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[Food] Restaurant 2019 Thread



Goldstone1976

We Got Calde in!!
Helpful Moderator
NSC Patron
Apr 30, 2013
13,783
Herts
Trabocco Pesce Palombo - Fossacesia, Abruzzo

IMG_1505.JPG

A couple of weekends ago, the GLDHI and I went back to Abruzzo, this time ostensibly for a "wine tour" on the Sunday, which I'm probably going to write about at length, so hilarious was it. It probably won't appear on NSC though as there's no obvious place to post it.

On the Friday we went to have lunch at a trabocca (see image above) down the coast with our friends.

I say "with". The plan was that the GLDHI would make our way to the restaurant for 1pm while our two friends would go to the train station to pick up two other friends (I'll call them John and Sue - partly because I have to give them names in order for the next part of the story to make any sense, and partly because those are their names) who were doing the Adriatic coast train journey as a holiday (what a great idea).

It's probably easiest if I just transcribe the posts on the whatsapp group that we'd created for the GLDHI, Friend A, Friend B, and me:

12:56: GLDHI - Road to restaurant is blocked. We've parked in lay-by just South of the turning on the main road
12:58: Friend B - OK. Train is 15 mins late, so ETA 1:10 x
13:11: Friend A - Problem
13:12: Friend A - Sue didn't get off the train
13:12: Me - But John did?
13:12: Friend A - Yes!
13:12: Me - Umm. OK.
13:12: Friend A - Driving South to meet her. I'll keep you posted x

The GLDHI and I walk down into the restaurant, where I'm met (it was "I" because the GLDHI pushed me in front of her as we entered) by a very friendly Italian who spoke to me in foreign. In my best Italian I said "Errr. Inglese. table for sei. Friend A's surname." Mentioning Friend A's surname was both a blessing and a curse. A blessing because Friend A did have a reservation at 1pm, and the chap recognised the name - principally, I think, because Friend A is Italian. A curse because Friend A had booked for seven people, and one had pulled out last minute.

The chap leads us to a table for seven:

Him: Sette?
Me: Sei.
Him: (more circumspectly) Sette??
Me: Sei (It's always a good idea to be able to speak foreign fluently)
Him: Sei?
Me: Si. Sei. (rather pleased with the alliteration)
Him: OK. Six. I'll bring the wine and water. Still or sparkling?
Me: (sotto voce) *******. Frizzante, per favore
GLDHI: "por favor" is Spanish. "Per favore" is the Italian.
Me: I know. I said "Per favore".
GLDHI: No. You said "Por favor".

The waiter left.

He returned with a bottle of still, a bottle of sparkling, and a bottle of really pretty decent prosecco. We opened it.

At 13:45 the other four turn up. On the way to the table the waiter catches Friend A and they chat for a couple of minutes with a crescendo of amusement. Friend A is still giggling when he sits down. He looks at me mournfully and shakes his head.

Ever the diplomat, I turn to Sue. "Why did John leave you on the train?" A sharp inhalation of breath from Friends A & B; a sideways look at me from the GLDHI; a pause and then a rush of self-justification from John. Naturally, it wasn't his fault in any way that he stood in the door of the train vainly jabbing at the button to get the doors open with Italian women behind him leaning over his shoulder trying to reach the button to open the door. Naturally, it wasn't his fault that he turned round and told them to "Be patient!". Naturally, it wasn't his fault that the doors did eventually open, but only long enough for him and him alone to get off the train, before slamming shut, trapping the Italian women who were now apparently giving him the bird and screaming "Motherf*cker" (in English) at him. Sue said that she pretended that she was nothing to do with him, but wasn't sure that the Italian women believed her as she, like him, was English and, err, she had been talking to John moments before the door slammed shut.

There was no menu. There never is. They buy whatever fish the day boats bring in, cook it, and serve it.

I have no hope of remembering every dish - just no chance whatsoever. It just kept coming, and coming, and coming. And coming. I do remember tiny fried fish in a cone ("little cod fishes" said Friend A - they bloody weren't), and squid, and clams, and prawns of varying sizes, and mussels...perhaps now is a good time to tell you that Friend B doesn't eat shellfish or "other sea-dwelling creatures that have.."and here he puts his fingers in the air close to his face and wiggles them. "But squid isn't a shell fish.", I say. "No, but..." finger wiggling again... and octopus (finger wiggling), and sea bass (Friend B ate a lot of sea bass), and mackerel, and spaghetti vongole, and some other fish tartare, and ...no, I'm giving up.

None of it was what you'd truly call world class. All of it was exceptionally fresh, beautifully simply cooked and utterly delicious.

The waiter returns: "Fried fish now?" he smirks at me. Everyone says no. Everyone is utterly stuffed. Even Friend B who basically ate sea bass and mackerel, lots of times.

Basically unlimited fresh fish, literally unlimited still and sparkling water, unlimited prosecco and unlimited pecorino. Fixed price: 50 euros. Unbelievable.

We get back to Friends A & B's place. We sit down with a glass of Friend A's deeply impressive homemade Limoncello, made with 100% alcohol that you can buy in Italian, err, pharmacies. Tart, sweet, lemony, alcoholic. Very alcoholic.

John starts complaining about Southern Rail.

I lean forward.

The GLDHI whispers "please, no".

"There's one good thing about British trains. At least everyone knows how to operate the doors".

Silence.

Sue says "Well, John, just how did you manage to not open the door?"

My work is done. I go for a pee. And a long walk.
 






Beach Hut

Brighton Bhuna Boy
Jul 5, 2003
71,959
Living In a Box
Cin Cin booked for Saturday week - [MENTION=409]Herr Tubthumper[/MENTION] I hope this is good as you have talked me into this !
 




Goldstone1976

We Got Calde in!!
Helpful Moderator
NSC Patron
Apr 30, 2013
13,783
Herts
There's no way I'm bothering with my review when you keep churning these sort of things out. Please do. There'll be loads of people interested - you're one of the first in the area to have gone...

Put the wine tour thing here - it's as good a place as any.

OK - if you're sure. It'll be long. If you want to move it somewhere else, pls do.
 




Yes Chef

Well-known member
Apr 11, 2016
1,819
In the kitchen
Tossers.

I’ve said before running a restaurant must be tough, and that’s without having ***** like these giving you grief.

What’s the situation with Tripadvisor? Can you get this removed?

When you try and get comments taken down, TA will then email the reviewer and get them to alter the 'inaccurate' parts. They were a vindictive bunch who began with our Facebook page (which we can edit) and then started on Tripadvisor. As [MENTION=396]WATFORD zero[/MENTION] kindly points out, it's surrounded by positive reviews, plus the fact that it's inarticulate drivel, we're relying on people to draw their own conclusions.
We've learnt our lessons too, and won't entertain the idea of hosting another teenage birthday party.
 


Machiavelli

Well-known member
Oct 11, 2013
16,642
Fiveways
Trabocco Pesce Palombo - Fossacesia, Abruzzo

View attachment 110802

A couple of weekends ago, the GLDHI and I went back to Abruzzo, this time ostensibly for a "wine tour" on the Sunday, which I'm probably going to write about at length, so hilarious was it. It probably won't appear on NSC though as there's no obvious place to post it.

On the Friday we went to have lunch at a trabocca (see image above) down the coast with our friends.

I say "with". The plan was that the GLDHI would make our way to the restaurant for 1pm while our two friends would go to the train station to pick up two other friends (I'll call them John and Sue - partly because I have to give them names in order for the next part of the story to make any sense, and partly because those are their names) who were doing the Adriatic coast train journey as a holiday (what a great idea).

It's probably easiest if I just transcribe the posts on the whatsapp group that we'd created for the GLDHI, Friend A, Friend B, and me:

12:56: GLDHI - Road to restaurant is blocked. We've parked in lay-by just South of the turning on the main road
12:58: Friend B - OK. Train is 15 mins late, so ETA 1:10 x
13:11: Friend A - Problem
13:12: Friend A - Sue didn't get off the train
13:12: Me - But John did?
13:12: Friend A - Yes!
13:12: Me - Umm. OK.
13:12: Friend A - Driving South to meet her. I'll keep you posted x

The GLDHI and I walk down into the restaurant, where I'm met (it was "I" because the GLDHI pushed me in front of her as we entered) by a very friendly Italian who spoke to me in foreign. In my best Italian I said "Errr. Inglese. table for sei. Friend A's surname." Mentioning Friend A's surname was both a blessing and a curse. A blessing because Friend A did have a reservation at 1pm, and the chap recognised the name - principally, I think, because Friend A is Italian. A curse because Friend A had booked for seven people, and one had pulled out last minute.

The chap leads us to a table for seven:

Him: Sette?
Me: Sei.
Him: (more circumspectly) Sette??
Me: Sei (It's always a good idea to be able to speak foreign fluently)
Him: Sei?
Me: Si. Sei. (rather pleased with the alliteration)
Him: OK. Six. I'll bring the wine and water. Still or sparkling?
Me: (sotto voce) *******. Frizzante, per favore
GLDHI: "por favor" is Spanish. "Per favore" is the Italian.
Me: I know. I said "Per favore".
GLDHI: No. You said "Por favor".

The waiter left.

He returned with a bottle of still, a bottle of sparkling, and a bottle of really pretty decent prosecco. We opened it.

At 13:45 the other four turn up. On the way to the table the waiter catches Friend A and they chat for a couple of minutes with a crescendo of amusement. Friend A is still giggling when he sits down. He looks at me mournfully and shakes his head.

Ever the diplomat, I turn to Sue. "Why did John leave you on the train?" A sharp inhalation of breath from Friends A & B; a sideways look at me from the GLDHI; a pause and then a rush of self-justification from John. Naturally, it wasn't his fault in any way that he stood in the door of the train vainly jabbing at the button to get the doors open with Italian women behind him leaning over his shoulder trying to reach the button to open the door. Naturally, it wasn't his fault that he turned round and told them to "Be patient!". Naturally, it wasn't his fault that the doors did eventually open, but only long enough for him and him alone to get off the train, before slamming shut, trapping the Italian women who were now apparently giving him the bird and screaming "Motherf*cker" (in English) at him. Sue said that she pretended that she was nothing to do with him, but wasn't sure that the Italian women believed her as she, like him, was English and, err, she had been talking to John moments before the door slammed shut.

There was no menu. There never is. They buy whatever fish the day boats bring in, cook it, and serve it.

I have no hope of remembering every dish - just no chance whatsoever. It just kept coming, and coming, and coming. And coming. I do remember tiny fried fish in a cone ("little cod fishes" said Friend A - they bloody weren't), and squid, and clams, and prawns of varying sizes, and mussels...perhaps now is a good time to tell you that Friend B doesn't eat shellfish or "other sea-dwelling creatures that have.."and here he puts his fingers in the air close to his face and wiggles them. "But squid isn't a shell fish.", I say. "No, but..." finger wiggling again... and octopus (finger wiggling), and sea bass (Friend B ate a lot of sea bass), and mackerel, and spaghetti vongole, and some other fish tartare, and ...no, I'm giving up.

None of it was what you'd truly call world class. All of it was exceptionally fresh, beautifully simply cooked and utterly delicious.

The waiter returns: "Fried fish now?" he smirks at me. Everyone says no. Everyone is utterly stuffed. Even Friend B who basically ate sea bass and mackerel, lots of times.

Basically unlimited fresh fish, literally unlimited still and sparkling water, unlimited prosecco and unlimited pecorino. Fixed price: 50 euros. Unbelievable.

We get back to Friends A & B's place. We sit down with a glass of Friend A's deeply impressive homemade Limoncello, made with 100% alcohol that you can buy in Italian, err, pharmacies. Tart, sweet, lemony, alcoholic. Very alcoholic.

John starts complaining about Southern Rail.

I lean forward.

The GLDHI whispers "please, no".

"There's one good thing about British trains. At least everyone knows how to operate the doors".

Silence.

Sue says "Well, John, just how did you manage to not open the door?"

My work is done. I go for a pee. And a long walk.

Anything else? :wink:
 


McTavish

Well-known member
Nov 5, 2014
1,562
I think that reading the Tripadvisor comments with the adults admitting to smoking in the premises and trying to get the alcohol the teenagers had smuggled in, most normal people would see it's orchestrated and make a fair assessment of the story. (Particularly since it's surrounded by 5 star reviews) :)

The issue is less with the reviews themselves but with the fact that they bring down the average score which, even if it is only a few tenths of a %, can move the restaurant down the rankings and may put it outside the "top ten" lists that Tripadvisor generates.
 




dazzer6666

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Mar 27, 2013
52,370
Burgess Hill
We're the Boathouse, in Littlehampton marina, thanks for asking. You'll know you're in the right place because there's lots of Albion paraphernalia on the walls!

Ah, you guys host the start/finish of the Arun River Marathon (couple of weeks ago). Very decent fry-up quickly served to hordes of hungry runners at the finish. Excellent job well done. Told the Mrs when I got home that we should pop down soon for a brekkie or something..........without running to bloody Storrington and back first [emoji23][emoji23][emoji23][emoji23]
 








Yes Chef

Well-known member
Apr 11, 2016
1,819
In the kitchen
Ah, you guys host the start/finish of the Arun River Marathon (couple of weeks ago). Very decent fry-up quickly served to hordes of hungry runners at the finish. Excellent job well done. Told the Mrs when I got home that we should pop down soon for a brekkie or something..........without running to bloody Storrington and back first [emoji23][emoji23][emoji23][emoji23]

Yes, that's us. Well done, I was impressed with the time you all completed the course in, I think you're all back in December for another one?
 


Jesus Gul

Well-known member
Feb 23, 2004
5,470
I love Saltimbocca, but the last time I was there, I'm sure the only main course was pizzas ?

Oh noes!

Just checked the menu on the website and that's still got them on (but still you could be right - bowling home through Preston Park scoffing a pizza is no where near as easy as bowling home through Preston Park scoffing a Saltimbocca)
 


Goldstone1976

We Got Calde in!!
Helpful Moderator
NSC Patron
Apr 30, 2013
13,783
Herts
*With permission of Bozza, above*

Abruzzo "wine tasting" tour - Sunday 26 May. And a restaurant A Casa di Lilla, Giulianova, Abruzzo

As said above, this is likely to be long.

Main Dramatis Personae - with only relevant-to-the-story background

Palace Full Kit Wanker (or was it an Albion fan on a dare/stag do?)
The GLDHI: Dislikes conflict. Likes: wine (much more knowledgeable than she admits), people (most), fun.
Friend A: Italian, from Abruzzo, proud and passionate about his country and region, extremely outgoing and organises social activities all the time
Friend B: English, married to Friend A, largely does what he's told socially, very funny; also very kind
Theresa: English, now living 6 miles from Friend A&B's place in Italy, been in Italy for three years - has almost no Italian. Mildly eccentric, but a total sweetheart.
Renaldo: An Italian tour companion and kitchen furniture maker, who got progressively more pissed and more excitable about The Donald, and US visa problems.
Pissed guy on coach: A pissed guy. On a coach.
Me: If I had to choose a specialist subject for Mastermind, it'd be wine.
Vanessa: Italian who - well, you'll have to read on...

Italy has some brilliant wine regions: Piedmont, Tuscany, Emilia-Romagna, Veneto all have many world class vineyards and growers. All are represented extensively in my cellar. Like any wine country, it also has some poor wine regions. Such as Abruzzo. Which is not. Zero bottles. Not one.

So why did I agree to go to Abruzzo to do a "wine-tasting" tour for a day with Friends A&B? Well, because I love them dearly; they are the most brilliant hosts - with Friend A being a fantastic cook (and maker of the World's best Limoncello); and because, as I said to the GLDHI, "we might get to find a really good small grower that I've never heard of - how exciting would that be?". "Very", she said, in a not totally convincing manner.

I think it appropriate to say what I consider a wine-tasting tour to be, so that a comparison with what follows can be fairly made.

First, you gather together half a dozen people that are passionate about wine. Ideally, that group will have at least one Master of Wine in it (of which there are ~300 in the world) - this will enable you to achieve three things: 1) get into wineries that Joe Public won't be able to - why not? because they will typically have tiny productions, which they sell out locally or because they are globally recognised and have no need to offer tastings, 2) get those wineries to offer you the best wines they have, rather than just the latest vintage they are trying to plug, and 3) you're bound to learn something - MWs are seriously, seriously knowledgeable about wine.

Second, you email (in the local language of course), the winemakers, praising particular cuvees of theirs that you like (thus demonstrating that you're not just on a piss-up), and telling them which other makers you are (hoping to) visiting - thus setting the bar for the expectation of quality.

Third, you arrange your diary, so that you can spend 4-6 days doing the tour, going to 5 or 6 wineries a day - at each of which you expect to taste 5-8 wines. This is to ensure that you have a decent representative sample of wines from that region.

Fourth, because you are tasting 25-40 wines per day, you spit out the wine. You are tasting, not drinking.

Fifth, because you are tasting between 100 and 250 wines on your trip, you take a note book. To take notes of the relative merits and demerits of the various wines, so that you can remember enough when you get home to know which wines you should buy and which not, and of those that you do buy, which are for drinking now, which in 3-7 years, which in 7-12 years and which you'll taste again in 12 years and make an assessment about how much longer you should leave them.

That's a wine tasting tour.

How much of the above took place on this trip? It involved wine. Or, at least something the growers tried to persuade you was wine.

Let's start on the Saturday evening.

"Tell us about tomorrow", say I.

Friend A: We're meeting up with the others at 9:30 at the petrol station at the motorway exit.
Me: Others?
Friend A: Yes, us 4 and 10 others.
Me: 10?
Friend A: Yes - Mama, Auntie, Auntie, Sister, Brother-in-law...(it's no less than 1% of his immediate family who are coming with us - oh boy; 14 of us?!)
Me: OK - so how are we getting to the wineries? There's 14 of us.
Friend A: On the coach. And there's not 14 of us. That's just my group. There's 50 in total.

50??!! On a small, intimate, considered wine-tasting tour? Oh bugger.

It transpires that this isn't a small wine tour. This is the day when "all the biggest wine-makers in Abruzzo open their doors for tasting". Wait, did you just say "biggest"? "Why, yes, the smaller growers don't want to see coach after coach turn up each with 50 people on them". "No shit."

We go to bed.

"Can I be ill tomorrow?"
"No. Reset your expectations. It'll be, umm, fun. Different."
"Different? Yes, it'll be that"

We leave at 09:15 in Friend B's 1964 Citroen Diane. Chug, chug, jump, jump, jump she goes. "Push the choke in", I suggest. "Oh, righto. Oh, yes, that IS better. I must remember to do that in future."

We arrive at the petrol station and wander in for breakfast. Yep, seriously. Brilliant coffee, pastries, pizza, pasta dishes. Nothing fancy - but all better by a million miles than anything I've ever seen in a service area in the UK, and better than many, many restaurants/cafes I've eaten in. Somebody there takes real pride in what they're serving. "Bravo", say I. "Average", says Friend A. I believe him.

More people arrive to await the coach. "There's Vanessa", says Friend A. "She's organised the coach. She'll have got food in for everyone. She likes to sing. Especially when she's drunk. She'll be drunk later". "That'll be fun", says the GLDHI, meaning it. "Excellent", I say, not. Friend B smiles.

The coach comes. We are the last pick-up point. There are already 36 passengers. Friend A sits in the front row beside the driver. That seat has been reserved for him, as he apparently gets coach sick. The GLDHI and I sit together, with Friend B and Theresa sitting behind us.

"Hello Theresa"
"Hello, lovey"
"Are you looking forward to the wine tasting?"
"Oh, sweetie, I don't like wine. I won't be drinking any"
"Righto". I fall silent, as I ponder my next gambit. I decide I don't really want to risk it and remain quiet.

We set off, and pull onto the motorway, heading South.
South? Huh?

Italy has three main classifications for wine:

IGT - table wine. The lowest quality. But ironically, some of the very best (and most of the internationally acclaimed) wines are in this classification - it's due to the higher classifications telling the grower which varietals they HAVE to grow in order to be classified, and the grower deciding to grow something else (often Cab Sauv) because they think their terroir will suit a different grape variety, deliberately sacrificing the higher classification.

DOC - the majority of Italian wine that is exported to the UK is here, though IGT wines account for most of what is drunk in Italy.

DOCG - the highest classification.

Abruzzo has one DOCG micro-region, Teramo, and three DOC regions, one of which is Chieti, which is renowned for producing copious quantities of liquids akin to aviation fuel.

Teramo is North of the petrol station; Chieti is South, with the other two areas lying broadly West (towards Rome).

I wander down to the front of the coach.

"I'm sure it's a mistake, but we seem to be headed South?"
"Yes", says Friend A, "that's where we're going; South", helpfully pointing out of the windscreen in the appropriate direction.

I gabble...

"But, Teramo has the better wines, why are are we going to Chieti, which, err, doesn't?"

"Because all these people are from Teramo (correcting the place that I had put the accent - it's teraMO, not TerA(R)mo apparently). We all know what the wines from around here taste like. See?" "Besides", he says, "the wineries in Teramo aren't open today. They open on a different weekend", gently patting my forearm in a reassuring manner.

I go back to my seat.

"We're completely f*cked" I mutter. "It'll be fine", says the "GLDHI; "What's that?" says Friend B and Theresa.

We pull off the motorway and immediately enter wine country. Well, lots of vines anyway. We drive round a bit and pull into the largest winery I'd ever seen (up until that point).

There are 300 cars and 20 coaches in the car park.

"See? I told you, we're f*cked".
"It'll be fine".

We queue up and pay our 5 euros. In return, we get a canvasy type bag thing on a string which contains a glass (not a good glass [MENTION=409]Herr Tubthumper[/MENTION], but a much better glass than that which I got at St John) - image below - and a wristband with two removable buttons on it. You trade each button in for a "free" taste.

"How much for another two buttons, without an extra glass?", I ask. "There's no point, we're only tasting two wines". F*cked.

IMG_1557.jpg

In case you can't read the engraving, it proudly states "Movimento Turismo del Vino, Abruzzo", which translates as "We make aviation fuel for tourists, because they don't know any better".

The canvasy bag things are a thing of beauty. Here are Friend B and Theresa modelling them. They are accesorised by having white plastic cups which they have both chosen to insert into the top of the wine glass.

IMG_1513.JPG

Notice something else? The sky? Yep, it's about to rain. Hard, for the rest of the day.

Before going to taste our two wines, Vanessa called us over to the side of the coach. She'd opened the luggage compartment doors and there lay about 1000 rounds of sandwiches, and cakes, and pastries, and flasks (Barber Out) of coffee, and bottles of water. We weren't going to go hungry.

We went and did the "tour", which consisted of going round an industrial chemical plant (which is what a large winery is), full of gleaming pipes and stainless steel vessels. We had the two wines - a Trebbiano, which was shit, and a Montepulciano d'Abruzzo, which was shitter.

Friend B, Theresa, the GLDHI, and I went back to the coach in the rain.

We return to the Whatsapp group I talked about in a previous post

12:50 Me: Four of us are on the bus, just to let you know.
13:40 Friend A: Sorry guys. I got involved with a couple of bottles of red on the way back. Stick with me at the next one :wink:

We set off for the next winery.

"How many wineries are we going to?" I ask.
"It was supposed to be three, but we're late. It'll probably be only two now".

"Small mercies", I mutter to the GLDHI.
"What's that?" enquires half the coach.

20 minutes pass.

"Umm, why have we stopped - in the middle of nowhere?" I ask.
"Umm, people seem to be getting off. Hang on, what's that smoke?"

We get off. The nearside (in Italy) front wheel brake pad is on fire.

The driver goes and gets a fire extinguisher. It's empty. He gets another, and puts the fire out. 50 people, standing on the edge of a country road in the middle of nowhere beside a coach which is going nowhere llok at the driver.

He considers the situation for 10-15 seconds and decides to...shrug.

A torrent of abuse is directed at him from 46 pissed-up Italians and one Brit who has fluent Italian, while 3 Brits who have zero to very little Italian nod furiously along.

He decides to...shrug.

Eventually, he decides that he'll call base and organise another coach. There's no mobile signal. Off he trudges - to the top of a nearby molehill - and tries again. Miraculously, it works. Hooray! A spare coach has been despatched.

The crowd contemplates the prospect of standing in the mud by the side of the road in the pouring rain (because we can't get back on, due to the fire). We all figure that as long as the coach doesn't move, the chances of the brake pad spontaneously combusting again are low, and pile back on the coach.

Out comes the wine that many (really far too many, have they no taste buds at all, these Italians?) have bought at the first winery. Cork screws are found and Movimento Turismo del Vino, Abruzzo glasses filled.

After an hour and a half, the second coach arrives. We pile on, and off we set.

"Definitely only two wineries now", confirms Friend B.
"Thank f*ck for that" I say
"What's that?", says the whole coach.

All goes well for about 30 minutes.

We get to a tiny village, where we have a choice of bearing left, or going straight on. There's an old woman leaning out of a window holding a broom. As you do. She watches the coach intently. I watch her. The coach starts to slowly move left. The woman shakes her head. The coach picks up speed. The woman starts jumping up and down, banging her broom against the wall underneath the window and shouting. The driver stops the coach, gets out, and goes to talk to the woman. A week later, he returns and reverses the coach back to the junction, and goes in the other direction. The old woman smiles and waves her broom at us. I later find out out that the way the driver had wanted to go led to a low bridge. Low enough to take the top off a coach that had gone that way two weeks before.

We arrive at the second winery at about 4:30pm. We've been on the road for seven hours, and tasted two wines. At least there were some positives.

Here's what it looks like:

IMG_1516.JPG

WTF? This is not just industrial scale wine-making. This is just patently a piss-take.

But no. We go in, get another (identical) canvasy bag, with another (identical) glass (still better than those they give you at St John) - "No, you can't use the same glass as you've already bought. Yes, I know they're identical" - and four paper tokens to redeem for the wines.

Four wines here. All shocking. But. But.

There's a band. Actually in the winery. Don't believe me? OK, then:

IMG_1525.JPG

"But that's photoshopped", I hear you say. Oh, ye of little faith:

[Hmm... here was supposed to be inserted a video, but at 70meg it's apparently too big to be emailed from my mobile to my laptop. I'll see if I can get it uploaded another way. For the moment, you're just going to have to trust me. The band is real, and they're shit.]

I go out into the rain for a puff on my vape and get collared by Renaldo, who runs his own furniture-making business which exports all over the world. He tells me that he's very pleased that Trump has introduced a 25% tariff on goods from China.

"I used to be 45% more expensive than the Chinese, which was too much. Now I'm only 15% more expensive, and people are prepared to pay that premium for Italian products".
"Where are your products assembled?"
"China, of course. But I haven't told them that. I bring them back into Italy, put a "made in Italy" sticker on them and ship them"
"Righto"

He's less keen on Homeland Security though.

"I've been banned from entering the US"
"Oh, why?"
"They don't like some of my passport stamps"
"Oh, where have you been?"
"Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, Syria..."
"Righto"

Pause

"I've appealed though"
"Ok. How long ago?"
"17 months ago now. They haven't replied yet. I'm starting to get worried".
"Righto"

I go back into the winery. Vanessa has decided to sing. With the band. Here she is, telling the guitarist how to play the guitar.

IMG_1530.JPG

We get back on the coach.

Vanessa sings.

The guy in front of us is pissed.

IMG_1536.JPG

His right hand gently caresses the hair of the woman in front of him who has fallen asleep on her partner's shoulder. For an hour and a half. She doesn't know - she's asleep. Her partner doesn't care - he's pissed too.

We get back to the car parked at the petrol station at 21:30. We get in and decide we're hungry. We call up an aristocini place (really thin kebabs) in Giulianova and go eat. It's called A Casa di Lilla. It doubles as a B&B. The food is outstanding, particularly the lamb and the calves' liver and onion ones. The latter is a real surprise to me as I normally don't much like liver.

"How did you enjoy your day?" asked Friend A and B simultaneously.
"Bloody loved it", I said. I had too. Just not for the reasons that I had hoped I might.
"I told you it'd be ok", said the GLDHI

We got into Stansted the following afternoon. On the bus back to the Mid-term car park, I spotted this:

IMG_1540.JPG

He was travelling with 3 or 4 mates. I don't know if he's a Palace Full Kit Wanker, or if, more likely I guess, and as suggested by the GLDHI, an Albion fan on his way back from a stag do. I didn't ask.


TL;DR? Shit wine; great time; good kebabs.
 
Last edited:






Herr Tubthumper

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
59,483
The Fatherland
Cin Cin booked for Saturday week - [MENTION=409]Herr Tubthumper[/MENTION] I hope this is good as you have talked me into this !

Oh no. The pressure is on! Which venue are you going to?
 












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