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  • Warsaw – Metro System (Visiting Every Station)

    Warsaw – Metro System (Visiting Every Station)

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    I obviously need a new project since I only have about 18 ongoing ones….. It’s not a great secret that I have a moderate obsession with trains, metros and trams, although coaches and buses usually annoy me, so I can be picky rather than randomly loving all forms of public transport. The evolution of metro systems also intrigues me, I’ve been on a couple of systems in China which were expanding at an insane rate, and on systems which don’t seem to be getting bigger any time soon.

    The Warsaw Metro system (Metro Warszawskie) is the only rapid transit system in Poland and it’s of a manageable size as they only have two lines. After many failed starts to the project, the first section didn’t open until 1995 and a second line has since opened. The first line goes from north to south and is the M1 (the blue line) and the second line goes from east to west and is the M2 (the red line). They cross at just one place, Świętokrzyska, and there are plans to extend the lines and also to open new lines.

    So my intention here is to cause mass excitement for my two loyal blog readers with no end of posts about the history of the network, but I’m also going to visit every metro station and try and find something interesting to write about all of them. To check this will sufficiently interest me, I’ve already visited eight of the metro stations and I haven’t lost engagement yet, so I think it’s safe to start posting this. I’m starting with the M2 line, but to get us going, here is a list of all of the stations. I’ll eventually hopefully link to all of them. And, yes, I should probably get out more if I think metro systems are this exciting, but there we go…. I’m not saying this will be fascinating, but it’ll keep me sort of quiet for a little while.

    OK, given all of that, here is a list of the currently operational stations on the Warsaw Metro system, based on the network status since the last openings in September 2022, grouped by line:

    M1 Line (North-South) – 21 stations

    • A01 Kabaty
    • A02 Natolin
    • A03 Imielin
    • A04 Stokłosy
    • A05 Ursynów
    • A06 Służew
    • A07 Wilanowska
    • A08 Wierzbno
    • A09 Racławicka
    • A10 Pole Mokotowskie
    • A11 Politechnika
    • A13 Centrum
    • A14 Świętokrzyska
    • A15 Ratusz Arsenał
    • A17 Dworzec Gdański
    • A18 Plac Wilsona
    • A19 Marymont
    • A20 Słodowiec
    • A21 Stare Bielany
    • A22 Wawrzyszew
    • A23 Młociny  

    M2 Line (East-West) – 18 stations

  • Norwich – Rumsey Wells (Two Julians)

    Norwich – Rumsey Wells (Two Julians)

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    This was the third pub on the latest perambulation around Norwich that Julian and I undertook last week as a service for the people of Norfolk and Suffolk (and indeed beyond) as we continue our attempts to straddle the Waveney. I confess we haven’t done much straddling lately, but never write us off as we are brave enough to return to Suffolk for brief periods at a time.

    I have digressed though. The history of the pub is complex, although it has transpired that Julian once again remembered its recent past correctly (he hasn’t entirely lost it just yet), and effectively the pub was originally the building on the right. It then lost that bit on the corner which is now a shop, but which was the main bar, but then gained the relatively large building in the middle which was a hat outfitters. George Plunkett has a rather lovely photo of the front door from 1938. There’s also a photo in his archive from 1989 which shows what is now a separate shop, but the old name remained it appears for the new shop.

    The historic pub bit of the building had opened as a wine and spirits shop, operated by Ward & Fisher (later Ward & Seaman), in the early 1820s and in 1829 the owners offered the lease for sale and noted the substantial cellars and premises that the wine merchants were operating from. The building became a pub in the later Victorian period which was known as the Shrub House and it was taken over by Lacons in 1896. In the 1970s, the corner section was lost to become a shop and the pub closed in 1979 for a few years. In 1984 it opened in its expanded form and was renamed the Blueberries and then became known as the Rumsey Wells between 1985 and 1989. It was then renamed again (I wish they’d stop doing this to pubs as it always sounds like they’ve having some identity crisis) to St. Andrew’s Tavern, but reverted once again to the Rumsey Wells in 2008. Hopefully they’ll just leave it like this now.

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    The new bit of the pub. This is the former shop area which was historically run by Herbert Rumsey Wells (1877-1937) and he was rewarded by having the pub name after him. He was by all accounts something of an eccentric hatter and his family business dated back to the early nineteenth century. Visible in the above photo, this was the Wells & Son hat shop that became part of the pub in 1984. Between 1984 and 1989, the pub was run by Colin Keatley, who went on to do great things at the Fat Cat. Back to Rumsey Wells, I mentioned that he was eccentric as I got that impression from the obituary put in the local newspaper in December 1937:

    “Norwich has lost a picturesque personality by the death at his home in St. Andrew’s Street, on Wednesday, of Mr. Herbert Rumsey Wells. He was 60 years of age. With his “doggy” cap, large Inverness cape, snuffbox, and sometimes a monocle, he must have been known to many thousands of his fellow-citizens, and he was almost as well known in most of the big cities and towns of the British Isles. It was his boast that he was the most expensive cap maker in the world. He travelled the country on behalf of his firm from Land’s End to John o’Groat’s and it certainly could be said that he was his own walking advertisement.”

    You’ve got to have some confidence to say that you’re the most expensive in the world…..

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    The pub today is operated by Adnams, which might be obvious when looking at the beer options. The service from the team member was efficient and polite, although it’s a little difficult here as they have a split bar and I know from past experience that it’s hard for them to see who is waiting next. Everything seemed well managed, although there were some uncovered sausage rolls that were looking a bit lost and vulnerable at the end of the bar, like pastry orphans awaiting adoption. For the truly forensic photo inspectors, they can spot them in the earlier photo, assuming they have the time and, frankly, the inclination for such detailed sausage roll scrutiny.

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    The old bit of the pub is visible behind the glass. The beer inside the glass is the Double Ghost IPA from Adnams, not a beer that I’ve heard of before, but it was rather lovely with a malty, slight toffee flavour which was balanced and smooth. The beer was well-kept and served in an appropriate branded glass, not something that’s essential but I do try and mention it positively.

    The food offer here is Pieminister (which I keep calling Pieminster in error) and they had a selection of pies available at prices that weren’t unreasonable. It’s an interesting food franchise, it keeps an option open for customers, without having the huge kitchen and salary costs of a larger operation.

    The venue is a rather agreeable one, although it’s not one that I visit at all regularly. The pricing was somewhere around average and the pub was clean and organised, with a slightly studenty vibe going on. I didn’t visit them on this occasion, but they have a little courtyard area available and I think there’s a basement bar which is in operation when it gets busier. Anyway, the pub had some interesting beer choices and a quirky building history, so all rather lovely.

  • Norwich – Cinema City Bar (Two Julians)

    Norwich – Cinema City Bar (Two Julians)

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    Julian suggested for the second evening visit of the night that we should visit the Cinema City bar. Now, this was a decent idea, but it’s such a complex building that there’s quite a lot of history to uncover. Julian has had some significant involvement here over the years, but I’ll let him tell those stories over a pint…. It’s an historic building which opened as a cinema in April 1978 and it was remodelled between 2004 and 2007 to add more screens. George Plunkett took a photo from around this location in 1936 and it looks relatively unchanged from the exterior. Here’s one of the frontage of the building from the same time period, showing what is now the entrance to Cinema City.

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    The courtyard of the building. So, as I understand, Cinema City is formed of two buildings:

    (i) Suckling House – This is the core medieval part of the building which faces onto St Andrews Street. It’s a Grade I listed merchant’s house with origins dating back to the early 14th century (around the 1320s). It’s named after the Suckling family (Robert Suckling was Mayor of Norwich) who owned it in the 16th century and it stopped being used as a residence around 1915, today being the restaurant and bar area of the cinema.

    (ii) Stuart Hall – This hall was added to the east side of Suckling House. It was part of a restoration project funded by Ethel Mary and Helen Caroline Colman (of the Colman’s Mustard family) in 1923. They gifted the restored Suckling House and the newly added Stuart Hall (designed by local architect Edward Boardman) to the City of Norwich in 1925 for public and educational use. Stuart Hall was equipped with cinema projection facilities from early on and this is the area of the building where the cinema screens are located.

    Two medieval doorways survive in Suckling House and it was originally constructed as a hall house. Julian correctly remembered the building was descheduled in 1997, but it remains protected and is known as one of the city’s most historic buildings. It has obviously required some clever and innovative thinking to ensure that the building could be modified to become a cinema and remain in usage, but to also ensure that it remained suitably protected.

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    The dining room area. I didn’t go in here as I didn’t want to disturb the sole table of diners. The building was partly demolished by the construction of a tramway, although not as much as the building opposite, but the listed building record mentions that some of it was restored back again. I am going to copy the building survey here as I think it’s a definitive record and offers a more detailed background than I can offer:

    “The Great Hall of Suckling House is generally agreed to be 14th century, although opinions about the precise date vary. The original entrance to the hall would have been through one of the two doors which face one another at the western end of the hall. This would have led into a screens passage which, on the western side led to service rooms in vaulted bays, and to the east into the open hall. The screen was probably timber, and no trace remains. The area where the cinema foyer is today was originally part of the Little Parlour, and fragments of the wall survive in the north and south walls. In the south wall at first floor level a medieval door still exists, and may represent the original entrance to the Solar from an external stair.

    The ground floor of the western range would have served as the service wing. Three vaulted bays survive, with evidence for another in the panelled room. This latter bay has fragmentary remains of vault webbing and is thought to have been the buttery, with the larder to the south, and further south were kitchens. There is much speculation about whether the service wing is earlier or later than the hall. The awkward junction between the original southern door and the vaults suggest that the two buildings cannot be contemporary. The layout of the hall follows the typical Norwich format of having the principal living rooms separated from the street by service rooms.

    Early in the 16th century a long covered passageway was added to the north of the hall, leading out from the screens passage towards the counting house. This had open sides with oak posts and decorated spandrels, one with the Grocers’ Arms and another with the arms of St Andrew. The inventory of Robert Suckling (1589) has allowed a conjectural plan of the building to be drawn up. In the 17th century the building begins to be broken up. In 1608 the buildings were divided into northern and southern sections and sold separately. The wine merchant Philip Rose who bought Suckling House from 1819 is believed to be responsible for the insertion of a cellar in the Great Hall by raising the floor. Wine merchants continued to use the building until 1914. In the 17th century the western range was refaced . The Great Gate that once stood just south of the Counting House was blocked off and incorporated into a house of six bays which appears Georgian, but is in fact just refaced.”

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    A rather lovely window which has some seating located within it. There’s some stained glass at the top of the window, although it’s hard to make out from this photo.

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    For reference, this is the pizza menu. The pricing is a little punchy, but it’s in quite a decadent building which is generally frequented by, let’s be realistic, a relatively middle-class audience.

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    The main menu.

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    That’s some ceiling arrangement.

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    Spot the smoke alarm in the rafters which it feels must be entirely sub-optimal to have to change.

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    The bar area and it’s perhaps a little cluttered, but they are trying to sell snacks to cinema goers, so I understand that. The service was friendly, personable and efficient, so the vibe was welcoming.

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    And finally the beer, which was pretty much the only option and there’s no cask available at all. The beer is the Mosaic Pale Ale from Adnams, but this is the keg version which was light and hoppy, but a little too cold and I think it’s simply better in cask form.

    This venue is one that is probably over-looked by many drinkers in the city and I have to confess that it has never occurred to me to come here. But that’s what you get for being friends with Julian, an encyclopaedia knowledge of every watering hole in Norwich. It’s a little pricey and the beer selection is limited, but the surroundings are historic and on that basis alone, it’s worth a visit.

  • Warsaw – Hopito Parkingowa

    Warsaw – Hopito Parkingowa

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    This is one of two Hopito outlets in Warsaw and this is their newer venue, which I usually always visit when I come to the city. The service is always personable and efficient, it’s a comfortable and on-trend atmosphere as well. The venue’s craft beer list is available at https://hopito.ontap.pl/. There are usually twenty-one taps available with a well curated range of beers, including sours, porters and some rarer beer styles. The team members are knowledgeable, keen to engage and willing to offer samples. I’m not entirely sure why it’s named as Parkingowa, but that’s the name they use on Untappd and so that’s what we’re using here, although I’m sure there are better things to name it than after car parking. It’s located on ul. Żurawia and it’s won numerous awards over the last couple of years.

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    I haven’t had a flight here before, but there were a number of tempting options (including from my favourite brewery, Funky Fluid) and so I couldn’t choose just one. The flight was branded with the Hopito logo, as were the individual glasses.

    The beers, from left to right, are:

    Gelato : Royal Orange from Funky Fluid and I wish that all orange juice tasted like this. It was a smooth beer with a suitable level of sourness, with flavours of mango and peach in addition to the orange.

    Crisis Identity from Browar Monsters, like a sweet, malty chocolate delight, with a rather decent lingering flavour.

    Born in the USA from Funky Fluid, clean, light and tropical. A credible beer, although I think that Funky Fluid’s strengths lie elsewhere.

    Mochi Green – Kiwi, Banana & Mochi from Magic Road. A rather lovely pastry sour, with the kiwi and banana being evident and it’s a nice and smooth beer.

    The Last Call from Harpagan, an oaty and roasty beer.

    This was an interesting selection of beers, it’s always a delight to see what they have here.

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    This is the n’duja pizza and it’s the first time I can recall having burrata on a pizza and it was quite marvellous. The heat from the n’duja was in contrast to the creaminess of the burrata, with the base having a richness of flavour and suitable leopard spotting. The pizza is the equivalent of less than £10 and for the quality, I thought that was a bargain, even though it’s one of their most expensive options. Decadent and delicious, I might come back and have this pizza option again at some point later in the year. It would be hard to eat this without a knife and fork, it’s something of a creamy and saucy delight.

    There’s quite an artistic feel to the interior and although it was quiet when I visited in the late afternoon, it gets busy in the evenings and on weekends. The toilets are a little challenging to get in given the arrangement of their beer barrels, but where there’s a will then there’s a way. The atmosphere is informal and relaxed, with customers needing to order their food and drink at the bar. The venue’s pizza oven is visible behind the bar to add to the authenticity of the whole arrangement.

    The venue is centrally located and under 100 metres from one of my favourite hotels, the Novotel, although that’s been a little pricier than other options recently so I have stayed there for a couple of years. I will definitely be coming here again, it’s in my opinion one of the best craft beer bars in Warsaw with an excellent selection of craft beer and some delightful pizza.

  • Norwich – St. Andrew’s Brewhouse (Two Julians)

    Norwich – St. Andrew’s Brewhouse (Two Julians)

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    Located on St. George’s Street, this is the exterior of St. Andrew’s Brewhouse which opened as the Festival House in 1899 when it was a Bullards pub (George Plunkett has a photo which he took in 1936 of the exterior). It was briefly known as the Grocer’s Ghost in 1992, then briefly as Franco’s the following year, before reverting to its original name. In 2001, it was reopened as the Irish bar Delaney’s after a substantial renovation, before being renovated once again and opening under its current name in 2015.

    John Hostler, a local labourer of no fixed residence, was intoxicated inside the pub and had his drink removed from him in 1908, so he threatened to put in the windows. He managed to do this, causing nearly £5 damage to the large plate glass window at the pub. In his defence to the court, he said that he fell and “my knee accidentally went through the glass”, but unsurprisingly this wasn’t believed and he was sentenced to six weeks hard labour. Perhaps as an attempt to get some of their money back, the next year they were flogging tickets to see the King go by, offering “splendid uninterrupted view of the procession, with tickets from 2s 6d”.

    It was reported in the local press on 22 May 1909 that the new landlord of just two weeks, Joseph Samuel Paston, had been found dead in the pub. I’ll repost the entire article as it’s quite intriguing:

    “The Norwich City Coroner (Mr. R. W. Ladell) conducted an inquiry on Monday morning into the sad circumstances attending the death of Joseph Samuel Paston, aged 55, landlord of the Festival House public-house, St. Andrew’s, who was found dead in bed at 10.30 last Saturday morning, having evidently died from gas poisoning. Mr. P. L’Estrange was present, representing Messrs. Bullard, Ltd.—The widow, Alice Mary Paston, who is living at 43, Gertrude Road., said her husband was a retired Sergt. Major of the 3rd Dragoon Guards, and until quite recently was landlord of the Golden Star public-house, Duke-st. During the past two years his health had not been very satisfactory, and on several occasions he had received medical treatment. They had only lived at Gertrude-rd. a fortnight, during which time he applied for an appointment as caretaker, but he was unsuccessful, and in consequence he had taken over the licence of the Festival House.

    As her husband had been in the Festival House only a fortnight, their furniture had not yet been removed from Gertrude Road. The deceased had slept at the house, and witness and her little boy had slept at Gertrude Road., witness sending her husband’s meals down to him. On Friday afternoon last the deceased became somewhat queer, and he went to bed unusually early. On Saturday morning witness carried on the business of the house, and about half-past ten, thinking her husband had had a long rest, she went to his room to tell him to get up. On going into the room she found it full of gas fumes. She immediately opened a window, and on going to the bed found her husband quite dead. He had apparently passed away in his sleep. Witness was of opinion that in turning off the gas, which was immediately above the bed, he accidentally turned it on again. Her husband had been extremely happy since he had been in that house.— A son, Wm. Thomas Paston aged 12, said he last saw his father alive on Friday afternoon, when he was very queer. He corroborated the other facts of his mother’s evidence.—Detective-Sergt. Goldsmith spoke to examining the premises on Saturday evening. He thought the gas was turned on in an accidental way as the deceased was taking his arm from the burner.—A verdict of “Accidental Death” by suffocation was returned, the jury expressing their deep sorrow with Mrs. Paston in her bereavement.—Mr. L’Estrange said the deceased was a most trustworthy man.”

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    The interior of the pub and it’s all rather large in size, with a lower seated area which has a restaurant and numerous floors above which are usually reserved for private parties. They have also been used as a nightclub in the past and it has gone under numerous incarnations, including as Sams Rock Nite Club. I think that sounds just a little raucous for me. It was also named Samantha’s, which I assume is the same Sam, claiming to be the only rock club in Norfolk with its resident DJ, Gary Lee. When I get my little group about pub history going, I suspect that there will be a lot of memories from people about this pub and club.

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    The beer selection is mostly, but not entirely, from their own brewery set-up. I think the server was new, but he was friendly enough, with the pub feeling generally all rather clean and tidy.

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    The beer I went for was half a pint of the Anglo Saxon Amber from St. Andrew’s Brewhouse. Its flavour seemed to be playing a rather successful game of hide-and-seek if I’m being entirely honest, and it’s hard not to be as I merrily score every beer I have on Untappd. A thin and quite watery brew which was rather sub-optimal, it had the charming simplicity of something your mate might proudly offer from his garden shed brewery – you praise the effort, admire the bottle and hope he doesn’t notice you didn’t quite finish it. Julian had the Oaks from Barsham Brewery and was more pleased, noting it was a nice, standard bitter. The prices are slightly higher than average for beer, but not by much, so it’s all relatively affordable.

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    Flights are available….. I’ve had numerous beers from the brewery and I’ll just limit myself to saying that I haven’t ever been surprised or delighted. Well, I’ve been surprised, but not in the positive sense, as I had a Tombland Porter in December 2021 and it was hard to even get through it and I had the Grocer’s Ghost Pale Ale on the same night and discovered that it was even worse. However, others might get on better with beers from the brewery, each to their own.

    I mainly remember this as Delaney’s, a vibrant and quite loud Irish bar, which Julian reminded me used to have elevated wooden seating by the window which allowed for watching over the bar. Julian also reminded me of how he once helpfully used to sit watching the bar for trouble-makers many years ago, he’s always offered that helpful service to landlords and landladies. Back to the pub, I’ve rated the food here higher than the drink over the years, but the service has always been polite and helpful. It’s located opposite where Norwich Beer Festival is held every October (other than last year when the Halls were out of commission, hopefully not something which will happen again this year) and there’s external seating which is agreeable for people watching. It’s a popular venue and so it’s clearly doing quite a lot right, so that’s all rather lovely.

  • Food from Every Stall on Norwich Market (2025 Edition) – Week 4 and Norwich Fresh

    Food from Every Stall on Norwich Market (2025 Edition) – Week 4 and Norwich Fresh

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    And the fourth week of this year’s attempt to visit every food stall on Norwich market. James and I visited this stall in 2023, his first appearance in this riveting series after he inherited this rather sacred duty from Nathan. He’s truly embracing the role now, displaying admirable dedication… primarily dedicated to finding creative ways to make the ‘random’ stall choice land squarely on the purveyor of whatever deep-fried delight he’s currently craving. His methods lack subtlety but score high on optimism.

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    The stall opening hours and there’s a juice bar opposite run by the same operator. I had forgotten about this and we did consider including this last time, but we opted for stalls which sold food, so limited ourselves to this main event.

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    The menu part one and the price increases since 2023 have been moderate, around 50p for each dish. The pricing was already towards the higher end of the scale for the market, so they perhaps don’t have much margin here to increase prices further. It’s an extensive list, but it’s all clearly displayed. The stall accepts cash and cards, with the service being efficient when we visited despite there being quite a queue.

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    The menu part two….. I am supposed to be ordering different items from 2023 but hadn’t checked (I’ve been ill so I’ve had to limit my screen time to under twelve hours a day which has caused me some issues) what I had last time, but thought it unlikely that I’d order the same thing given the menu is quite broad. I mean, what are the odds of my getting the same again? Apparently, the odds are 100% when you’re a creature of habit whose subconscious has the culinary imagination of a beige brick….. I might as well copy and paste this from my last visit…

    “I decided to opt for the Korean Chicken Bowl which is battered fried chicken served with jasmine rice, chicken and vegetable dumplings, boiled broccoli, spring onion and homemade Korean sweet and sour sauce.”

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    Your number’s up….. Customers are given a ticket and they wait for their number to be called. We had a wait of six minutes, which wasn’t unreasonable given that it was busy when we visited.

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    And the food was served, looking very similar to what I ordered in 2023 although that’s not unsurprising since I ordered the same bloody thing. I will make an effort to improve on this…. Anyway, I digress. The food looked appetising and the dumplings added texture and firmness to the arrangement. The chicken could have perhaps been a little crispier, but it was tender and the sauce had a sweet flavour. The broccoli was perhaps a little too healthy, but it was soft but retained some bite. There was a depth of flavour to the whole arrangement and the rice was soft and cooked well.

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    James and his food, which I think was the chicken dumpling ramen. I actually think my photo is better than his, but I didn’t mention this when he sent it. I asked James what he thought and he replied:

    “Ah, Julian, this is all about ramen. One must endeavour to articulate the sheer transcendental magnificence encapsulated within this quintessential paradigm of Japanese gastronomy. It is not merely sustenance, you understand, but rather an intricate, alchemical concatenation of profound flavours and textures meticulously orchestrated into a singular, Cimmerian vessel. The foundational quintessence, the broth, is an ambrosial elixir; a deeply umami-laden decoction derived from protracted, painstaking processes involving porcine or avian carcasses, desiccated piscine elements, and select vegetal constituents. Its unctuous viscosity and olfactory profundity serve as the very soul of the experience. Submerged within this veritable nectar reside the alimentary filaments – delicate, yet resilient strands, exhibiting an exquisite al dente characteristic, providing the crucial textural counterpoint. It’s not as good as a battered sausage though.”

    I think he liked it, but he did mention at the time he was getting a bit bored of it as he was eating it. He gets distracted easily.

    All told, this was a rather lovely lunch, but the price point is still a little high and so it verges into being a rather more decadent option. The server was though friendly, the service was efficient and the food had a pleasant taste, so all to the good.

  • Food from Every Stall on Norwich Market (2025 Edition) – Week 3 and Ron’s Chips

    Food from Every Stall on Norwich Market (2025 Edition) – Week 3 and Ron’s Chips

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    And here we are in week three of my second time working around all of the food stalls at Norwich Market, with my friend James nobly assisting. Here’s my post from when we visited in 2023 when I enjoyed my sausage and chips.

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    It’s their stall and they can put up what they like, but personally I’m not entirely sure Norwich market is really the place for political statements about the Government introducing a digital currency to control the British population. I’m not sure they could competently do that even if they wanted to, but I digress. However, I respected that the stall preferred to be paid in cash and I did that, although they do also take cards for those who want to.

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    The stall was established in 1953 and is run by the third generation of the same family, so there’s some considerable heritage here. It’s not a fancy set-up, but it’s not designed to be, instead it’s a traditional British chip stand offering value and quality to refuel the workers of Norwich.

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    The prices are low and some of the cheapest on the market. It was £2.90 for two battered sausages and chips in 2023 and it’s now £3.40, so it’s a relatively small increase. I did try and order cod and medium chips to have something different, but they didn’t have any immediately available and I didn’t want to wait whilst James saw his chips going cold. Which meant I had a battered sausage and small chips, deliberately not wanting anything too filling otherwise I’d need a nap in the afternoon. The cold drinks are evidently reasonably priced and the cost of the cod is very much towards the lower end of the scale (there’s a pun there that I won’t labour).

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    The battered sausage and small chips. The amount of the batter was generous and the sausage would have felt well protected if it needed to go into battle, although I think it had been left in the hot hold for a while as it was going a little hard, but there was a depth of taste to it (the sausage, not the hot hold). It isn’t a butcher’s sausage, but it tasted fine and it was all at the appropriate hot temperature. The chips are thinner than those at Lucy’s (I like how there’s evidently a whole philosophy going on about potato cutting sizes) and they tasted as expected, with the portion size being generous for small chips.

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    James was busy capturing beauty with his framing of the photo, whilst I was engaged in trying to fend off a squadron of seagulls who clearly hadn’t eaten since breakfast five minutes ago and viewed his chips as their birthright. I think he was pleased and how I protected his food (and I had nearly finished mine). On the matter of the food, James was suitably impressed and he said something along the lines of:

    “This seemingly pedestrian offering, comprising a sausage enrobed in crisp batter accompanied by fried potato parallelepipeds, ascended, quite astonishingly, to a veritable apotheosis of savoury delight.”

    Fine praise indeed. The value offered here is excellent, it’s an affordable lunchtime snack although I will definitely have to have the fish when we do this for a third time in future years. So, all in all, it’s was all rather lovely.

  • Wrocław – National Museum in Wrocław (St. Mary Magdalene’s Church by Adelbert Woelfl)

    Wrocław – National Museum in Wrocław (St. Mary Magdalene’s Church by Adelbert Woelfl)

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    This painting is in the collections of the National Museum in Wrocław and was painted by Adelbert Woelfl (1823-1896) in 1867. Woelfl was the best known artist of landscapes in Breslau, the German name for the city, and he was himself German having been born in Münsterberg (now known as Ziębice and part of Poland since 1945). It depicts St. Mary Magdalene’s Church which had been where the first Lutheran services had been held in the city in the early sixteenth century and it remained a Protestant church until the end of the Second World War, when it was restored to the Catholic tradition. I rather like the painting, it’s realistic and there’s a sense of reality about the individuals going about their business.

    Here’s what the same view looks like now. The church was badly damaged during the Second World War and was substantially rebuilt, but they’ve been faithful (if you excuse the pun) to the original design, although the towers have been changed somewhat.

    This is what fascinates me though, we have a German painter painting a German church in what was Germany. Everything is still there today, but everything has changed.

  • Wrocław – Ibis budget Wrocław Południe

    Wrocław – Ibis budget Wrocław Południe

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    For my final night in Wrocław, I switched to the Ibis budget Wrocław Południe which was £30 including breakfast. Fortunately, I had enough points to pay all but 0.8zl (about 15p) which it was noted was the cheapest room they’d charged at the hotel for a while. On which matter, the receptionist was friendly, engaging and spoke beautiful English (as in, she spoke it beautifully rather than me making some general comment about how great English is as a language….).

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    I forgot to take a photo of the room as I was distracted by the welcome gift, which the hotel doesn’t really need to offer but I always appreciate it. Especially when it’s food. I have stayed at this hotel before, but it was around eight years ago and all I remember is the three mile walk to the city centre. I made sure to leave a five-star review because they gave me a doughnut and that is why hotels should give doughnuts…..

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    From my extensive collection of photos that I keep….. This is the room in 2017 when I last visited and it hasn’t changed much to be honest.

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    To quote the great philosopher Frank Spencer, a trouble shared is a trouble doubled, so there are other things…

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    The view from the window and it’s a peaceful location. The building in front is the Novotel, but it’s quite a bit more expensive than the Ibis Budget and I’m not as decadent as Richard.

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    The breakfast buffet arrangement, albeit at a slight angle.

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    Very hearty. Bread, butter, gherkins, salami, a hot dog sausage, tomato, cucumber, cheese, coffee and apple juice.

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    This is a photo I took in 2017 of the breakfast room, which also hasn’t really changed much. The on-line reviews of the hotel are generally positive, although I suspect that some people have some perhaps excessive expectations for a budget hotel. Such as….

    “No brush or toothpaste. No water bottle or drinking water.”

    I mean, there is drinking water out of the bloody tap. And there’s a Lidl a short walk away, but I’m not sure many hotels supply toothbrushes in rooms.

    “No shelf under the sink”

    I really don’t know how some people cope.

    “The distance of the hotel from the most important points of the city of Wrocław. Everything is far away. For people who do not have a car at their disposal, it will be incredibly inconvenient.”

    I’m annoyed on behalf of the hotel (I’m like that) about reviews like this. Why on earth book a hotel which is three miles out then? It’s a 45 minute walk into the city centre and there’s a bus stop which is a two minute walk away for those who want to use public transport.

    “Breakfasts are a big disappointment, a few concise vegetables and cold cuts. I do not recommend buying!”

    I like the hotel’s response which was “We would like to remind you that we are an economical one-star hotel that offers basic products for breakfast. However, this does not mean that there is nothing to choose from. In addition to cold meats and vegetables, we also serve yellow and white cheese, pâté, two types of salads, fruit, three hot dishes, breakfast cereals, yogurts and jams. However, if you are looking for more variety, we encourage you to check out the breakfast offer at our partner hotel Novotel Wrocław City, which is a three-star hotel. We believe that the breakfast offer of this hotel will meet your expectations regarding the variety of dishes”.

    Anyway, I really like this hotel which is in a peaceful area of the city, it’s keenly priced, the staff are friendly and there were no noise issues. All really rather lovely and I managed admirably without a shelf under the sink.

  • Wrocław – National Museum in Wrocław (St. Martin from St. Martin’s Church)

    Wrocław – National Museum in Wrocław (St. Martin from St. Martin’s Church)

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    This wooden polychrome sculpture is in the collections of the National Museum in Wrocław and depicts St. Martin of Tours (336AD – 397AD) who was known for cutting his cloak in two to give warmth to a beggar. Very benevolent, although I wonder why he didn’t give him the whole thing, but there we go. As with all these things, some of the cloak that Martin kept survived and became relics likely dotted around numerous locations. The most important one was originally at Marmoutier Abbey and there were priests put in charge of looking after the holy cloak relic and the head priest of this operation became known as the cappellanu. Eventually, all priests who went to serve the military became known as cappellani, which in English became the word chaplain and that was all named after this relic.

    Anyway, I digress. This sculpture was likely made in a workshop in Wrocław and it has been dated to around 1490. It was located at St. Martin’s Church, the only survived building from the former Piast’s castle in Wrocław. Before the Second World War, this was where the Polish people in the German city would have gone for services, but the building was damaged during the conflict. The sculpture is in relatively very good condition and a fair chunk of the paint has remained. And the moral of the story is that if you give half of your coat to a beggar, then you too could maybe have your own church named after you in the future and perhaps a word named after you as well.