Hi
I am meeting an old friend not seen for 15yrs, would like to take her for lunch somewhere nice around Fin Park tube. Has to be near station.
Any recommendations appreciated ?
Pasta Remoli is right by the Wells Terrace station exit and it's perfect for a lunchtime catch-up - friendly staff, freshly made pasta and good wine. Affordable too.<div><br></div><div>If you wanted to head further up SGR, there's Petek, Pappagone etc. Sadly some of the better options (Season Kitchen, La Fabrica, Dotori are closed at lunchtimes)</div>
Hi Toddlesocks,<div><br></div><div>We are open from 12:00 and serve all afternoon, with lunch specials like chicken, leek & mushroom pie with mash or pork chop with fried potatoes both for under £10.</div><div><br></div><div><br></div>
I showed Hussain Sutent's opinion of his cooking, and he was pleased. I usually just have coffee and cake, which is OK... <div>l am not there principally for the food and drink. But today I tried a verluffel (sp?), prettily decorated with salad and dressing. It was a snack, about 5 mouthfuls... and absolutely delicious! I've never tried Lebanese food before - similar to, but different from eg Algerian, or Turkish, it seems to me.</div>
Thank you all, a good selection, I will let her choose.
Unfortunately mobility is an isssue, ideally I would love to take her a walk down SGR so she could see how the area had changed since she emigrated.
Thumbs up for Hussain at Gadz too. It's a tatty old place and you can't get a beer (and you might have to put up with Chekski or Jeremy) but the home made Lebanese food is great and cheap. He usually makes me a mega chicken salad with everything on top from tabbouleh to pomegranate seeds and chilli - it's about a fiver, very fashionable in an Ottolenghi-style, you couldn't get it in Crouch End for less than £12. Bargain.<div><br></div><div>@Verga if you are referring to me as the shambolic guy who can't speak Portuguese - spot on. I always lose at chess, and I couldn't get anyone to do my Portuguese translation for me (lots of volunteers, nobody actually could be bothered, every one let me down). I am going to have to raise the £150 necessary to get it done professionally, so it will likely never happen. And I am a spring chicken.</div>
All of our cleaners at work speak Porteguese as their first language. I could ask if any of them are interested/have time to do it if you like? I'm not sure if any of them are confident enough with English to do it but one was a teacher at home in Brazil so she might do it.
@krappyrubsnif, a friend of mine is a professional translator - she's Portuguese. Msg me a link to what you want translated, & I'll ask her how much it would cost? She might be willing to do mates' rates...
Just to report back on the translation from Portuguese.<div><br></div><div>I asked for an estimate from a professional translation company - they would charge £610 to translate 17 minutes of video (probably about 2,000 words). It's what it costs. I know translation is time consuming and expensive, but that's money I just don't have. (I run a self-funded 'not-for-profit' <a href="http://www.tvindalert.com">public-service website, investigation and blog</a> on this charity scam - more fool me - and while I have many interested supporters, it would take me weeks to raise that kind of money.</div><div><br></div><div><span style="font-size: 10pt;">I was hoping I could rely on 'crowdsourcing' a rough translation rom well-wishers. That didn't work - several promises, but no deliveries. Luckily, after making a fuss, I think I've found a solution now - a young woman in Brazil who was herself a victim of the scam I'm exposing is doing a translation for me - of course, she is highly motivated. This is great because in a few days I'll be able to update my blog with a story repeating the Portuguese TV programme's allegations for all the world to see. </span><br></div><div><span style="font-size: 10pt;"><br></span></div><div>I've learned one lesson - people won't generally do something for nothing, even for a good cause, so next time I'lll pay £10 an hour for a rough translation - it's the only way. And I will just have to crowdfund some money and keep it in reserve. And it will happen again - TV reports in different languages come up all the time.</div><div><br></div><div>Thanks for the offers of help, I'll reply to each individually.</div><div><br></div><div><br></div><div><br><div><br></div><div><br></div></div>
The friend I asked yesterday said she'd have done it for free! (Because though she's a translator, her qualifications are for written rather than audio pieces, so she wouldn't have felt comfortable charging for it). Glad you've found someone.
<a href="http://www.tvindalert.com">I</a> am - finally - getting it done for free! It has just been a faff, since - perhaps understandably - people's initial enthusiasm to 'help' sort of evaporates after a day or two, there are always other things to do, nice weather, beer to drink, you never hear from them again. It ends up just leaving you high and dry.<div><br></div><div>Duh! Annoying! Next time, as I say, I'll just offer to pay to begin with and find the money later.</div>
Back to the subject of Gadz. Is this the right thread? Hope so.
I've never had a meal there before. Vegetarian. Rice.pots.couscous. salad, Lebanese style. Delicious. And Hussain only charged me a fiver. Wonderful man.
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Very much reminds me of my time in North Africa as it happens (no hangovers there though).