In the village of Cartmel, England is a modern award-winning restaurant housed in a rehabilitated traditional village blacksmith workshop. The restaurant, called "L'Enclume" has only a capacity of 50...
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In the village of Cartmel, England is a modern award-winning restaurant housed in a rehabilitated traditional village blacksmith workshop. The restaurant, called "L'Enclume" has only a capacity of 50, providing an intimate atmosphere, but its Michelin Guide award of 2 stars attracts fine-dining and wine enthusiasts from across the region. It also includes seventeen rooms similar to a very small boutique inn where visitors can stay. The entire ordeal is very high-society. While I cannot point you in the direction of an eager chef aspiring to open a similar restaurant, I wanted to share the idea that Waxhaw would be an ideal location for a similar development. The small-town yet up-and-coming ambiance of Waxhaw provides the perfect mood. Furthermore, the town's proximity to statistically wealthy neighboring communities, as well as North Carolina's growing wine culture, could significantly increase the chances of success of this development.
See: http://www.lenclume.co.uk/sr/
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Oct 25, 2013 by
Kyle (7 points)
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In the village of Cartmel, England is a modern award-winning restaurant housed in a rehabilitated traditional village blacksmith workshop. The restaurant, called "L'Enclume" has only a capacity of 50, providing an intimate atmosphere, but its Michelin Guide award of 2 stars attracts fine-dining and wine enthusiasts from across the region. It also includes seventeen rooms similar to a very small boutique inn where visitors can stay. The entire ordeal is very high-society. While I cannot point you in the direction of an eager chef aspiring to open a similar restaurant, I wanted to share the idea that Waxhaw would be an ideal location for a similar development. The small-town yet up-and-coming ambiance of Waxhaw provides the perfect mood. Furthermore, the town's proximity to statistically wealthy neighboring communities, as well as North Carolina's growing wine culture, could significantly increase the chances of success of this development.
See: http://www.lenclume.co.uk/sr/