19 August 2014

Travel Guides - Reading and exploring Recommendation

One of my favourite things about travelling is the planning. I can happily spend hours pouring over recommendations, reviews and suggestions about a new travel destination. 

I do have a question for you though, in this day and age of blogs, tripadvisor, websites and e-zines, do you still turn to a book in your hour of need? Or do you simply rely on Wi-Fi and word of mouth at your hotel?
I tend to roll with a combination.

Travel Guides - Reading and exploring Recommendation
Just a small selection of travel guides collected over the years. I can't bear to part with them...
We've very luckily been to quite a few countries in the last few years, and during that time, we've whittled down our favourites. Travel guides, we've tried a few. But there are one or two brands that seem to hold their place in our luggage.

The internet can be a wonderful thing, and really helpful whilst planning and sitting in your accommodation, but when you are walking the mean streets of a foreign country you don't want to be fiddling with and iPad or a massive tourist guide, making yourself into a target for shysters.

On the move:
These Eyewitness Pocket Guide babies are the bomb. Teeny-tiny enough to fit into a fairly normal size pocket (16cms x 7cms x 7mm) they hold all of the highlights of your city, a petite phrase section and a pocket map that makes life a whole world of easy. I could almost be tempted to sing a song about the maps; a good general area map pointing out landmarks, a metro map (where applicable), a street index and a detailed map of the most central area. I love planning our days with these - they section the city off into hunks & I spend hours picking out the things I was to see, marking them and organising days so they make the most sense.

They are also pretty cheap and frequently updated.
Travel Guides - Reading and exploring Recommendation
Pre-planning and during trip planning:

Either the Eyewitness in-depth books or Lonely Planet guides. Full of info, great photos and some natty travel tips. I love that on the hostel/travelling mates circuit there is a lot of sharing love that goes on as well (thank you Zela). These are great for a real in-depth looks at the areas you will be staying in. The beauty of these bohemoths is that the information doesn't really ever go out of date (bar a few opening times) so you can beg, steal or borrow one of an awesome travelling mate who can give you the low-down on where not to go, of if very lucky snaffle one at a hostel book exchange shelf. (I'm trying out a couple of ebook versions on my next holiday - wish me luck!)
Travel Guides - Reading and exploring Recommendation - Eyewitness
The 'money-can't-buy-they-are-so-good' guides:

You are very, very lucky to get one of these. Especially if you are a foodie, and have a particular foodie mate who includes it in a box of goodies. You are a legend Julie.
Travel Guides - Reading and exploring Recommendation

Ps. I'm not sponsored or any such thing by Eyewitness, I just love the junk in their trunk.

(Please note any links to Amazon are through my Amazon Associates account, which means I make a little money (less than 5%) from any purchases made after clicking through these links and it adds nothing to the price of your book. This helps support my book addiction, so if you are interested in buying the book, please click through the top link)

18 August 2014

Catching a steam train on the London Underground - all aboard!

I was never a 'girlie' girl growing up. Sure, I had Barbie dolls and sewing kits, but I'd be so busy designing their international homes (made with stacked chairs and ice cream container Jacuzzis) and embroidering details into their fantastical outfits that I never really managed to find the time to style their hair or play tea with them.
 
Catching a steam train on the London Underground - all aboard!

Catching a steam train on the London Underground - all aboard!

I'm much the same 20 (or so) years later; while I've learned the basic art of applying make-up and dressing up with scarves, of a weekend I'm never happier than with my hair chucked my hair into a crazy bun and skidding around an architectural wonder, be it a church, bridge or tube station.
Catching a steam train on the London Underground - all aboard!
This...
 
Catching a steam train on the London Underground - all aboard!
or this... it's not even a choice is it?
Yes, you read that correctly, I'm a self-proclaimed geek with a fascination for mechanics, design and structure. This weekend began with delicious cocktail in  glamorous London bar, but by the end of it I was found on a tube station platform, eagerly awaiting an original London Underground Steam train running specially for Chesham's 125th birthday.
 
 Catching a steam train on the London Underground - all aboard for Chesham!
 
Chesham is at the far end of the Metropolitan line (that plum coloured one running NorthWest to NorthEast) and is quite a pretty station. Surrounded by trees, cream iron tracery and pretty cottages, it isn't the grim, grey London that commuters are used to, in fact it's not really London anymore, but an area of Hertfordshire.
 
Travelling in style - Catching a steam train on the London Underground - all aboard!
  
Trains evoke for me a taste of England; the tolling of church bells, the delicate tinkle of a tea cup, and the chugging whistle of a steam train. It also spins an image of London; the chatter of commuters, splash of a chilled pint and the melodic whoosh of underground doors to a background reminder of 'mind the gap'. 
 

Travelling in style - Catching a steam train on the London Underground - all aboard!

Inlaid with the glamour of a bye-gone age, there are no perspex sheets or lemon yellow safety rails here, but an opulence that transports you to another era.

Travelling in style - Catching a steam train on the London Underground - all aboard!
 
Travelling in style - Catching a steam train on the London Underground - all aboard!
 
Travelling in style - Catching a steam train on the London Underground - all aboard!

Some of our fellow passengers dressed beautifully...

Travelling in style - Catching a steam train on the London Underground - all aboard!

...while in this case I opted for a style far less flattering and much more suited to shovelling the coal. Some things never change.

Travelling in style - Catching a steam train on the London Underground - all aboard!

The underground does, evolving to suit technology and the needs of the growing population, but we much prefer the slower, prettier trains used to running the Underground. Alas, our white bullets are here to stay, shooting through London, keeping the city running smoothly.
 
Watching the countryside speed by as the gentle chugging of the train echoed around the nearby villages was simply divine.
 
Travelling in style - Catching a steam train on the London Underground - all aboard!
  
Sadly, all good things come to an end and the train whistled off into the sunset, back to the depot for cleaning and housing whilst we boarded one of the white tube bullets back through London, to make our weekday daily commutes as normal.

Travelling in style - Catching a steam train on the London Underground - all aboard!
  
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16 August 2014

Bloggers are...

Curious

Detail oriented

Irreverent

Dedicated

Kind

Photography addicts

Hungry

Often introverted

Gregarious

Slightly mad

Imaginative

 
 
 
 
 
 
I'm sure several traits are missing off this list - hit me in the comments section!...



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15 August 2014

Friday figments and photos

Life lately has been one trying to appreciate every day and everyone who crossed my path. As the recent sadness of Robin Williams passing has shown us, we need to live every moment of our lives that we can, not wishing away the hours clockwatching.
 
Take this view from a bar I've just discovered in Covent Garden and love, for instance. Most people see an ominous rainy sky. I see is as another excuse to spend more time laughing with some lovely mates. You know who you are.
 







Ps. I hope you're all afternoon-tea'ing like mad - it is after all "National Afternoon Tea Week". Like we need an excuse...

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14 August 2014

Gluten-free Italian nosh, Riccardo's of Chelsea

Italy, the dream of a country that I spent a year labouring 50+ hour work weeks in earnest search for. The sunshine, the music, the fresh vibrant flavours, the crumbling architecture older than the mind can imagine. So, to be introduced recently to a restaurant that can cater not only for my poor gluten-intolerant stomach as well as my wander-lusting soul in Central London was a treat indeed.

Riccardo's of Chelsea - Gluten-free Italian nosh
Crudite: Fresh raw vegetables, warm anchovy and garlic dip and a warm olive oil dip
 
Riccardo's of Chelsea - Gluten-free Italian nosh

Tucked unobtrusively down Fulham Road, Riccardo's is a restaurant I could adopt with all the love and gusto in my foodie heart. Inspired by family Tuscan heritage (notably the owners own Grandmother) the menu revolves around fresh, classic, simple flavour pairings that make your tastebuds sizzle.

Riccardo's of Chelsea - Gluten-free Italian nosh
Carciofi Grigliati Con Prosciutto; Grilled tender baby artichokes, prosciutto, truffle oil


Riccardo's of Chelsea - Gluten-free Italian nosh
Gluten-free bread rolls, freshly warmed.

Disclaimer: We were invited guests of Riccardo's, but my (many) opinions are only ever my own, and I would never recommend anywhere that I wouldn't happily visit own dime.
 
Riccardo's of Chelsea - Gluten-free Italian nosh
 
The rest of this gluten free kitchen story kinda tells itself. The simple but powerful flavours danced off the plate, onto my camera. (And then into our appetites). 
 
Riccardo's of Chelsea - Gluten-free Italian nosh
Insanely good Aubergine tower with passata and a parmesan flake (it could be
Tortino di melanzane alla parmigiana - I was too busy enjoying to listen.)
 
Riccardo's of Chelsea - Gluten-free Italian nosh
Polpette: Tuscan style gluten free meatballs
We arrived to a luxuriously set table, stretching in the hot summer evening perfectly placed for beautiful people watching. Welcomed with a cool glass of white wine (organic for bonus brownie points), we settled in as plate after plate sashayed from the kitchen.
 
Riccardo's of Chelsea - Gluten-free Italian nosh
 
Riccardo's of Chelsea - Gluten-free Italian nosh
 
As someone who is Gluten intolerant facing real digestion issues, it's wonderful to not feel like a troublemaker by wanting real, proper restaurant quality food. What's more, not only have they catered for gluten intolerance for nearly a decade, they cater for vegans, vegetarians and whatever you fancy. Well played Riccardos, well played.
 
Riccardo's of Chelsea - Gluten-free Italian nosh
Chocolate Almond cake, gluten free and sumptuous.

Riccardo's of Chelsea - Gluten-free Italian nosh
Riccardos Tiramisu tower (full of glutens) - this was mostly eaten with table guests eyes closed.


Riccardos, Molto molto delizioso. 

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