Treasures of Ireland:
A Donnybrook of a Feast
(Dispatch #3)

Story and photos by Tom Weber

Donnybrook

enturies ago, in a small village along the high road just outside Dublin, a two-week-long event took place annually in late August that captured the attention of Ireland and beyond, but for all the wrong reasons.

Horse and livestock traders, fortune tellers, wrestlers, bare-knuckle boxers, dancers, performers, musicians, magicians and hawkers selling just about every kind of regional food, drink and elixir, were drawn together for one of the rowdiest, noisiest festivals in all the land: the Donnybrook Fair.

Noted primarily for its non-stop, high decibel levels, it was the legendary, whiskey-fueled, after-dark brawls involving sticks and fists that eventually signaled the demise of the fair, leaving behind in its riotous wake a word that lives on to this day in the English lexicon: donnybrook.

O'Connells, Donnybrook

Under the cloak of darkness and sans shillelaghs and bruised knuckles, the "band of merry media," 18 travel writers and photographers invited by Insight Vacations (Insight) to sample its Treasures of Ireland journey, takes its place around the table to enjoy a riot of traditional Irish fare at O'Connells in, you guessed it, Donnybrook.

Tom O'Connell

"We're a respected, farm-to-fork restaurant," notes soft-spoken Tom O'Connell, owner of the family-friendly business in the heart of the village-turned-suburb, "committed to the highest quality Irish produce from around the Emerald Isle."

menu at O'Connells

The bounty plated before us, around carafes of red and white wine, is expertly prepared from recipes passed down through the O'Connell clan since the late 1800s.

fresh salads, cheeses and smoked organic salmon pate at O'Connells

To start, a buffet of fresh salads, cheeses – including Irish mozzarella – and smoked organic salmon pâté are there for the taking at the Small Irish Food Producers counter.

Tom O'Connell with his dishes: roasted leg of lamb, rib of beef in a three-day gravy, charcoal oven-roasted breast of guinea fowl and fish pie

Piping hot main dishes are aplenty as our choices nearly stretch all the way to Co. Cork. There's roasted leg of lamb, rib of beef, in a three-day gravy ladled out by Tom O'Connell himself, charcoal oven-roasted breast of guinea fowl and, my fave, a delicious fish pie.

Lil O'Connell's traditional sherry trifle dessert

And, to cap this epicurean donnybrook, a hearty helping of Lil O'Connell's traditional sherry trifle dessert. Mmm, mmm good!

Insight Vacations brochure

For complete information on Insight's 100+ premium and luxury-escorted journeys around Europe, including the Treasures of Ireland itinerary where you'll never go hungry, just click HERE, or call toll free 1-888-680-1241, or contact your travel agent.

Kilkenny Castle Park

See you tomorrow morning, well after the rooster crows first light, as we enjoy a "relaxed start" and head south to Kilkenny and Killarney.

Oíche mhaith (Good night).

Related Articles:
Dublin and the Book of Kells; Treasures of Ireland: Prologue; Ashford Castle: Regal Elegance Wrapped in Irish Charm; Our Irish Dream Vacation; The Long Good Bye to Ireland