Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Dear All


We?re opening a cheese stall in the ED warehouse in a few days time. We?re passionate cheesemongers and are very excited about our new venture which will focus on artisan cheeses from across Britain particularly Wales. In addition we?ll be launching a cheese club which amongst other things will offer you the chance to meet some of the heroes behind our cheeses over a nice lazy weekend lunch in Dulwich.


The Warehouse plans to open this week and it?d be great if you could pop by over the weekend to sample our cheeses. If not look out for our herd of Mootown Freisian friends roaming around Lordship Lane on Saturday 17th November. If you?d like to join our cow parade or know any passionate cheese sorts interested in doing some part time work we?d love to hear from you.


All the best


The Mootown Collective

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/1935-new-cheese-stall-at-ed-warehouse/
Share on other sites

I guess that the Cheese stall is in competition with the Cheese Block. But even the Cheese Block has to contend with the reputation of the Cheese Nazis in Highbury. Cheese!


Cheese announcements in triplicate? And the ED Warehouse coming to blows with the residents? Too much drama for a Tuesday.



Charlie

despite some previous comments about the cheese block - i love it, and if you ask for a cheese that makes the owner tick ( apparently Liverot!) then you will be splashed with love and little extra bits and ohhhh try this if you like this you will love ..... but I am always happy to try something new, i love any thing strong and vaguely local, I think cheese, and more so beer, does not travel well.... so give me something glorious from Pwellhili above some thing mundane from Holland...


Good luck to a welcome new business in the area....

Dx

Popped into the Warehouse, chatted to or own EDF representative (bookshop - first stall - good position - bodes well). Cheese place was friendly and quite Welsh - tried a few samples and made a purchase. There is room for more stalls and the Oyster(?) place at the back looked fun, but as I dont like Oysters I didnt try.


Staggered back with bread from the Deli, more cheese from the Block, a book from Cheners and some foot cream from the Coop. Fun.

I did try the oysters and they were very yummy. Also I am feeling extremely horny and have a very large hard-on so what they say about their aphrodisiac powers must be true!!! They have two types of oysters, one smaller wild oysters from something Bay (can't remember the name, all the blood has flown away from my head!) and larger farmed oysters from Scotland. Opened in front of your very eyes, a dash of lemon, drop or two of Tabasco and some slivers of garlic - down the hatches straight from the shell and Bob's your uncle!


I would like to strongly recommend this consumable except the excessive breeding habits of ED'ers make me reluctant to do anything that would increase local libido levels!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Yes it would be easier, and I give a lot to the hospice shops, but for various reasons there are certain things I prefer to give to Oxfam. However I might go through the books and see if some could be donated more locally. I think in any charity shop staffed by volunteers, the reception you get must depend on the member of staff. The Oxfam bookshop have always been very happy when I've taken shedloads of books there in the past. On the other hand, I've taken things to the hospice shop that were received very grumpily when they hadn't even looked in the bag or asked what they were. It felt like I was being a nuisance and causing them more work. I don't remember a previous thread on here  about the Oxfam shop and parking, but that's possibly because it wasn't relevant to me at the time.
    • The other side of P13 drivers being risk averse is that I  have been on P13s at night that speeded (?sped?) down Underhill Road so fast I seriously thought they might crash.
    • Some P13 drivers appear very risk averse. I live in Underhill and on that road drivers are forced to back away, often considerable distances, from buses to allow them to pass, even when the bus has an immediate space it could back into. The driver at the time said that buses 'weren't allowed to back'. So reports of cars 'blocking' P13s might mean simply that the car was legally parked but the road too narrow,or the bus driver not prepared to risk advancing. NB some P13 drivers are both skilled and courteous, but not all. 
    • I’ve experienced the same in Herne Hill. It’s definitely linked to where there are already marked bays, it prevents you from parking within approx 200-400 metres around the bay. Dulwich Village has quite a few bays, which probably explains why you’ve noticed it there and not elsewhere. 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...