Besides books, I got some stuff that I could never ever find here. Like this, a very yummy poppy seed bagel for breakfast! With cheese, eggs and bacon of cos.
Yup, poppy seeds, the kind used for baking, are banned here. Naturally, I wolfed it down like a junkie just out from rehab. So folks, don't narc on me! It was all perfectly legal!
Saturday morning at the famous Borough Market. Was freakin' crowded, kinda like Chinese New Year's eve in our Chinatown ... should have gone on a weekday, maybe next time I guess. But the weather was good and so was the food.
Cheap, good and very, very fresh oysters. Sure miss them...
Hey wow, this is my 299th post and I thought maybe for my 300th post I'll do or post something different. Any suggestions?
Interestingly, I know Da Paolo is selling poppy seed gelato. I'm not so sure how since it's banned here.
ReplyDeleteGo narc on them! <^;^>
ReplyDelete... or maybe its fake poppy seed n they been lying all this time!
i didn't realize poppy seeds are banned here. i brought back bottles of it from sydney for the friends who want it to bake with!
ReplyDeleteHaha, all u crazy runners r all the same...;P
ReplyDeleteBooks are more expensive in Madrid than in Canada (not to mention, they are in Spanish - English copies are even more expensive).
ReplyDeleteMy parents used to complain the poppy seeds they could buy in Canada were all too dry. They said the seeds in Poland were better. Incidentally, my mother used to make a poppy seed pudding (this used lots of seeds, several cups full: cook the seeds in a little milk with honey and raisins. Soak rusks in honeyed milk. Alternate layers of poppy seed paste and rusks. Decorate with slivered almonds. Chill it. To serve: spoon into bowls, pour warm milk over it, enjoy. Looks something like this. It is called 'makowki' in Polish.
hah, the poppy seed pudding sounds interesting!
ReplyDelete