Jump to content

Recommended Posts

keane Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I had the same experience ar la Chandalier - went

> there with my 8 year old son - for a treat & I

> wanted to introduce him to the concept of

> afternoon tea - he was smartly dressed and well

> behaved - we wanted to sit in 2 armchairs at the

> front that were vacant but were told we were only

> allowed in the back. I won't be going back.

Chandelier is one of the few ED eateries where you can relax without a billion kids jangling the nerves with their shrieks, squeaks , yowls and bruising careenings -- while mum and dad chat happily with their flat cap wearing friends.


Just saying.

BTW my own child and those of my friends are, on the other hand, perfect in every regard . Models of decorum , civility and a certain raffish charm.

I went to Prettys* on Sunday - served up a full English at 1pm, which they didn't used to do (correct me). Lovely food. Decent meat, quality beans, half mushrooms, proper inch thick bread, real tomato sauce (which for me is the key), a good slice of black pudding, good eggs and er.... leaves on the side. I couldn't move after that brunch. Best in ED in my humble opinion. Friendly too - probably the most important thing thinking about it. Now don't tell anyone.
Sorry to start with a negative but one to avoid is Il mirto, Melbourne Grove. Had my folks down for Mothers Day from Lancashire this weekend booked a table for four by phone on Wednesday we were told by a very stroppy Manager that we had to come at 7pm rather than our request of 7.30pm as "I do two sittings you will be rushing!!!!" So we had an earlier glass of champagne for Mum and arrived for him to tell us they had mistakenly given our table away???!!! He kind of apologised but was hostile when challenged by my partner. What a fool!!!

the-e-dealer Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Sittings get up my nose. I like to eat when I

> fancy it not when they tell me. Thanks for the

> Warning.


xxxxxx


To be fair to Il Mirto and places like it, they are both relatively cheap and relatively small, and probably can't afford to have people taking up a table for hours who aren't spending very much money or they'd very soon go bust.


They've already had their fingers burned at that place they started in Nunhead (Esmerelda, was it? Something like that).

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

    • Its that time of year again, past Christmas day and late delayed cards are turning up. How late are your cards arriving ?  Last year I had one delivered 4 weeks late. Can that be beaten this year ? 
    • Sadly, a lot of businesses didn't invite reviews on the EDF at that time due to a number of "negative nellies" that would take delight in posting unfavourable comments, often despite never being to the business in question.  No matter how good the place was, some posters would find fault that wasn't there "don't lile the colour of the bidet set in the private bathroom, avocado 😅" Can hardly blame businesses at the time for not wanting reviews on here, thankfully that has mostly changed now.   
    • Was that the Hare Krishna place? I can't remember exactly where it was (or maybe still is) but it was somewhere around Oxford Street.
    • The "for sale" section on this forum lets people offer things for free or cheaply. And the "wanted" section let's people ask for things they want or need, for free or cheaply. There are also existing schemes like Freecycle, and also local  food banks. And there is (or was) a local scheme where you can bring things to be repaired free. I think it is/was based in Nunhead. Isn't that simpler than having a barter system? You might have something to give away, but the person who wants it might not have anything you want. Or have I misunderstood how it works? I can see that offering services free might not fit into existing schemes, but depending on what they were, what would happen if things went horribly wrong eg someone wrecked your house? Sorry if the above sounds very negative. 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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