The four-acre Buckinghamshire estate, called Watercroft, has a natural pond, a guest cottage, a coach house, and a tennis court.
In the event that you at any point watched Mary Berry Cooks and considered what it might be want to make a dinner on the powder blue AGA range in the darling gourmet specialist and food essayist’s comfortable nation kitchen, indeed, presently you can.
The previous Buckinghamshire home of the OG Extraordinary English Heat Off judge has raised a ruckus around town with Savills, asking £3.5 million (or about $4.3 million). Also called Watercroft, Berry bought the property back in 1988 close by her better half, Paul Hunnings. Together, the couple inhabited Watercroft for around 30 years before they gave the spot over to its ebb and flow proprietors in 2019. Curiously, it’s likewise where the dearest Sovereign of Cakes shot numerous episodes of her eponymous Programs.
By and large, the property offers around 9,000 square feet of room between the six-room Sovereign Anne-style principal house, isolates two-room visitor bungalow, mentor house, and numerous sheds. Across the four-section of land grounds, you’ll likewise find a tennis court, formal nurseries, and a characteristic lake.
“Watercroft radiates character and beguile with some great period and verifiable highlights,” says Ben Dommett, head of Savills Beaconsfield, in a press explanation. ” Being the previous home of a notable food essayist, cook, pastry specialist, and television moderator, the kitchen is normally kitted out with the absolute best machines and fittings, including a somewhat well known AGA, alongside a refrigerated larder.”
Other than the kitchen, the fundamental house involves three banquet halls, including a wood-framed lounge area with an open chimney and hid pantries. Moreover, there’s a drawing room with bow windows, a family room, and an office.
What’s more, don’t be astonished in the event that Berry comes thumping on the entryway. ” Since we’ve been here, Mary shows up regularly in the event that there’s a going thing on in the town,” merchant Lucy Patten tells The Times. ” She’ll come over and have some tea. At the point when we moved in, she facilitated a gathering to acquaint us with the neighbors in general. They are cordial.”
Ready, get set, bid!