Cremnivores

Charles 11 Comments
Charles

 

Gloucester crematorium’s Arbor restaurant is now offering Sunday lunch. Observes one Gloucester resident wryly:

“It seems a bit odd – and perhaps even slightly macabre – for them to be offering roast meat to people, given that their main business is to cremate bodies. I’m not sure I’d like to eat my Sunday roast in that environment really. It could be awkward complaining that meat is too well cooked or even burnt in such a restaurant.”

 

Full story here

 

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
11 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Vale
Vale
12 years ago

I can see that the roasts might cause alarm, but I’ve enjoyed a fine rock cake at Gloucester crem (Sweetpea treated me as it happens). They might be ideal locations for Death Cafe’s too. In fact to be celebrated as great places (for celebrants at least) to cool the heels, wet the whistle and, if you must, chew the fat as well.

Sandwell’s crem has nice one too. Are there more?

Ru Callender
12 years ago

This is mindblowing news to me. Crems have restaurants? How absolutely brilliant. Almost makes me regret my thunderous attack on them in the forth coming Natural Death Handbook of Essays. Almost.

Kathryn Edwards
Kathryn Edwards
12 years ago

Rather glum little tearoom at Golders Green crem has nonetheless been the venue for sundry funeral teas I’ve been involved with. Very convenient, esp for elderly people who don’t well survive being shipped big distances round the city on a sad day.

Kathryn Edwards
Kathryn Edwards
12 years ago

And actually, the offer of a Sunday lunch club is inspired: so many bereaved people’s cooking goes to hell, and a roast is often seen as too much bother for one person to make. Nice day trip: visit the rose garden and then go for the knife and fork. With a rather good and sympathetic social ambiance, too.

Wishing I’d thought of it.

Ru Callender
12 years ago

Who runs it?

sweetpea
sweetpea
12 years ago

Vale – I believe it was a rather luscious teacake we shared! Vale wore a green carnation, and I wore a rather fetching feather boa so that we could identify each other. Ru, it is run by some very nice ladies from Gloucester City Council. It is brand new, purpose built and very smart, set a little way back from the main building. Tea shop in front, larger room on the other side – including a bar – which can be hired for a couple of hours for bunfights after a funeral. Or in the case of one couple, I… Read more »

Michael Gamble
12 years ago

We have used the tearoom facilities at Gloucester Crem on many occasions and have always had glowing reviews from the families who have used it. Its quite detached from the crematorium so it doesn’t really feel like part of the “crematorium experience”. I think it’s great and hats off to whoever had the foresight to get it together.

Jonathan
Jonathan
12 years ago

Cafe Crem? How come you guys have been keeping this astonishing piece of good news a secret all this time???????

gloria mundi
12 years ago

Blimey. What a treat that would be round here. Most crems seem just about able to put on funerals, let alone something as valuable as a bunshop and social space.

Huh! You southwestmidlanders have all the fun.

I’m sulking now.

Vale
Vale
12 years ago

Sweetpea, you’re right. The memory of the boa must have confused me. Tea cake it was!

sweetpea
sweetpea
12 years ago

How about next time you can treat me to a cream puff? I never touch savouries until the third date.