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Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Opera, Neapolitan songs and One Bee Gee at Fellini Restaurant




Music, meal, drink and price
What a wonderful evening crammed with entertainment, for only £30 per person (plus pay if you order a bottle of wine and want to leave any tips). We had a three course meal. Starters, buffet style were the highlight. After some of the singing we had an interval for the main course. The price included a glass or red or white wine with the meal. After dessert, coffee or decaffeinado (decaff coffee and a small chocolate - like small wrapped Malteesa) and a Prosecco on the house to end with.

Entertainment
While waiting for our opera singer, we listened to and watched Vittorio singing Napolitan songs (from Naples).

Opera
During the meal we heard grand opera. The singer was Davide Sorrentino. He is not from Sorrento. He hails from Sicily - "It's beautiful," he said, and showed me pictures on his phone. Listening to him was like having Pavarotti in the room.

I recorded him singing La Donna e Mobile and several other songs.

During the main course interval, some more, light songs, from Vittorio, sometime in duet with Davide, 'Take me back to Sorrento', romantic songs, and a Country song pleased me.

Bee Gee
A third singer appeared, a surprise, diminutive singer, hailed as "one of the Bee Gees". I presume he is what is known as a tribute act.

His interaction with the audience was really amusing. He swayed around the tables singing to the ladies, "Will you still love me tomorrow". Once when one of the ladies joined in, he asked, "How about tonight!"

I nearly fell off my chair laughing.

The atmosphere was wonderful. By the end of the evening we were swaying, swinging our arms. The restaurant owner, Andrea Surace, was dancing with the customers.

What other events are planned? The restaurant is open New Year's Eve. See their website.

(More pictures of food and the singers and video in later posts.)
Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, author and speaker.
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Opera at Fellini Restaurant Nov 29 2016


Opera at the Italian restaurant, Fellini, named after the Italian film director. Italy is the home of opera.


£30 for the entertainment, buffet and a glass of wine.

See my other posts about Umbria in Italy.

Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, author and speaker.

Tuesday, November 29, 2016

Accommodation, Free and Budget Travel In London, and sandwiches for £1


Somebody on WAYN asked where to stay cheaply near the centre of London for a week.

Bikes?
Decide how you plan to travel, walking, by tube train and bus using a one week travel card, or by borrowed bike from the Santander system.
Travel Directions
Work out two places you wish to visit each day. Mark the nearest tube stations on an underground map. See if they are all within one travel zone. Decide how much you are prepared to pay for a travel zone card. If you are going to pay only for a central London card then you need a hotel further in.

Travel train zones
If you are travelling further, and paying for an all zones card, you can look for accommodation in that zone.

Mark the stations on the edge of the zone (the further out of London the cheaper), then look for hotels or rental places near those stations.

Weekly Rate
Look for a reduction on one week to compare with a daily rate.

Loyalty Cards
If you are going for a hotel chain, check if joining their loyalty scheme gives you a room rate reduction, room upgrade, or free breakfast, or free day's stay if you are in one of their hotels a certain number of days.

More Information
At suburban and central London station you find racks of information leaflets. At big stations like Euston you can pick up a leaflet showing the tube system, also another larger leaflet showing local streets and landmarks. (Useful to find your way to nearby museums, find your way back to the station, find your way back to your hotel.)

Other leaflets include a bike map. This has a handy free map of streets all over central London.

Some lines and stations have faster train times than others. Some central areas are very crowded during rush hour. If your hotel is in central London, if you have an hour to spare, you can pop out and walk about. If you are in a suburb, you may feel more like having an early night or sitting at your phone or computer or the hotel's system (check what wifi is provided) or visit a local pub or coffee bar.

Coffee Loyalty Cards
You could choose an entire system, such as Costa Coffee, or Second Cup. Collect loyalty points for free coffee. You can save money by eating a sandwich on a public bench in an indoor shopping mall (such as Intu in Watford) or in a public park. This is not just a question of coffee shops wanting to discourage people from sitting around hogging seats (which might apply in Italy, where there is sometimes a cover charge for bread - see advice on Italy and systems in different cities in the simple wiki). In Singapore where central branches ask school children not to hog tables doing homework.

In the UK it's a government VAT charge on eating in. So you'll save on that by taking away your coffee and sandwich.

Pubs
You could check a different pub each day. Alternatively, opt for one group.
Wetherspoons pubs vary their food, so one day is curry day, another something else, so you can sample a variety of meals.
Some times of day, usually early, you get special deals.

Cheap Sandwiches
Also check out the £1 sandwiches in Boots (drug store / pharmacy) and Morrisons and Tesco, but they might sell out early.)

Late in the afternoon or early evening you will see more reduced price bargains. Even Tesco Express has a reduced price section in most stores offering sandwiches and other items such as fruit and salads which are on their last day of best by or use by dates.

So there you have it, travel sorted, coffee and drinks sorted, sandwiches sorted.
More Information from:
https://tfl.gov.uk/plan-a-journey/

Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, author and speaker.
See more by and about Angela Lansbury, author, on other blog posts, Facebook, LinkedIn, Youtube, Twitter, Amazon books and Lulu.com self-published print on demand books.

Umbria and Tuscany, where are they in Italy?





Italy

According to simplewkipedia.org :
CULTURE, ARCHITECTURE, ART
'Italy is home to more World Heritage Sites than any other nation in the world. These sites are culturally important and valued according to UNESCO. About 60% of the works of art of the world are in Italy.

FOOD
Italy is famous for pizza, spaghetti Bolognaise (from Bologna), cannelloni, ravioli and many more types of pasta.

WINE
'Italy is also a big wine producer. In 2005 it made over 5 million tonnes. Famous Italian wines include
Asti -
Chianti,
Lambrusco and
Prosecco'

Regions:
Region Capital Area (km²) Population
Abruzzo L'Aquila (10,794) 1,324,000
Aosta Valley* Aosta (3,263) 126,000
Apulia Bari (19,362) 4,076,000
Basilicata Potenza (9,992) 591,000
Calabria Catanzaro (15,080) 2,007,000
Campania Naples (13,595) 5,811,000
Emilia-Romagna Bologna (22,124) 4,276,000
Friuli-Venezia Giulia* Trieste (7,855) 1,222,000
Lazio Rome (17,207) 5,561,000
Liguria Genoa (5,421) 1,610,000
Lombardy Milan (23,861) 9,642,000
Marche Ancona (9,694) 1,553,000
Molise Campobasso (4,438) 320,000
Piedmont Turin (25,399) 4,401,000
Sardinia* Cagliari (24,090) 1,666,000.
Sicily* Palermo (25,708) 5,030,000.
Tuscany Florence (22,997) 3,677,000.
Trentino-Alto Adige* Trento (13,607) 1,007,000.
Umbria Perugia (8,456) 884,000.
Veneto Venice (18,391) 4,832,000.

AOSTA is a ski region. Mont Blanc (in French meaning white mountain) is a highest mountain in Italy.

Genoa is a port in the Liguria region. Christopher Columbus is said to have come from Genoa, hence his keen-ness on travelling by boat to make his fortune, escape in 1592, the day the Inquisition started, and head for India, arriving by mistake in America.

Prosecco comes

Milan is the industrial north and has nine million people, nearly ten, in the region of Lombardy.
If you visit Switzerland you can get the train down into Northern Italy. We travelled to Milan by train to see Milan cathedral later afternoon and in the evening an opera at La Scala.

I visited the islands of Sicily and Sardinia, Sicily on a cruise ship, seeing the Roman ruins. I had a beach holiday at Sardinia, another at Viareggio.

I also stayed at Venice Lido, Lido de Jesolo, a beach outside Venice, and went to visit Venice and St Mark's Square with its pigeons, saw the canals and bought little glass figurines.
Prosecco comes from the NE Venezia region, starting in the place called Prosecco, then a grape called Prosecco became so popular it is gradually spreading to meet demand.

Tuscany
The capital of Tuscany is Florence on the West coast, where they grow the San Gervase grape which makes the wine called Chianti after the village.

Umbria
The two biggest tourist attractions are Assisi, which has the birthplace and burial place of St Francis of Assisi. A trail can be followed by bikers, walkers on a pilgrimage, hikers or history buffs. We saw the hovel where St Francis slept in a village which also has a museum or Roman remains including a large mosaic floor.

Umbria is a mountainous region known for little hill-top villages, known for truffles, snuffled up from under the trees on the lower slopes, and from olive trees they get olives and olive oil.

Orvieto wine comes from the town of Orvieto in the South West corner of Umbria. They mix San Gervese (Which the Tuscan area uses for Chianti, with a local grape called Sangrantino di Montefalco (mountain of falcans). I must admit I didn't see a single falcan, neither obligingly perched on a branch for a photo nor flying past hunting prey.

Asti is a village, and Barolo is another, both in the

More information from
simple.wikipedia.org - Italy
umbriatourism.it

Photos by Angela Lansbury Copyright. November 2016.
Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, author and speaker.
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Monday, November 28, 2016

Cooking The Best Truffles and Truffle Hunting: interviewing dog trainers and marketing people


"Italian truffles are the finest," claim the Italians in Umbria. I don't doubt them.

The Truffle Kitchen Chef
Their Italian factory kitchen certainly had the finest cook and we were amazed at the number of ways you can serve up truffles. Angelo Maria Franchini, chef di cucina, lives in Spoleto nearby. We can't compete with the dishes of truffles we enjoyed. We are still talking about trying to copy his dessert of creme caramel to see if we can make it as well as he did.
But, let's get back to the truffles which are the signature dishes of the company which exports and promotes all over the world, from Italy, and has a factory office in New York near Columbus Circle.

Growing Truffles
"Why don't you grow truffles, like mushrooms, in an artificial environment?" I asked.

"It's very difficult to grow truffles. You plant and hope. Plant trees and seeds nearby and irrigate. It's a high risk investment."

"What kinds of trees?"

"Oaks, hazels, pine, poplar, hornbeams. The important thing is the PH of the soil. It needs to be alkaline."

Hunting With Dogs
"Why hunt with dogs - because they are friendly and companions? Why not pigs?"

"Pigs eat truffles and rough up the soil. A dog doesn't dig too roughly."

"What kind of dogs?"

"Terriers - they have stamina. Very tough dogs, and smart. Terriers were originally aggressive, but they've been bred or trained to be obedient.

Training Dogs
How do you train Dogs?

To train dogs you reward them, with pats, voice and a treat to eat. "You train a dog by hiding truffles under the soil."

Selling Truffles
Is it easy to sell truffles, which are so expensive?

"It's a developing market, in Spain, selling fresh truffles, for example to San Sebastion chefs, also around Madrid and Barcelona, Valencia. (In a good year) in the US we sell to Casa Tua in Miami, and hotels in New York and London and Paris.

"Our Italian factory also buys truffles from France and Australia."

So where can you taste truffles? Many restaurants in Umbria.

www.cipriani.com
www.angelofranchini.com
http://urbanitartufi.it
umbriatourism.it

Photos by Angela Lansbury Copyright. November 2016.
Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, author and speaker.
See more by and about Angela Lansbury, author, on Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, YouTube, Amazon books, Lulu.com . Please share posts. More articles and photos on Italy and Umbria is other posts.

Truffles: where they come from, where they go, how they get there



First of all, forget the idea that you can just rush out with any dog and find a truffle. First you need the right kind of dog, ideally a retriever type dog and one you have the patience to train. You need permission from the landowner, or factory owner who has his own dogs. You have to know where to look, have a good truffle season, and train your dog to stop running about and chasing other dogs and stop by the roots of trees and sniff for truffles for truffles. Then to dig down and to bring them up intact without eating them or destroying them. Not to drop them down the hillside so they disappear, nor start digging somewhere else and burying them again. You then need a restaurant or truffle factory owner who has the clients who want to buy truffles.

I found that truffles don't necessarily grow on nice flat land, but up a steep forested mountain in a place such as Umbria. You have to know where to park your car and have the energy to climb up the hillside.
We took a long path, snaking up and up. Then trees stretch in all directions. I soon got left behind. I had to force myself to puff up, to catch up.

Next is the treasure hunt. For our demo, it looked easy. The leader of our expedition admitted, "We could have saved time and just taken a truffle and buried it for the dogs to find, so we could then have taken you back down again in time for lunch. We didn't."

Naturally, I suspected that was exactly what they did. Yes, you might search and search for hours and find nothing. If it's been a bad season.

If you succeed, you must wrap the crumbly, strong-smelling truffle, and carry your huge dirty-looking brown truffle down the steep hillside again. Without twisting your ankle. I sank deep into the autumn leaves. It's not a place for high heeled shoes nor expensive boots or socks or trousers (as Americans would say, pants). The professionals have all the equipment. Even if it's only a big basket, probably lined.


You need to be a dog lover. And have the patience of St Francis.

I soon got tired of chasing three tail-wagging dogs doing giant circles in different directions. Dogs ran in all directions, up the mountain, down the mountain.

A Good Business
One of my companions from the UK later in the day looked out at all the careful planted and tended vineyards, with the factory with the huge steel vats, and expensive wood barrels at £1000 each to make, only used for two years, more or less, and remarked, "Truffle hunting is a great business to be in. Better than vineyards. Go out with a dog and dig up something which grows itself. All you need to do is find it and sell it."

Not really. Truffles, gold and silver, maple syrup - I went to the World Travel Market in London where the Canada stand served maple syrup every year (until this year when they served bagels). Canada makes maple syrup and has something like 50 per cent or more of the world's supply. They don't have the only maple trees in the world. But they have the ability to organise the maple syrup business and sell the top quality pure product competitively to what has now become a brand name.

The same happened with gold, silver, and railways in the USA. Along comes a Mr Big, organises the business and makes a fortune. The same applies to writing best-selling novels. In theory anybody could do it. But you need the determination to persist through the first year, or five or ten, earning money from some other source.

Other people in your area, or other areas of the world, can come up with a new product, a new use, new packaging. You need to find a new recipe. (Like Crosse and Blackwell in England, two employees who got together and bought out the company they worked for and built it into a nationwide success still going a century later. Heinz - not just baked beans. 57 varieties.

Fight through setbacks. Refine your product. Market your perfect product.When you get demand you have to be able to supply and not disappoint the buyers. Here's where we learned more insights.

Delivering The Goods
Our truffle makers told us the secret of their success, not just finding the truffles, but getting them to the truffle eaters. The Chinese also produce truffles. Those truffles can be shipped cheaply and arrive fifteen days later.

But the Italians can get their truffles to a New York restaurant by courier in 24 hours, says Giorgio. The truffles travel overnight. The truffle company can dig up a truffle, phone a restaurant on another continent, and despatch it by courier.

What if the courier lets them down? I bet you have to be up all day and all night tracking your shipment. Or have an alert on a hotline if there's trouble. Your Michelin starred restaurant has promised a customer, a client or two or three that truffles will be on the menu for a special dinner. You are sending truffles, fresh truffles mind you, to a wedding. You have to jump in your own car and deliver your truffle to the next city. Or send a member of your family or trusted employee, somebody reliable and enterprising, to deliver it. You have that delivery, and all future business to that customer and worldwide reputation, achieve, and to maintain.

What could go wrong? The carrier or courier is too busy. So you send a member of staff with a car. You get a call. Accident on motorway. Two or three hour delay, no guarantee when it will end. So you send a motorbike rider, or go yourself, on a motorbike. All the time, the minutes are ticking by.

The thought of it is enough to put you off your lunch. But it didn't put me off my lunch. Truffles are something of a learned taste. Like anything else, (I remember yogurt - didn't like it first time). I shall have to go back and try truffles three times. (Hint.)

Is there any point in acquiring such an expensive taste if you can't afford to eat truffles every day? Yes. Firstly, you know if you would like them for a special occasion or treat, such as a birthday or wedding. Secondly, if you don't like them, you know that you can donate yours to somebody else who will be grateful. Thirdly, if you have tried three or four times, different qualities, recipes, varieties, and you still son't like them, you can quit feeling that you are missing out and smile indulgently at the excitement of others. You can stop revealing yourself sa somebody who has never tried them, and talk knowledgeably, or express a polite and enthusiastic interest.

So, what if you don't know the people at the truffle factory and can't afford the Michelin restaurant in New York. If you holiday in Umbria you will find lots of restaurants in the locality offering truffles on the menu.

Don't worry that you are party to some kind of fraud. The factory gives permission to local people to go and forage and buys the truffles from them.

So, now when you are looking at truffles on the shelves of your supermarket at Christmas, looking at a special offer from a restaurant on wet Monday lunchtimes in January, you can look at the truffles on the menu and the truffles on your own plate, or the plate of another diner, with appreciation of what it takes to get the truffle from the earth in Umbria and across the world to the package or plate.

In London, England you can buy white and black truffles from Umbria in La Fromagerie cheese shop off Marylebone High Street near Baker Street station.

More information from:
http://urbanitartufi.it
umbriatourism.it
Photos by Angela Lansbury, copyright, November 2016.
Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, author and speaker.


Truffles Found By Dogs in Umbria



I went out truffle hunting with three dogs, their owner, the head of the truffle company and lots of people keen to try eating fresh truffles.

I'd always thought you needed a wild pig to find a truffle. A large wild pig. Although little piglets are cute, and pigs on farms are friendly, I'm not so sure about a wild boar.

The good news is you don't need a heavyweight bad-tempered boar to find a truffle. The friendliest little terrier is just fine.

How do you train your dogs, and yourself - and how long does it take?


Here are some pictures of truffles. The first thing I was going to say is that sweet truffle chocolates and savoury truffles in eggs are two different things. However, the first thing I noticed in the reception centre where the big buyers are entertained was a bowl of silver foil wrapped chocolates. They turned out to be chocolate coated with a savoury truffle centre.
I was in Umbria, in the heart of Italy.
Finally, real truffle, served in food at the truffle factory's kitchen. This was just one of the surprises and delights of my informative and educational trip to Umbria.

(More text and amusing pictures in my later post.)
http://urbanitartufi.it
umbriatourism.it

Angela Lansbury

Pickpockets warning from police


Warning of pickpockets in Harrow.

Pickpocket proof clothing from:
https://www.clothingarts.com
Like other website sellers, they offer discounts at intervals for seasonal events.

Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, author and speaker.

Harrow: Festive lights in St Anns

Street lights outdoors in pedestrian precinct.

Lights inside St Anns.

Photos by Angela Lansbury Copyright. 2016.
Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, author and speaker.

Second Cup coffee shop in Harrow, Middlesex


Second Cup coffee shop is to the right of St Ann's shopping mall. You can sit outside if you want to smoke, or inside in the warm. Signs say more seating upstairs.

Here's the counter. Festive lights and a tree - raising funds for a a charity.

Second cup, alas, does not mean that you get a second cup for free. (Check my earlier post or on the net to find which places offer a second cup of coffee free. I think one of the pub chains does so at breakfast time.) The name second cup means they want to evoke an image of a cup of coffee so delicious that you want a second cup. A piece of smart marketing.

Ask for the loyalty card if you intend returning. They punch a hole in your card each time you order a coffee so eventually you get a free cupful of coffee. Interesting and initially baffling that I nearly said a free cup but had to change it. A free cup is not the same as a free cupful of coffee. The 'cup' stands for the contents.

Coffees
We ordered double espresso with cream. Fine. The website is really good. It shows all kinds of teas and coffees and gives calorie counts. You might want to read it and make your choice before you go there.

Teas
A wide selection of teas was shown on a chart on the counter top.

Cakes
I liked the look of the triple deck chocolate cake - with sparkle. Then I saw the carrot cake.

The red velvet cake was appealing. What was it? They said it was beetroot.

The New York style baked cheesecake looked both moist and solid. However, it was nearly lunch time, so I opted for something more sensible.

Sandwiches
I hesitated between the chicken sandwich, which had something green, lettuce I think, and the smoked salmon and cream cheese. I had chicken at home so, despite feeling I ought to have some vegetable, I opted for the salmon and cream cheese. It was good, filled me up, tasty with pepper or poppy seeds or both.

I checked their website and found that the company started in Canada and they have franchises.
More information from:
www:secondcup.com

Photos by Angela Lansbury. Copyright. 2016.
Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, author and speaker.

Pinner Festive Lights On Gables And Trees



Pretty Pinner, historic Pinner. Pinner, Middlesex, a suburb of North West London. At the bottom of the road is Pinner station on the Metropolitan line if you want to visit Pinner by train. Pinner is also proud of the newly opened Heath Robinson Museum in Pinner Park, which is opposite the railway station.

Photos by Angela Lansbury. Copyright. 2016.
Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, author and speaker.

Sunday, November 27, 2016

Statues of Mrs Beeton, Heath Robinson and others wanted in Harrow





Nelson's column in Trafalgar Square is one of London's well known landmarks.Oscar Wilde reclines nearby. Freud's bust is in Swiss Cottage. Mandela is in Westminster. Florence Nightingale stands holding her lamp outside a London hospital on Waterloo Place. Handel had a statue erected in Vauxhall Gardens, central London during his lifetime. A statue of singer and songwriter Amy Winehouse is in Stables Market, Camden Town. What have we got in Harrow? Yesterday I discovered to my delight that a page on Harrow had been set up on Facebook. I posted on it that I wanted statues placed around Harrow:

1 Mrs Beeton, cookery and recipe pioneer, should stand in Hatch End, where she lived and died. A plaque to her is on the wall where her house was in The Broadway, still a broad or wide street.

2 Heath Robinson, the cartoonist, should have a statue in the Pinner Park or better still in the High Street, to draw attention to the museum devoted to him which has opened in Pinner this year.

3 W S Gilbert, who wrote the words, "I've got a little list ..." in his operetta, Gilbert of Gilbert and Sullivan fame, was also a magistrate. His house where he lived in Victorian times is now a hotel but he should have a statue, somewhere prominent and central, perhaps Harrow.

4 Roger Bannister who won the race and established the record for the four minute mile, has a playing field named after him. He is still alive, in his eighties. If a statue of him takes as long as the Heath Robinson Museum to be established (twenty years of campaigning), he would be well over a hundred if he were still alive by the time his statue is up. It should show him running, Many pictures of him running must exist.

5 Crosse and Blackwell
They are both buried in All Saints church, Harrow Weald, with big mausoleums in the grounds near the entrance to the church. Blackwell's house has been demolished but his front garden is now a park on the Uxbridge Road (see one of my previous posts for pictures) and he gave land for St Anselm's church in Hatch End.

6 Screaming Lord Sutch
Great character. Has to have a statue in central Harrow.

7 Leefe Robinson
WWI hero. Buried in All Saint's church cemetery extension, across the Uxbridge Road opposite the church. The pub next door to the church was named Leefe Robinson and locals campaigned for new pub owners to preserve the name (and press cuttings about him inside the building, left of the doorway).

8 Winston Churchill
Writer of so many famous speeches. He inspired everybody to fight on in WWII. "Never, ever, ever give up." His statue is already outside Parliament in central London. Let's have another in Harrow.


In London in addition to our classic busts of people such as Kennedy, and a statue of Charlie Chaplin standing, we have modern statues such as:
a) The Australian mapmaker, Captain Matthew, and his cat on Euston station.
b) Artist Coneo who painted trains and stations with his palette on Waterloo station.
c) Sherlock Holmes standing wearing his distinctive deerstalker outside Baker Street.
d) Brunel in his high hat, his top hat, on Paddington station.
I would like to see statues all along St Anne's, or St George's shopping areas in Harrow, like they are all along Pietrowsky Street in Lodz, where you see a statue of Arthur Rubinstein, pianist, who was born in Lodz.

Many other famous people have lived or worked in Harrow.
Winston Churchill went to school in Harrow. A picture of him is on the Whitefriars glass in the Harrow Civic Centre, which is going to be demolished. I hope they preserve the glass, as well as the wall of tiles commemorating famous people and events, and the parlour's cabinet of gifts from various groups, from or to former mayors, and the marquetry on the wall in the parlour showing famous people of Harrow.

9Byron
He wrote and went to school at Harrow on the Hill. His young daughter was buried in the church grounds, almost inside the church door.

10 Claire Rayner wrote in Harrow, a formidable woman and campaigner on health issues.

Central London has many more: Dick Whittington and his cat. Harrow is not short of famous people. We need statues of our heroes and heroines to inspire students and install pride and ambition in our residents and workers and visitors.

I want to keep this list in one place so I shall probably come back and update rather than starting another post on the same subject. Georgia Weston, Sue and others have commented on the Facebook page on Harrow.

Photo of sculpture of Arthur Rubinstein seated at the piano in Lodz, Poland, from Wikipedia.
Other photos by Angela Lansbury. Copyright Angela Lansbury
Angela Lansbury, travel writer, author and photographer.

Saturday, November 26, 2016

Illuminated Tree Outside The Broadwalk, Edgware, Middlesex



This illuminated tree livens up and lightens up the dark nights outside The Broadwalk, indoor shopping centre at Edgware, Middlesex, right beside the Edgware train station and bus garage.

When you venture outside the shopping mall and supermarket, you'll find lots more choice of things to do and places to eat up and down the main road, Station Road: The public library, Izgara Turkish food, Orli, Halal food, Kosher food, Polish food, Nando's chicken, a coffee shop and many more.

Edgware Library
I grew up in Edgware, living near the public library. Once I was doing my homework in the library when a boyfriend phoned me. In those days you did not pay by the minute. One old Penny in the box and you could talk indefinitely. So our German au pair girl, Hannelore, ran down to the library to fetch me back to answer the phone whilst the boy of the moment was still hanging on.

Spelling of Edgware
Note that there is no E in the middle of Edgware, only one E at the start and another at the end. Maybe back int he mists of time there was an e as in edge, but over time people got tired. Or perhaps the nam e was established in the middle ages when spelling was a free for all, before the dictionary established set spelling.

Origin of the Name Edgware
OK - I had to look it up in Wikipedia which says:
Edgware is a Saxon name meaning Ecgi's weir. Ecgi was a Saxon and the weir relates to a pond where Ecgi's people caught fish. Goodness, I associate Edgware with being the end of the Edgware Road which was an old Roman road, dead straight from the centre of London, leading north.

Railway Tavern, Edgware
Alas the old Railway tavern, a grand Victorian mock Tudor building is still boarded up, waiting for help (financial help, loving help). It's been siting there for years, empty. Every now and then a sign goes up praising redevelopment. One day. Meanwhile, let's cheer ourselves up thinking of the illuminated tree outside The Broadwalk.

Getting There
If you are driving, it's hard to find a free parking place and you risk getting fined in streets around the main road. However, behind the bus garage is a big public car park. It was free on Sundays last time I parked in Edgware (and went into London on the Northern line). I suggest you look up car parking and the latest car parks and times and charges if you plan to drive and stop there.

Photo by Angela Lansbury, copyright, November 2016.
Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, author and speaker.
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Wine Society Wine Tastings


Christmas trees outside provided a welcome and a free taste of c r e m a n t (sorry, auto correct tried to convert this to creamed. C r e m a n t is a sparkling white wine, not allowed to be called Champagne which is a French place name, and protected). This event was held n Stevenage but go to their website and you'll see they have paid for events all over Britain, sometimes in Europe, which despite the price are often sold out before I get to read the website. Luckily a member of my family is a member and takes me along, and gets news of events like the pre-Christmas tasting which is really hard to find on the website.

The Wine Society is a mutual society, a bit like the Co-op. It costs about £40 to join, and you get £20 back to spend on wines. Once or twice a year they have a free tasting of 10-20 of their wines. The Christmas tasting was free. If you can drive to Stevenage - or visit a friend or stay in a hotel overnight, it's a lot of fun. Some people drive all the way from the south coast of England or down from the Midlands.

A lot of people live in London and zoom up the motorway and back. One person has to be at the designated driver who knows how to taste and spit into a spittoon. If you are not drinking at all, or even if you are, the foods appear within an hour of the start of the tasting. It was from 4 pm to 6 pm, so not for those who work, unless you take time off work, hence a lot of white haired couples, plus a lot of young couples and solo beards.


The Christmas special foods are not on sale other times of year so it's a treat to try them and a chance to buy them. Everyone has different tastes. Others were enthusing about the pates, venison, rabbit, boar. (I'm a chicken liver pate person and none of the pates appealed to me.) But I was impressed by the cheddar cheese, and the honeycomb in chocolate, and the chocolates.

I loved the huge salted almonds. I've never seen such large almonds. The ones in supermarkets the world over are much smaller.
You can buy lots of novelties as gifts. Plum pudding (Christmas pudding), sticky toffee pudding, parkins (a northern biscuit - more details and recipes in Wikipedia and on other websites), tins.

Plus the expected wine glasses, bottle openers and novelties. Our purchase was the balls for cleaning the inside of a decanter or a wine bottle or plastic bottle you use for carrying small amounts of wine. (How does it work? You roll the balls about then empty them out.)

The Stevenage shop and tasting room has two Enomatic machines. The free tasting section is turned off during the free tastings. You don't need it since you are trying the half dozen or dozen wines they are offering and have in stock.

You can still use the paid for machine. The price for the teeny tastes is less than similar machines in shops in central London. The Wine Society has bin ends in a separate room of more expensive and unusual wines. But the vast majority in the main room start from bargain hunter or average person friendly prices.

For example, you might try a taste of a wine from the machine, at just 45p. Contrast that with a shop in Kensington, London, where you might pay £30 for a tasting of a wine costing hundreds of pounds which you would never otherwise get to taste. (I had a sip of one of those very expensive wines from somebody else's glass in central London, and it was wasted on me. The Wine Society is just right for me.)

Whilst I was there, I looked at some of the special sections. One was on English wine and rosé wine. The English wine I noticed was Three Choirs. Many people in Europe are surprised that England has even one vineyard or commercially produced wine.


The staff are all very helpful and knowledgeable. You can ask them anything you like. (Not, 'Are you married or single?'!) You can ask: 'Which food goes with this wine?')

More details from:
Thewinesociety.com

Photos by Angela Lansbury, copyright 2016.
Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, author and speaker.
Follow me and like my posts on blogger.com, Facebook, LinkedIn, YouTube, and read about my books on Amazon and Lulu.com

Saffron Secrets Revealed On Farm Holidays in Umbria, Italy




The Saffron growers have revived saffron production and have a lot of books and leaflets and recipes. You see in my photos the purple crocus flower and the yellow stamens pulled out. It is all done by hand. You need lots of flowers and stamens to make one small jar of the product. That is why saffron is so expensive.

See my previous post on The Story of Saffron and farm holidays in Umbria. More photos and text later today.

Other posts about Umbria cover different types of accommodation and restaurants, such as Castello di Monterone, the castle hotel where I stayed.
See the regional website:
www.umbriatourism.it

Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, author and speaker.Follow me on Facebook, link to me on Linkedin, watch me on YouTube, read about my books on Amazon and Lulu.com