Aware from a Google search that Dulwich Village lacks a breakfast cafe, we disembark at Forest Hill and find the familiar "Cafe Open" sign at BB & Friend Cafe celebrating its 35th anniversary!
When we ask the proprietor if he's the original owner, he laughs and announces he's barely 35 years old! He had been head chef at the Peckham Cafe which was also owned by the previous owner, and 1 1/2 years ago he bought him out.
It's a step above a regular cafe with printed menus,table service and seats for 64. A bowl of shiny fruit on the counter makes it almost posh! Five pen and ink sketches of Forest Hill High Street (2006 by Sivokorn, the artist) and an oversize antique guild framed mirror provide tasteful decor.
But BB's is full of locals, and the tea is hot! To top off a good experience, seeing us waver between wholemeal and crusty bread, the proprietor kindly offers us a slice of each.
We meander through Forest Hill, past the new aqua centre and refurbished Victorian library, down Havelock Walk -- a series of artist's studios stretching down a side street.
Next stop Dulwich Village home to prestigious Dulwich College (frist grade through high school) started in the early 1600's as Alleyn's College of God's Gift by Edward Alleyn an actor and "theatrical entrepreneur." The surrounding bustle of the city seems lightyears away from this quaint quiet village. The Church of England primary school (connected to the College) and the original hall of Dulwich's "College of God's Gift" remind the visitor of the prominence of education here.
Our attraction to Dulwich is the Dulwich Picture Gallery,the oldest public art gallery in London started with the collection bequeathed to Dulwich College by its founder in 1626. We gaze upon Rembrandt, Van Dyck, Rubens and more now housed in a building specifically designed by Sir John Soane 1811. A treasure indeed. One favourite, we don't remember ever seeing before in art books -- "A girl at a window" by Rembrandt.
So, if you're in London and craving country life, drop in on Dulwich Village to step back in time, to slow down, and to enjoy a stroll among the masters.
Another brilliant Breakfast in Britain!
.
Next stop Dulwich Village home to prestigious Dulwich College (frist grade through high school) started in the early 1600's as Alleyn's College of God's Gift by Edward Alleyn an actor and "theatrical entrepreneur." The surrounding bustle of the city seems lightyears away from this quaint quiet village. The Church of England primary school (connected to the College) and the original hall of Dulwich's "College of God's Gift" remind the visitor of the prominence of education here.
Our attraction to Dulwich is the Dulwich Picture Gallery,the oldest public art gallery in London started with the collection bequeathed to Dulwich College by its founder in 1626. We gaze upon Rembrandt, Van Dyck, Rubens and more now housed in a building specifically designed by Sir John Soane 1811. A treasure indeed. One favourite, we don't remember ever seeing before in art books -- "A girl at a window" by Rembrandt.
So, if you're in London and craving country life, drop in on Dulwich Village to step back in time, to slow down, and to enjoy a stroll among the masters.
Another brilliant Breakfast in Britain!
.
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