Sunday
30th December, 2018 1110
Yesterday
Jodie invited me for lunch. She is Annie's Chinese teacher, by which
I mean she is not only Chinese but she teaches it, both in our
university and elsewhere.
These
days I am no more a lunch person than I am a breakfast person (except
in hotels where I can get an English one!) so I was not expecting to
particularly enjoy much beyond a couple of beers.
She
took me to a new (to me) place called “26 Inches”. Despite the
rather rude connotation I guessed perhaps it was a pizza parlour. I
was correct and my heart sank – pizzas in China are very often less
than satisfactory, Pizza Hut being a perfect example. Thankfully
pizza was not all that was on offer, particularly when I asked her
what they were like and she replied “so-so”. If a Chinese person
says that, it's virtually a guarantee I will hate them.
Thumbing
through the menu I came across several likely alternatives. Then I
turned the page and encountered a sausage platter! Sausages here are
dire but these were labelled as Bavarian, American and so on and they
looked authentic. I had to try them but didn't want lunch to
be purely meat, so ordered some cheesy, bacony potato skins. She
selected meatballs and spaghetti.
The
skins were delicious and there were far too many sausages but I ate
more than I have for some time. Oddly the two I liked least were the
American one and a Cumberland type one, the origin of which I know
not. I made sure to get a doggy bag and in fact five minutes ago
finished them off.
The
occasion was slightly marred by the presence of an inordinate number
of kids, many of whom were noisy and boisterous and appeared to be
sans parents. Shortly before we left, Jodie asked a waitress what
was happening, it turned out it was a primary school breaking-up
party. The kids had been given pizza bases and they had put their
chosen toppings on before returning them to the kitchen for baking.
There were no parents, merely a few teachers, until as we left, the
parents arrived and suddenly a thirty-foot long table became
instantly full of adults and minors. I shudder to think how noisy it
will have got once the food service got under way!
We
then went to Caffe Bene, somewhere I had been meaning to try because
I thought perhaps it was somewhere you could get a pannini or a
toastie, but no, cakes, ice creams and coffees were all that were on
offer. And beer and wine. Plus you could smoke upstairs. And it was
warm, so warm in fact I yawned at regular intervals!
Considering
we met at 1230 and our shared taxi dropped me off at home at 1800,
our “lunch” had lasted five hours! It also gave me the
information that a relative of hers has a business dealing in issuing
visas of all denominations (for a fee). That knowledge and contact
may very well prove to be handy when the time comes.
I have
no idea what I will do tomorrow night although the likelihood is that
I will be a boring old fart and stay home, possibly even being asleep
as we enter 2019. However if you are going to celebrate the dawning
of the last of the “teen” years then I hope you enjoy yourselves
and emerge safe, unscathed and hung over.
Happy New Year!!
Happy New Year!!
No comments:
Post a Comment