why limit yourself to a short visit when you could stay right here? The Old Ferry House enables you to do just this, located in what is undeniably one of Mull’s best locations.

The stone house has character and charm aplenty, plus a cosy log burner to keep you toasty. Step outside and you’re right on the water’s edge, with rock pools and a fishing pier to enjoy. With the water comes wildlife. Keep your eyes peeled for sea eagles and hen harriers by air and porpoises and dolphins in the water.

The Old Ferry House sleeps 8-10 people. Available from £995 per week.

 

Best for loch-front living: Ormsaig Cottage

Head to the south-west of Mull and you’ll find Ormsaig Cottage, perched on the shores of Loch Scridian. It’s the perfect choice for large holiday houses on Mull to share with your favourite people.

Imagine sociable evenings in front of the open fire, with soft piano music played live in the background. How about enjoying dinner with family and friends while views of the Atlantic Ocean beckon from the window? Or a gentle group stroll to the nearby village of Bunessan, just in time for a pub lunch… Book Ormsaig Cottage and you can enjoy all of this and more!

Ormsaig Cottage sleeps nine people. Available from £695 per week.

 

 

Best for grandeur: Craig Ben Lodge

Planning a group getaway to celebrate something special? Whether you’re looking for large holiday houses on Mull for a birthday, anniversary or simply some family time, the baronial Craig Ben Lodge offers just the right level of luxury for the occasion.

With sumptuous interiors, carved wooden fireplaces and stately home style, not forgetting the turret outside, Craig Ben Lodge is bound to impress. And that’s before we’ve mentioned its exclusive location on the side of Loch Uisg, with a mountain rising up behind it…

Craig Ben Lodge sleeps 10 people. Available from £995 per week.

 

Find the perfect place for your holiday today and make the family getaway you’ve been talking about happen. We make it easy to find the right holiday cottage for you with our large holiday houses on Mull.

 

Have you stayed in any of our large holiday houses on Mull? Which was your favourite?

5 of Mull’s Best Beaches to Explore in 2018

Being an island off the west coast of Scotland, the Isle of Mull has no shortage of stunning beaches to tempt you. Here, we travel around the coast to bring you five of Mull’s best beaches. Ready to find inspiration for your next island getaway?

Ardalanish Beach, South West Mull

If you’re staying on the Ross of Mull, you’re in prime position to visit Ardalanish Beach. It’s easy to reach from the car park close to Ardalanish Weavers. Once you’re on the sand, the beach offers a lovely walk with excellent coastal and hill views. The beach is surrounded by sand dunes but, if you can tear your eyes away and look up, it’s not unheard of tospot a white-tailed sea eagle here too! Warm up afterwards with a cup of coffee (and perhaps a new blanket) at Ardalanish Weavers.

7 Must-See Historical Attractions on the Isle of Mull

The Isle of Mull is famed for many things. A charming harbour town, breathtaking beaches and abundant wildlife are only the beginning. It is also an island of great history, where much of it has been carefully preserved. Plenty of historical attractions remain on the island on display for visitors to see.

Here, we round-up seven brilliant historical attractions for you to visit on Mull. From castles to clans and old crofter’s cottages, you’ll find many memorable ways to step back in time on the island.

Isle of Mull Wildlife Highlights of 2017

The varied and spectacular Isle of Mull wildlife is one of the island’s biggest attractions. Here are some of the most unique Mull wildlife moments spotted in 2017.

The King of our Seas

On Mull we’re fortunate to be able to observe kings of the airwaves on a regular basis: Golden and White-Tailed Eagles. But Mull being an island, it is surrounded by the largest habitat on planet Earth, the ocean. On a rare occasion you may even get to see marine royalty and the ocean’s top predator patrolling the big blue… Orca.

5 of the Best Ways to Spend Rainy Days on Mull

Whether you’ve visited Scotland and its many islands before or not, news of the nation’s frequent spells of wet weather travels fast. But while it’s also no stranger to sunshine, the Isle of Mull is an island borne of exactly such weather systems. The waterfalls, rivers and verdant, green landscapes are in part carved out and created by rainy days on Mull, so the wet conditions could even be something worth celebrating.

If you’d like to make the most of your visit, whatever the weather, then try these five ideas for damper days. With something for everyone, from families to crafters to wildlife enthusiasts, your day will be anything but a wash out.

Self-Catering Holidays on Mull: Where to Buy Food During Your Stay

Self-catering holidays on Mull are arguably the best way to explore the island if you want to balance luxury and flexibility. Our portfolio of over 100 hand-picked cottages boast some of the best views on the island, and you can choose the one with an interior to suit your style.

You won’t be tied to your hotel’s restaurant this way, so you can eat whatever you want, whenever you want, with the option to eat out any time you fancy it too. To help you make the most of your island getaway, here we round up Mull’s impressive offering of stores, farm shops, produce markets and even homemade ready meals delivered to your door!

How to Choose the Best Holiday Cottages on Mull

Whether you come for the wildlife, the untouched landscapes or the colorful charm of Tobermory, the first step to planning your holiday on Mull is to choose where on the island you actually want to stay.

From beaches to loch shores and remote retreats, there are many idyllic holiday cottages on Mull for you to make your base. And wherever you choose, the beauty of this island is that nowhere is out of reach. Hop in the car and the entire island is within reach (and a few others too, if you don’t mind swapping the car for a boat!).

Here, we share six of our favourite locations for holiday cottages on Mull to help you find the best one for you. And if you know what you want to see but not where to go to see it, get in touch with our family-run business to pick our brains for ten years’ worth of local knowledge. With an exclusive collection of over 80 cottages on the island, choose your destination and your perfect island getaway won’t be far away.

Planning a trip to the Isle of Mull? Experience the freedom, luxury and scenery you desire with a stay at one of our holiday cottages on Mull

A Visit During Autumn On Mull

Autumn on Mull can be spectacular, from its starry, dark skies to the changing colours of the landscape and the wildlife waiting to be discovered...

Author looking over Loch na Keal near Kellan Mill Lodge

I was a latecomer to Mull. Shamefully late in fact. Having moved to Scotland in 2003 and consciously making the decision at that point to explore every corner of my adopted home, it was 12 long years before I set foot on the island. It wasn’t until my second visit that I experienced autumn on Mull.

GREAT EXPECTATIONS

My first obstacle was an earnest but naïve fixation on climbing munros (Scotland’s 282 hills over 3000ft) and ONLY munros. I did so with single-minded determination for the first few years. In so doing I completely overlooked the walking potential of rugged ‘lesser’ hills on the islands or the unique atmosphere and challenges of their wild, convoluted coastlines… two things Mull has in spades. But when that fixation happily abated, a second and unexpected obstacle took its place.

Remote Holiday Cottages in Scotland

One of the special things about being on an island is that sense of removal from the hustle and bustle of mainland life.  With water all around, the peace and quiet and breathtaking views can begin to work their magic!  We’ve put together a selection of our most remote holiday cottages on the Isle of Mull. These cottages offer guests a sense of total privacy and solitude in the most stunning of scenery.