WHETHER apple and berries tickle your fancy or banana, mango and peach there’s a flavour for everyone at a new juice bar.

Warren and Cheryl Scarr, of Quarry Road, St Giles Hill, Winchester, have opened Rawberry, offering a healthy food alternative to High Street customers.

For Mr Scarr, who had a corporate background for 29 years and worked for B&Q, it’s about putting some goodness into the market – and into people’s tummies – at the former Pitfield site in the Brooks Centre. Rawberry also serves organic coffees and vegetarian wraps.

“We’re deliberately offering food that makes people feel good,” he said. “It’s based around juicing.

“We tested it on the market for three months to see what the response was like and a lot of people said it was great if we had somewhere open every day.

"So when the opportunity came up we took it with both hands and we’re both excited about it.”

The enterprise has been a family affair. The couple are being helped out in their new venture by daughters Emily, who has just returned from Cardiff where she studied fashion, and Molly, who is off to study in Bristol, and son Tom, a digital marketing analyst in the city.