Looking for a tasty serving of eggs and toast? Or a bit more? Hoping our trials can help avoid your errors! My husband and I eat breakfast out each Thursday, our day off. We have moved to Salisbury from London, so now head out by foot into town or by car into the Wiltshire coutryside on the hunt for a Cafe (pronounced "caff"). We share our collected experiences, and keep you up to date with the new venues we discover each week. Here goes...
Showing posts with label Greenwich. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Greenwich. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Paul's Cafe, Greenwich UK

 Ah, the simple pleasures of a sugar-shaker that pours.  Little did I know, as I do not eat sugar, that  Happy Husband notices the flowing quality of the sugar-shakers.  And here at Paul's Cafe in Greenwich -- the sugar pours freely!  

Thursday Breakfasts in Britain have not faltered; it's the posting that has.  Between a daughter's wedding and the temptations of summer, I've been away from my computer.  Now the dark is returning to London, and my cozy computer corner welcomes me.

We'd spotted Paul's Cafe months ago, walking home from Greenwich via Deptford, crossing the Ravensbourne River bridge closest to the Thames.  

Nestled on a side street (18 Haddo Street, SE10 9RN) and hidden from tourists,  Paul's business is hopping. The proprietor of nine years, from Capadocia,Turkey, explains that the cafe is busy all day, catering to young professionals from the surrounding new high-rise flats springing up in Greenwich at an amazing pace.


Somehow we forgot to take photos of the food -- I'm not a fan of food photos anyway.  But it was hot & tasty -- no complaints.
After our meal we walked the short jaunt to historical Greenwich and enjoyed a self-tour through the Cutty Sark, fastest ship of its day!

Our recomendation:  Paul's Cafe is clean, friendly -- we enjoyed the quirky collection of teapots on the window sill -- a place to which we'll return for another delicious Breakfast in Britain.








Monday, March 10, 2014

A Candle for my Father - from Greenwich to Tower Gate


Today I lit a candle at All Hallow's Church near the Tower for my father who died on Monday.  Today's tale of Breakfast in Britain is how I got there.

It's a glorious morning! The rain has stopped -- rain, rain, rain!  London has had more rain these past couple months than in recorded history...and that's a long time here.

We head out on foot, strolling through the Brockley Conservancy area with its rows of terrace homes, along the Ravensbrook River in Millbrook Park.  Daffodils line the path and blossoms fill the trees.

Even in the park there are signs of construction and maintenance -- Britain's on-going attempt to keep the ravages of time at bay --
replacing broken pavement, straightening sagging fences, painting peeling bridges.

We cross over the DLR (Docklands Light Railway) tracks, which only a few years ago opened up the area for commuters to the financial district of London.  The construction of ever more highrise apartment buildings are testament to the popularity of the idea.

These new expensive towers stand side-by-side with the Council Estate towers, the public housing that dots the London map.  We walk through the Coldbath Street Estate as we near Greenwich.  The view toward the city shimmers in the morning sunlight -- the Shard to the west, Canary Wharf to the East on the horizon.

Tempted to eat at our favourite Golden Cafe, we decide to try a different cafe this morning -- the Hot Pot Cafe on South Greenwich Street.  Like the Golden Cafe, the Hot Pot sits just outside the tourist mecca, so prices are local and reasonable (half the price of their counterparts two streets closer to the Greenwich market).

The bright cafe enjoys a steady stream of fluorescent jackets and hard hats, and assorted tools including a six-foot level -- feeding the men who work hard to keep London up and running.  As usual for these breakfast cafes, not a woman in sight, except me.


Happy Husband enjoys the perfectly runny fried eggs.  The mug of tea steams hot.

The decor is eclectic, for sure.  Pictures of cats, women in togas (looks a bit like a Victorian Greek harem), Eastern European ceramics, mountain scenes of Turkey perhaps, or Vietnam, and two original pieces of art spouting wisdom.



Greenwich is a great starting point for a London extravaganza -- which our day becomes.  We hop on the DLR at the Cutty Sark station, ride under the Thames and then over the canals of the Docklands, ending up at Toward Gate.

As members of the Royal Palaces, we can visit The Tower of London anytime, and we especially enjoy arriving before 10:00 am, before the crowds and strolling through the grounds, often with a quick view of the jewels, the coronation spoon and the gold baptismal fonts.  A good reminder of the disparity between the wealthy and everyone else.  A good reminder that fairy tales include very few characters who live happily ever after under crowns and ermine robes.

Today, rather than walk up the river to the city centre, we head up toward Cheapside.  Construction cranes tower over the city -- making old newer and squeezing in new wherever there is space. We come across a church we've never noticed before, behind the Tower Gift Shop. We slip inside.

We find ourselves on the site of Barking Abbey started in the 7th century, built over "one of the most perfectly preserved" sections of Roman pavement.  All Hallow's Church baptism registry shows William Penn (23 October 1644), and the wedding register displays the signatures of John Quincy Adams and his bride Louise in 1797.
 A Mariners' Chapel displays numerous model ships -- Happy Husband suggests they may have been off-loaded over the years by well meaning parishioners, like the toothpick Last Suppers found on too many church walls.

Breakfast in Britain, a solid start for another wonderful day in London!





Thursday, February 27, 2014

Golden Cafe -- Greenwich High Street -- a favourite

The Golden Cafe on Greenwich High Street is surely my favourite breakfast cafe in London.  In addition to the occasional breakfast out, I meet friends here almost every Saturday morning for a tea with hot milk (which the staff are very happy to provide).  
Great location.  Good hearty food and friendly service at a reasonable price.  

My more posh friends marvel at the 70p price tag on the mug of tea -- obviously not frequenters of breakfast cafes.  Keep in mind, I'm looking for a local friendly greasy spoon, not Costa Coffee. 

The Gold Cafe has everything going for it to qualify as a favourite greasy spoon -- friendly staff, newspapers on the tables, please soft background radio of chatty rock-n-roll, full of men looking for a good hearty breakfast, no TV.  

I love the numerous bright coloured hand-written menu cards covering the walls. 

The Golden Cafe is popular and busy, yet we've always found an empty table, or half of one, enough space for the two of us.  
 Even though we're in Greenwich, the prices are not inflated for potential gullible tourists.  It's just far enough from the central historical area -- the Clocktower Market, recently restored Cutty Sark, Maritime Museum, Painted Hall and Victorian covered market -- that it's protected from any onslaught of tourists. 
When it comes to the food -- runny poached eggs on thick slabs of toast. Hot tea with hot milk.  And a Full English Breakfast option that fills the large plates to overflowing.

I'm not a fan of baked beans, personally, and marvel at their popularity.  For most folks here, breakfast isn't complete without those baked beans on the side.  A bean delivery at the Gold Cafe assures that beans will always be available!  That's a lot of beans!
Seating -- I don't usually think that much about it; most cafes have pre-fab molded tables and chairs, and we just slip in and enjoy our meal.  But here at the Gold Cafe I realize seating makes a difference -- loose chairs that are fairly comfortable (not just molded plastic scoops) make for a better eating experience!  Is it my imagination, or does the conversation actually flow more smoothly when sitting on rattan chairs and my cup rests on a marble-look-alike table?  Maybe that's why I frequent the Gold Cafe and the ECCo on Drury Lane for tea anytime -- just wondering.  

I'll be back to the Golden Cafe in Greenwich for another Breakfast in Britain!  And now, I'll enjoy all that Greenwich has to offer -- a must for anyone visiting London.
Here are photos from a previous visit, on a much sunnier day -- yes the sun does shine in London!

The painted hall ..."The Painted Hall is often described as the ‘finest dining hall in Europe’. Designed by Sir Christopher Wren and Nicholas Hawksmoor, it was originally intended as an eating space for the naval veterans who lived here at the Royal Hospital for Seamen. Its exuberant wall and ceiling decorations are by Sir James Thornhill and pay tribute to British maritime power."  Completed in the early 1700's  http://www.ornc.org  


The matching towers of the Chapel and Painted Hall, part of the old Royal Naval College. "The Chapel, constructed by Thomas Ripley to the designs of Sir Christopher Wren, was the last major part of the Royal Hospital for Seamen to be built. Following a disastrous fire in 1779, it was redecorated by James ‘Athenian’ Stuart in the Greek revival style, and today is a wonderful example of a complete neoclassical interior."

The Cutty Sark, once the fastest ship on the seas!  "Cutty Sark reopened in April 2012, beginning a new chapter in the extraordinary life of the last surviving tea clipper, the fastest and greatest of her time. She is a living testimony to the bygone, glorious days of sail and, most importantly, a monument to those that lost their lives in the merchant service."  http://www.rmg.co.uk/cuttysark 


Looking across the Thames toward Canary Wharf from the Greenwich Observatory... "The Royal Observatory Greenwich is the home of Greenwich Mean Time and the Prime Meridian of the World. It is also home to London's only planetarium, the Harrison timekeepers and the UK's largestrefracting telescope. "  
http://www.rmg.co.uk/royal-observatory