Yeh zeret kitchen is so good
― Blandford Forum, Sunday, 15 February 2015 21:44 (eleven years ago)
Lol at you posh people eating out in Woolwich, You wouldn't have even attempted that shit in the 90's!
― xelab, Sunday, 15 February 2015 21:54 (eleven years ago)
fairly sure i did in the 1990s
― no love deb weep (nakhchivan), Sunday, 15 February 2015 21:55 (eleven years ago)
I might have even have crossed paths with you at the time
― xelab, Sunday, 15 February 2015 21:57 (eleven years ago)
But didn't see many "aspirational" types in the area at that time.
― xelab, Sunday, 15 February 2015 21:58 (eleven years ago)
ha, this was at the birthday party of an amiable kid from a very aspirational asian family
― no love deb weep (nakhchivan), Sunday, 15 February 2015 22:02 (eleven years ago)
anyway i think lj has the ability to move seamlessly between the ritz and and canning town burger king and to treat each with equanimiy
― no love deb weep (nakhchivan), Sunday, 15 February 2015 22:06 (eleven years ago)
aw!
xelab obv shook at the prospect of the terriers wandering straight into the dragon's lair on the 28th, see just how damn aspirational this area is then
― not that sort of birdwatcher (imago), Sunday, 15 February 2015 22:09 (eleven years ago)
will give zeret kitchen a go if I'm in Camberwell too, cheers folks
― not that sort of birdwatcher (imago), Sunday, 15 February 2015 22:15 (eleven years ago)
Do you still get all the night-shift workers from the dockyard Emafyl factory converging at the market pub for for a 6am piss-up on Fridays ? That is a part of real Woolwich that is invisible to some of you folks. It depresses me when you get this whiff of gentrification going on in such a shithole as Woolwich, which I lived in for two years, well Plumstead for 6 months of it as well. Anyway peace to you all and enjoy your food, this isn't some ongoing feud, I was thinking aloud and probably not in a good way.
― xelab, Sunday, 15 February 2015 22:23 (eleven years ago)
sorry dude
have lived on the edge of woolwicy for nearly 3 years now & have been to all sorts of places. am living in a rickety old basement terrace flat & I share your sadness at many aspects of gentrification, but good food is good food. at least this stuff was affordable. anyway, sat in a woolwich boozer rn, always glad to hear the history of this place, hope it doesn't turn into a characterless boutique row
― not that sort of birdwatcher (imago), Sunday, 15 February 2015 22:32 (eleven years ago)
is woolwich gentrifying?
― no love deb weep (nakhchivan), Sunday, 15 February 2015 22:35 (eleven years ago)
I can recall someone telling me that that the area consists of 80% social housing and would consider it a tall order.
― xelab, Sunday, 15 February 2015 22:56 (eleven years ago)
but slowly it will probably happen, until London becomes North Sea territory Hah!
― xelab, Sunday, 15 February 2015 23:00 (eleven years ago)
yeah, probably not vastly more upmarket than in those days, just with a more mixed population than 20 years agothe eritrean immigrants probably replacing erithrean emigrants
― no love deb weep (nakhchivan), Sunday, 15 February 2015 23:03 (eleven years ago)
£500k or thereabouts for a 3-bed flat in a Woolwich development shown just this week to some horrible prannet and his fragrant wife on Location Location Loation.
― camp event (suzy), Sunday, 15 February 2015 23:06 (eleven years ago)
jesus, although there are tower blocks in deptford that have been privatized and would sell for more than that, but they exist in a bit of a quarantine from the local area
anyway back to restaurants does anyone have recent experience of high end italian anywhere centralish (not my cheque thankfully)
― no love deb weep (nakhchivan), Sunday, 15 February 2015 23:12 (eleven years ago)
xpIn the 90's there was a huge Somalian influx in Woolwich, so that sounds very correct.
― xelab, Sunday, 15 February 2015 23:13 (eleven years ago)
during the conversation with bf's colleague (not remotely hipster, a slightly older teacher) in which she raved about the eritrean restaurant, and woolwich generally despite it being "rough", there was a gradual dawning that she was describing exactly the sort of place hackney was 20 years ago :(
― lex pretend, Sunday, 15 February 2015 23:19 (eleven years ago)
woolwich retains a distinct character & despite the gaudy & looming riverside developments is not yet shorn of its caribbean & othersuch concerns (going into a cornershop today & buying both irish moss & sarsaparilla should confirm this) - (oh ffs just drank a drop of irish moss & am reeling, like a blancmange you drink, or choose not to. sarsaparilla ok tho, esp with pernod) - yeah, it's gonna be an auxiliary city dormitory given crossrail but cheap greasy spoons, morning pints & bereft charlton fans still present & correct. hackney minus 20 years? perhaps, although it's more remote & less prone to sudden invasion of the moneyed & their demands my rent hasn't gone up too much although i'm a 7-minute bus ride out of central woolwich so this might not be a reliable guide
if people are priced out of the area it will be disgraceful, but whether a ridiculously cheap eritrean cafe in a barely-redecorated sausage factory is a sign of this process is yet to be clear, whatever tripadvisor might herald (can't we just believe in a championed underdog?) if their prices triple within the next 2 years we may have our answer
― not that sort of birdwatcher (imago), Sunday, 15 February 2015 23:42 (eleven years ago)
I'd have said Locatelli's, but it's still shut. My knowledge in this area is shamefully scant - I have a hunch expensive Italian in London might be more to do with location than quality of product, but it's only a hunch.
― Madchen, Monday, 16 February 2015 01:17 (eleven years ago)
McDonald’s opened its first restaurant in the UK in 1974. It is still there today in Woolwich, London.
― sʌxihɔːl (Ward Fowler), Monday, 16 February 2015 09:14 (eleven years ago)
xp Polpo might fit the bill, there's one in Soho, Venetian food and very good the time I went to their Clerkenwell branch, the only problem being the lack of booking.
― Keith Moom (Neil S), Monday, 16 February 2015 09:37 (eleven years ago)
Of course Woolwich is gentrifying. You look at the way the greenary near the station has been done up etc (I think it was around the time at the Olympics), then there was another piece of greenary (Just as you come out of Plumstead)...right there and then you knew it was all going to shit.
Ads for dockside flats.
The girl who cuts my hair is also moving out to Thamesmead, rents are going up.
It will get to the same shit as Dalston: KFC then two doors down some fucking tapas bullshit. Enjoy your lol 'food'.
― xyzzzz__, Monday, 16 February 2015 10:10 (eleven years ago)
xpsBocca di Lupo? It's a couple of years since I've been but people love it p consistently.
(I had a birthday dinner there. It was great, but a bit hazy towards the end)
― woof, Monday, 16 February 2015 10:19 (eleven years ago)
internet comment
― Moyes Enthusiast (LocalGarda), Monday, 16 February 2015 11:15 (eleven years ago)
It'll be Thamesmead village next - internet comment x2
― xyzzzz__, Monday, 16 February 2015 11:19 (eleven years ago)
Re: High end Italian, consensus pick is probably L'Anima if money is no object. Bocca di Lupo is lovely (and has a fantastic wine list), and slightly cheaper but still great are Trullo in Highbury and Zucca on Bermondsey St.
― Blandford Forum, Monday, 16 February 2015 11:54 (eleven years ago)
you'd probably really like the blue nile tbqh xp
― not that sort of birdwatcher (imago), Monday, 16 February 2015 11:57 (eleven years ago)
I would, its just that its part of a thing so I had to make a comment on the internets.
― xyzzzz__, Monday, 16 February 2015 12:21 (eleven years ago)
Cosign Zucca, it really is excellent and not too expensive for high-end food.
As someone who was going swimming and hanging out in Woolwich on a weekly basis in the 90s it feels like a more run down and desperate place now than then. They have been trying to gentrify it for years without much success, I suspect its future is closer to Vauxhall than Dalston. At one point there were reports of unsold luxury flats being used as crack dens.
― Matt DC, Monday, 16 February 2015 13:59 (eleven years ago)
that's more like it
― Moyes Enthusiast (LocalGarda), Monday, 16 February 2015 14:20 (eleven years ago)
lol matt, there's an afrikan boy interview that i can't find just now where he makes a convincing case for woolwich as realness capital of london
clearly rising land values everywhere is a tide lifting all boats (submerging all those without boats) so renter flight is ubiquitous, but local govt prettification and insipid gleaming newbuild crap is often a bad indicator of gentrification, it won't all go for the brochure price and in any case it exists parasitically, in an area rather than of it
it is being sold to people with no connection to or love for the area, and whereas in 95 (iirc the peak year for crime in england?) they would have been more circumspect, there's less heroin related property crime and less violent crime in general which mitigates the most proximate disincentive to the middle class
― no love deb weep (nakhchivan), Monday, 16 February 2015 15:55 (eleven years ago)
and thanks for all your recommendations
― no love deb weep (nakhchivan), Monday, 16 February 2015 15:57 (eleven years ago)
We went for drinks in the Woolwich Equitable afterwards, the building society premises transformed into a pub, keeping much of the old decor and the curiously lofty, incongruous room shape...it was great, but if that's gentrification then it's a very strange, counterintuitive gentrification, with cheap drinks and an extremely unpretentious selection of books adding to the sense of haphazard improvisation. Posh gastropub it is not - its grandeur feels democratic and accidental, like anyone could walk in and feel at home. They didn't even have a beer menu!
― not that sort of birdwatcher (imago), Monday, 16 February 2015 16:10 (eleven years ago)
do they have a crack menu instead?
― xyzzzz__, Monday, 16 February 2015 16:31 (eleven years ago)
See if I can score some 'greenery' next time I'm there
― not that sort of birdwatcher (imago), Monday, 16 February 2015 16:41 (eleven years ago)
A lot of what people mistake for gentrification is actually businesses opening up to specifically cater to pockets of middle class people (and/or working class people with a bit of disposable income) that have been there all along. A tapas bar opening is not really a sign of gentrification given that fucking Catford had one in like 1990.
― Matt DC, Monday, 16 February 2015 17:02 (eleven years ago)
nor is a local business to blame for the housing crisis
― Moyes Enthusiast (LocalGarda), Monday, 16 February 2015 17:18 (eleven years ago)
It's also a consequence of the average age of parenthood creeping steadily upwards, something that is never mentioned in these debates - there have long been substantial communities of middle class people in areas that 90s North London chattering classes fuckwits like Alex Proud would never have thought about going to. But the ones with higher paying jobs are going out more than they used to because they're less likely to be at home with the kids. And that means more restaurants, and more of a certain kind of pub as well. I think people are more likely to take their kids are more likely to take their kids to those places than they were in the 80s and 90s as well.
― Matt DC, Monday, 16 February 2015 18:10 (eleven years ago)
These issues should be to an extent tangential but we have and have no chance of a government with an interest in countering the negative effects of rising rents.
― Matt DC, Monday, 16 February 2015 18:12 (eleven years ago)
probably a higher proportion of disposable income spent on eating out across all income levels these days? and more on food and less on drink
certainly if punitive duty rates are excluded, and the minority of people happy to pay ludicrous wine markups in fancy restaurants (eg £120 for a bottle i bought for £20 and readily available for £30)
― no love deb weep (nakhchivan), Monday, 16 February 2015 18:15 (eleven years ago)
That's true as well, casual eating out in Britain is a relatively recent phenomenon. And I'd guess that the emergence of online dating into the mainstream is a factor as well.
― Matt DC, Monday, 16 February 2015 18:35 (eleven years ago)
Fnarr.
I never said 'tapas bar' was the only thing, all rooted in the way the area looks and a comparison of this with the way other areas are now looking - sorry I don't have any figures of numbers moving out and migrating to Thamesmead or anything.
We'll see what the future brings for Woolwich and its fine new establishments, such as the equitable.
― xyzzzz__, Monday, 16 February 2015 19:04 (eleven years ago)
I really hate the idea of a gentrified Woolwich, especially if it meant some poor bastard had to commute from the arse end of Erith for a shitty manufacturing job that doesn't pay enough for a travel budget. Well that was the kind of narrative I was getting carried away with in my mind on here last night. And some of the horrific stories of local authorities evicting long term tenants with impunity. I probably shouldn't have waded in here considering it is about 18 years since I lived there!
― xelab, Monday, 16 February 2015 19:06 (eleven years ago)
that is happening all over london so in that sense woolwich like everywhere else is becoming gentrified, just not in the same way as happened in hackney which has changed very substantially, land values increased beyond even the london average over the last 15 yrs
if someone were looking for possible new dalstons then it probably wouldn't be the place 95% of people will associate with a soldier being murdered in the street by lunatics, and vigilantes gathered outside edl pubs in response
― no love deb weep (nakhchivan), Monday, 16 February 2015 23:46 (eleven years ago)
quite, although let's see
currently in The Gay Hussar. Hungary knows what's up
― not that sort of birdwatcher (imago), Tuesday, 17 February 2015 21:12 (eleven years ago)
& Soho was gentrified a while back iirc
― not that sort of birdwatcher (imago), Tuesday, 17 February 2015 21:13 (eleven years ago)
Someone needs to write the history of the regeneration of the Soho restaurant scene in the 1980s before it's completely forgotten, with key players in the scene in the scene such as Sue Miles having passed away.
― the gabhal cabal (Bob Six), Tuesday, 17 February 2015 22:27 (eleven years ago)