Tag Archives: English

We Lost Our Heart at Borough Market

Borough Market

Since our last trip to London at the beginning of the new millennium the city has changed a lot. You already see it when you look at the skyline that presents itself in a stunning combination of Medieval buildings and modern glass. The Shard is only one of the new views, it stretches its head high over the Tower and from a close it is almost even more impressive.

Borough Market

But it’s not the only great place near London Bridge. Only a few steps further and you will be in one of the most beautiful foodie Heavens this metropole has to offer: Borough Market

Borough Market

Borough Market

Built entirely under a train’s bridge construction, the mere sight is awe-inspiring; an open, yet weatherproof, hall with lots of daylight and a richness of impressions, that invites you to follow your nose wherever it leads you to.

Borough Market

Borough Market

Borough Market

You can roughly divide the market into two parts: The actual market with offers that will serve every palate from spices to greens and fruits, all the way to drinks, sweets, meat, fish, and bread, and the street food area with its constantly steaming pots and happily noshing people. Soul food until your tummy will hurt.

Borough Market

Borough Market

Borough Market

I can’t even say what impressed us most. The mere sight of all these wonderful ingredients? The seafood booths with mussels and shellfish and varieties of tuna in real sushi quality? The locals farmers, presenting their gorgeous products with a proud smile? The mass of vegetables and fruits that even tempt a carnivore like me to leave the beautiful sight of whole shelves packed with salami behind? The omnipresent offer to try, if possible? The cheeses? The colours? The atmosphere? The scents?

Borough Market

Borough Market

Borough Market

Maybe the people. People that are passionate for food. Good food. Real food that was allowed to see sunlight and grow up on a meadow. People that have a contagious sparkle in their eyes when they ask you if they can help you. People that love to cook and eat and enjoy.

Borough Market
Borough Market

Borough Market

Yes, we did come back here for more after our first visit. We tried as much as we could without exploding. We tasted the Comte from Borough Cheese & Co. We tried the gin from the East London Liquor Company. Lots of olive oil. Bought cured sausages at The French Comte. And munched ourselves through the street food from cold brew coffee over juices and smoothies, all the way to freaking amazing coconut pancakes, sausage rolls and burgers.

Borough Market

Borough Market

Borough Market

The only drop of bitterness was that we couldn’t take some vegetables with us. Or one of the mushroom baskets, some soft cheeses or fish. And that our bellies were stuffed too soon.

Borough Market

Borough Market

Borough Market

Borough Market

Thank you Borough Market for two wonderful and inspiring days in foodie paradise. We already miss you and your wonderful flavours.

And we’ll be back!

Borough Market

Borough Market

Borough Market

Street Food: Brick Lane & Camden Market

20160731-20160731-DSC_1631

There is a certain flair to street food markets that will ultimately pull you in. In Germany the trend is relatively new as far as I’m observing, and some attempts end in, sadly, rather bad and cheep food that comes at high prices and with an almost disappointed shrug of one’s shoulders in the end.

This isn’t a German problem only, naturally. It’s not that we don’t have great food either. On the contrary! But street food here still can’t shrug off this awkward image about being „not good“, fatty and unhealthy. Oh boy, how much do we have got to learn on that account!

20160731-20160731-DSC_1650

Of course a city like London is a bad comparison to a relatively small town somewhere between the Black Forest and the Swabian Alp. But let’s just take a look at London’s Brick Lane in the Shoreditch region. It has such a wonderful market that opens its doors on Sunday from 10am till 5pm to a colourful offer of food, fashion, music, art, and more.

20160731-20160731-DSC_1644

20160731-20160731-DSC_1642

It’s especially the cultural mix that fascinated us most about the London Artisan, the multiplicity of spices, flavours and scents. You can have Italian pasta, Japanese Ramen, or Spanish pealla. Chinese dumlings or Turkish sweets as well as Swedish buns, Mexican wraps or Greek antipasto.

20160731-20160731-DSC_1616

20160731-20160731-DSC_1617

You can indulge in cannoli (some Godfather fans present?) or solely in some fresh coconut water, some fruit or something like duck confit burgers or vegan pancakes.

20160731-20160731-DSC_1639

20160731-20160731-DSC_1609

The hall is vibrant with people chatting, meeting, eating, cooking, offering tasters. Wherever you go there is a good chance you will end up with your nose inhaling deeply over one of the many pans that bubble with food and breathe their delicious steam. Spice-pallets from Thai to Cuban to British to Vietnamese and to tropical islands await you everywhere. All you have to do is to just try.

20160731-20160731-DSC_1622

20160731-20160731-DSC_1637

And when you are done with the hall, you can go out, right back on Brick Lane itself, and experience even more. Worth a visit for example is one of the Dark Sugars stores: chocoholic paradise. You can buy whole bricks of chocolate here and the offer of chocolate truffles is amazing. Also it is one of these great places that makes hot chocolate with freshly chopped chocolate and in a way that will taste deliciously sinful.

20160731-20160731-DSC_1628

Afterwards you can take the Circle line via Baker Street and visit the address with the 221 B on the door and, on your way back, you could also make a stop at King’s Cross to visit Platform 9 3/4. There is a photo service for fans and a store…a nice place for Potterheads like me.

And not far from King’s Cross—just two stops away with the Northern line—there also is Camden Market.

20160727-20160727-DSC_1207

20160727-20160727-DSC_1138

Camden High Street is a region that seethes with modern life. The moment you step out of the Tube station it will capture you and lure you in. Head north, just along with the masses: They know where the good stuff will be. The walk up to the Camden Lock Village, where we are heading to, is an experience for itself. A little bit touristy, but also the home for subcultures.

20160727-20160727-DSC_1198

20160727-20160727-DSC_1194

You’ll see lots of tattoo parlours, piercing studious, beautiful Goth fashion and more, all lined up on both sides of the road. A feast for the senses! After a while you’ll cross a bridge and this, here, is where we wanted to go to all along. The street food market and all these wonderful stores that will charm you right away.

20160728-20160728-DSC_1254

Grab a drink somewhere, there’s enough juice, smoothies, lemonade or coffee, and stroll around. Take your time, because this wonderful place on earth is made of narrow, crooked alleys, with more and more to discover, just around the corner.

20160728-20160728-DSC_1225

Here you can have freshly roasted espresso from an adjacent booth, while you wait in line for some sushi with shrimp tempura that will make you smile in delight. Here you can look at handmade jewelry, while the scent of incense sticks from nearby lulls you in—in all the best ways.

20160727-20160727-DSC_1152

20160728-20160728-DSC_1229

A little further the food hall begins and simply the scents whilst walking through are pure joy. Asian, African, European, American…you will find what you are peckish for. Accept the tasters that are offered. Do it! And eat more than you thought you could, because it all tastes so delicious. The crispy fried chicken from the guys at the Thai booth for example. Heavenly!

20160728-20160728-DSC_1240

20160728-20160728-DSC_1245

And then there are the stables. Originally real stables, they have been made into a wonderland of tiny, little stores that sell all kinds of bric-a-brac and fashion.

20160728-20160728-DSC_1279

20160727-20160727-DSC_1173

Books, bags, accessories, psychic readings, dishware, shoes,…take a pick. My favourite were the Metal Rooster with its comfy unisex clothes and the Shoe Embassy (thanks again to Julia for the tip!). And always there’s the food nearby. Seriously: Take some quality time with you and a hungry stomach.

20160728-20160728-DSC_1265

20160728-20160728-DSC_1272

20160727-20160727-DSC_1167

I wish we could have spent more hours there, tasting ourselves through even more. But the last thing, the most wonderfullest (!) place in London? It’s still ahead of us.

Borough Market

Next and final stop: Borough Market.

A Tour to the Tower & Shaftsbury Ave

London

The streets are alive. People everywhere. Locals, foreigners, tourists, businessmen, workers, advertisers. A wonderful mix of ethnic groups and culture. The air is buzzing constantly and from the stairs next to you rises the unmistakable scent of the Tube. Yes, finally, I’m in London again.

London

There’s something to this metropole that has been fascinating me ever since I was three years old. An inner pull towards that place, all over the North Sea, that probably will never fade entirely. This time was the first time I’ve not spent with my family overseas or with typical tourist attractions.

It was the first time I’ve been there just to let my feet carry me, wherever we’ve wanted to, curiously peeking into small alley, sticking our noses into new markets, eating our way through pubs, booths, bars, and breakfast buffets. Enjoying a long-needed change of scenery from everyday life.

London

The Travelodge just next to the Tower was a perfect place to discover the city from anew. A five minute walk to the next Tube station and the Tower itself and—even better—with a new favourite pub right next to the hotel’s entrance. Only a few stairs or a lift ride away from the rented room.

I don’t know what it is that always makes us choose a bustling pub at our first evening at a new place. The connection to the locals, the promise of soulfood and an invigorating beer, a breath of everyday city life and the comforting jumble of the local language all around? Whatever it is; is it good we always end up coming back and back again. Like to the Minories with it’s wonderful collection of burgers, pies, desserts and drinks.

London

London

Go there on a Thursday or Friday evening from 5pm till 8 pm for a Pornstar Martini (Absolut Vanilia vodka, Passoã, passion fruit purée, pineapple juice and lime, served with a shot of Galanti Prosecco) and another cocktail of your choice for the price of one. Yes, the martini is as sinfully delicious as it sounds like. Also try their burgers and the salted caramel & chocolate bar.

If you do visit the Tower you will come across one of the Wagamama restaurants all over town. Inspired by Japanese ramen bars and Asian food in general they serve delicious dishes, snacks, and juices with a nice twist, that leaves you with a refreshed feeling and a happy belly. The lollipop prawn kushiyaki and the grilled duck ramen have taken a shine to us, as has the repair juice with kale, apple, lime, and pear. Order the mini cake selection for dessert or trust our favourite choice and directly go for the white chocolate ginger cheesecake. Yum!

London

London

Let’s leave the area around the Tower and go into the heart of the city around Leicester Square and Piccadilly Circus. There are places there that will always have my heart, starting with Foyles (my most favourite book store with a house-own café) on Charing Cross Road, Forbidden Planet on Shaftsbury Avenue (a must for every geek with a penchant for comics, books, or mangas—for games visit Orcs Nest, 6 Earlham Street), and Chinatown between them.

London

This time we couldn’t help ourselves to visit a few filming locations. Kingsman: The Secret Service got me hooked a few weeks ago and we visited one of the tailors in Savile Row that still has the Kingsman lettering on one side of its entrance sign, as well as the logo in the display window. And since St. James Street isn’t too far from Piccadilly Circus as well, we also went to visit one of the most traditional hatters in London, Lock & Co. Hatters, where people like Charlie Chaplin, Sir Alec Guinness and Winston Churchill got their headwear. What a great store.

London

Also, (if you are a Potterhead) there is Harry Potter and the Cursed Child playing at the Palace Theatre, Shaftsbury Avenue, currently. We didn’t get any tickets for the premiere sadly, so we haven’t watched it. But it’s a valid reason to go back.

London

A new place to eat at we found by mere accident while we waited for the Forbidden Planet to open. You find SaladPride in one of the hidden inner courtyards, 2 Neal’s Yard, and it is a wonderful oasis of calm and amazing smoothies, salads, and a great scenery—right next to one of the busiest streets in London. Just sit down, relax, and slurp a pear & lavender or mint & cucumber smoothie or an antidote juice and be amazed by the vibrant colours and wonderful people around you.

London

London

Another great place we fell in love with, almost too late during our stay, is the Shibuya Soho, 110 Shaftesbury Ave, right at the outskirts of Chinatown. If you are looking for a traditional Japanese place to eat at, you will want to go there. What almost held us back during our first visit were the prices…what we didn’t know though, was that they included everything a traditional Japanese menu is about: miso soup, pickles, more pickles, sauces, and the „main dish“ you choose. Let’s just say we almost wept because we dared to try it only on our second to last evening in town.

London

The food was more than amazing and we were reluctant to leave it behind. Go with the shabu shabu, a fondue-like dish with broth, any kind of gyouza that speak to you, or the sashimi don. Or invest a bit more and go for the fish plate with daily specials that I sadly don’t know what it’s called anymore, but that already looks so amazing it makes you swoon. Also have a green tea.

London

If you fancy Chinese on the other hand, go into one of the alleys next to it and settle for one of the places in Chinatown. Order some dim sum, a Peking duck dish or a Cantonese pork speciality, may it be ribs or crispy grilled belly. You won’t regret it.

London

Next stop: Brick Lane and Camden Market.