Blog Archives

Tamarind Kitchen, london

Cocktails and friends.

Yosma

A TURKISH MEYHANE, MANGAL & RAKI BAR INSPIRED BY THE STREETS OF ISTANBUL.

I love Turkish food and eat it often; so it was an absolute delight to find a restaurant in Baker Street that doesn’t do generic Turkish food but excellent  Turkish food with a twist.  Every dish melted in the mouth from the bread and humous to the lamb dumplings.  Even the salad was amazing.  Mouthwatering, with excellent ingredients where I could taste the quality. This is a true find for Turkish cuisine.  Beautifully presented and served with a smile. Easily the best Turkish inspired restaurant I have eaten at in London thus far.

http://www.yosma.london/

A short stay in Paris

Edith’s House N8

If you need cake; and let’s face it, at some time in life, even if you are savoury, you need cake, then look no further. Well if you are in North London look no further. Specifically Crouch End. White chocolate Scones and condiments like black pepper and raspberry? Whaaaaaat?  Yes they do have more foodie stuff because a place can’t survive on flour alone, but if you crave the sweet Edith’s House is a treat.

Gymkhana

gymkhana1.jpg

Where to begin with the feast that was laid before us?  Gymkhana, needs some booking ahead. Why? Because if you like this sort of food they are at the top of the game in London. I use opentable, book one month ahead and take the £35 tasting menu for a late lunch.  Oh you may think it may not look much as a three course meal (you can do four courses should you wish)  But I dare you to roll out of that restaurant wanting more.

Home Page


 

God’s Own junkyard

Random neon shop in Walthamstow 

Double Rainbow

Double the rainbow.

Double the rainbow.

I had to share this.  Probably the biggest rainbow I have seen and i was just around the corner.  Made me smile during a dreary day.

Savannah Georgia Day 39

cost you nuthin

cost you nuthin

 

So Day 39 was spent hung-over at first but what better way to get over it then eat some of Paula Dean’s fried chicken.  I had never come across Paula Dean before but she is definitely all over Savannah. You can even choose to do a 3 hour Paula Dean tour. You don’t get to meet her and apart from being charged a fortune to wander around aimlessly and eat in the restaurant for half hour I’m not sure what it consists of.   What I do know is I couldn’t stop saying Hey y’all it’s Paula Dean for the rest of the day.

After Fried Paula Chicken we went on the normal trolley tour around Savannah and it’s pretty good actually.  Worth the cash to sit for a couple of hours and be told the local folklore.  My favourite story was that pineapples would be left on the mantelpiece of any guests rooms and if the host removed the pineapple this was a signal to the guest that they had outstayed their welcome and it was time to pack up and leave. No words exchanged.  Strange but apparently effective.

Hey y'all! It's Paula Dean!

Hey y’all! It’s Paula Dean!

We then decided since everyone was going on about Tybee beach to go there and as soon as we got there and paid for parking we wished we hadn’t.  It’s a bit rubbish really or you feel like you are sitting on rubbish.  It’s not the nicest beach in the world, nor is it the worst.  It’s just a bit of a non beach.  So we amused ourselves by playing the game Would You Rather much to the distaste of the families walking by.  I don’t blame them, it’s a filthy game.

 

Apple Crumble Moonshine

Apple Crumble Moonshine

We then ate some fresh seafood and went back to Savannah trying to work out how we could live there for a month and not pay double rent.  It draws you in and it’s strange because it seems so sleepy but you don’t want to leave.  We ended up sitting through the night on a bench staring at the massive boats that were docked and gleaming like new and talking crap.  Me drinking wine out of a mug, he drinking whiskey out the jar.  I even tried some apple crumble moonshine which is deliciously dangerous. The only disturbance was Governor Tony a local bum making me some stuff out of blades which I really didn’t want.  I was more impressed that he looked like he was straight out of the TV show The Wire and would have given him something for that but my road trip friend was having none of feeding the habit and sent him on his way. Savannah though is a magical place and you don’t come across it often.  It was one of those places that we knew we didn’t want to leave so we stayed up talking as long as we could and wished time could have stood still for longer than it did.

 

Life is short

Today our caretaker at work suddenly died.  Bob was a smiley fellow in his sixties.  Slim frame, smoker’s gentle London voice and smoker’s lungs.  Slim and cheery, always so cheery. He was someone who had become part of my every day am.  I park my car and there he would be, popping out to say ‘morning’ from his underground office or in the lobby and a comment about another day in the rat race and a chuckle.  That was 9am this morning.  At three pm someone came into me to say he had been found dead in his office.

Already this week my family have been in remembrance of my Uncle who passed away a year ago on the 19th May.  His wife had fallen seriously ill and was in intensive care in hospital.  The panic and shock and unhealthy life style he had led took it’s toll and he died of a heart attack; A broken heart. She made it through to find him not there…

It’s also the remembrance of my granddad Alf.  The blond curtain haired cheeky chappy that I was so close to through all my years.   He is the one who used to sit with me as a child playing a word game.  He would say to me ‘Think of as many words as you can beginning with the letter G’ and being about seven or eight years old I would sit and concentrate for what felt like an hour.  I’d have a list of about ten words.  If we had the same word we’d cross them off and the winner would be whom had the most left.  It took me years to work out that he had always been reading my words and putting less than me so that I would win but learn also.

Grandad was a religious man who never went to church.  A solitary man who married once and then was never connected to anyone else although we were always suspicious that he liked the lady in the local launderette.  He had watched every nature programme on television.  He saturated the meat in too much fat.  When he cooked for my friend and I and I told him my friend was vegetarian, grandad panicked and said ‘but kid what does he eat?’  My friend ended up with a big plate of cabbage.

He snored like no other and when I was age seven I used to have the top bunk of bunk beds and him the bottom and I’d fallen asleep on an old style cassette recorder where I had tried to tape the evidence of the snoring.  Everyone knew though.  You could hear him from down the street.  Grandad who started crying when I cried at the monkey’s dying in the film Project X, because he didn’t want me to be upset.  Grandad who laughed the loudest when we did impressions of him.  Grandad who listened to every thought I had like it was the most important thing he could have ever heard. He loved us all so much and we loved him.  He really was the best Grandad a girl could have wanted.

So in remembrance my little blog a reminder that all we have is the here and now and it is a waste to not live life for the moment. And a glass raised to Bob, John and Grandad Alf.  Rest in Peace.