Echo the Seagull
Active member
Amended for youMy wife's family are Greek Cypriot and they thought they were shithouse.
Amended for youMy wife's family are Greek Cypriot and they thought they were shithouse.
The best potato I ever had was in Lisbon. Here, in factPortuguese potatoes are lush as well.
Quite possible for a similar reason as why it's very difficult to obtain Greek or Cypriot wines, (ther than Retsina), citrus fruit, or even olives, (other than Kalamata), in this country.Bloody love them. Waxy and excellent roasted.
Also perplexed as to why they’re rarely sold
I hear that Battersea has gone so far upmarket now, the locals are renaming it South Chelsea.Left there years ago, I was there before it was trendy, when it got trendy it never really improved and now parts of the High Street resemble the arse end of Oxford Street.
I liked living there, but never got the trendy posh label ever.
Balham, particularly the area between it and "Clapham Junction" is far posher than Clapham (infinitely so) but we like to keep very quiet about it.
We have a garden centre for instance albeit next to the prison.
Macknade sells dirty whiles at 65p a kilo (or pound, whatever). The Cyprus potatoes are £2.50 for the same weight.Anyone else a fan ?
.. and can anyone else throw light on why supermarkets don't sell them ? Is the mud that puts people off ?
Not that worries me because they are in abundance in the multi cultural yoghurt knitting urban utopia where I exist.
I just feel sorry for those you have never tried them. I eat mine with a fine olive oil and Greek yoghurt,
There are the king of the baked potato varieties.
That happened 30 years ago.I hear that Battersea has gone so far upmarket now, the locals are renaming it South Chelsea.
I hear that Battersea has gone so far upmarket now, the locals are renaming it South Chelsea.
The best potato I ever had was in Lisbon. Here, in fact
Looks like a great restaurant. I normally go for humbler fishy places and there's something they do with the spuds and slightly split them that's just incredible. A good mixed salad, some spuds and a bottle of cold, crisp Arinto will do me.
I owned property in Railton Road, Brixton, back in the early 1980's, one of the few houses that wasn't burned out in the riots. I wonder how much it would be worth today.It's always been "up-market" although like most bits of London it has it's rough bits.
"Between The Commons" , leading up to Northcote Road puts a lot of North London to shame.
If anything Clapham has gone down hill.
I lived there for 6 years or so in the 1970s, and have visited for holidays dozens of time since. When we lived there, the suggestion was that Cyprus didn't import anything fresh, and that it could produce (grow) anything they needed, they even planted bananas so as to avoid importing. There was always an enormous sense of pride in their own produce, and the potatoes are stunning. When spuds are being harvested you see convoys of trucks taking them for processing, especially in the areas to the east of Larnaca, north of Ayia Napa where the soil is a deep red colour. IIRC they have always exported them.Quite possible for a similar reason as why it's very difficult to obtain Greek or Cypriot wines, (ther than Retsina), citrus fruit, or even olives, (other than Kalamata), in this country.
The truth sadly is, that neither Greece nor Cyprus, for some inexplicable reason, exports it in any meaningful numbers. Such a shame as Greece is one of the leading wine procucers in Europe, yet all it exports, to this country at least, in any sort of number, is the humble Retsina. I like Retsina but it is hardly a wine.
The same applies to citrus fruit, they grow an awful lot of it, but what they don't produce for themselves is often left unpicked. Such a shame.
Yep l absolutely agree.20 years ago or so archaeologists working on an area that was to be developed for the tourist industry discovered artefacts that showed the (then) oldest evidence of wine production in the world. CY wine is either toenail or pretty good. Some of the indigenous grape varieties, produced by wineries like Tsiakkas using Vamvakada/Maratheftiko grapes make really good wines, IMO.
Good location. Only a stone's throw from the station.I owned property in Railton Road, Brixton, back in the early 1980's, one of the few houses that wasn't burned out in the riots. I wonder how much it would be worth today.
Yes plenty of thoise flying about in 1981.Good location. Only a stone's throw from the station.
An ex GF had a flat in 'Claahm' when she was at 'Chelsea art college darling' that was '97That happened 30 years ago.
And Clapham and Balham became Claahm and Baahm