Jump to content

Recommended Posts

The best caff for a fry up - I reckon. Very friendly. But - do not go there if you are starving. Surprisingly, for a greasy spoon, they have warmly embraced the concept of 'slow food'. Can take an age for your food to turn up. But they will keep offering you free drinks, toast and the such as compensation. Fantastic place.

nooooooooo....i was hoping no one would mention the blue brick cafe on this forum as now it will be impossible to get a seat in there, and where will i go for the best poached eggs in ED now???


food good

ambiance good

eggs good

service good

bread mmmmm goood


its all good, cant say a bad word. plus it has a small display of art work from local residence adorning its walls...so good food and makes me feel slightly cultrual whislt recovering from a hangover.

Marmora Man Wrote:

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

> IT was once recommended by James Nesbitt in a

> profile of him in the Evening Standard's FRiday

> supplement - that should help a number of EDF

> "ers" decide not to crowd out the place.


That is so true! There is such anti-JN sentiment in ED that it's a good thing he's moved to HH!

Started going there again when the management/staff changed - before that I'd sit and wait to order - one time it took 20 mins so I left as strangely I had more to do than sit in their cafe.

The lady who runs it is from Wales I think (wait for it ....... "so whats Wales got to do with it why do you have to mention that etc.etc.) is very friendly and chatty, they knock-out good cafe food and takeaway sandwiches/rolls too !

I used to love it there. But it took 55 minutes to be served one day and when I went to the back to ask where the adult meals were I got a mouthful of abuse from the 'new owner' who denied that we'd been waiting almost an hour.


The food is good


The woman was patently tired having cooked 6 meals before ours on the smallest frying pan (fits 3 eggs it seems) in the world.


I won't go back anymore because I was rather offended and extremely embarrassed, despite maintaining my standard politeness. In fact I bumped into the other woman later that afternoon and she couldn't apologise enough.

Curmudgeon Wrote:

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

> I used to love it there. But it took 55 minutes to

> be served one day and when I went to the back to

> ask where the adult meals were I got a mouthful of

> abuse from the 'new owner' who denied that we'd

> been waiting almost an hour.

>

> The food is good

>

> The woman was patently tired having cooked 6 meals

> before ours on the smallest frying pan (fits 3

> eggs it seems) in the world.

>

> I won't go back anymore because I was rather

> offended and extremely embarrassed, despite

> maintaining my standard politeness. In fact I

> bumped into the other woman later that afternoon

> and she couldn't apologise enough.


Oh, Curmudgeon how often does one meet 'the other woman' who's prepared to apologise? Let alone enough?

I'd never eat anywhere else again.

This is no longer a builders caff. It's genrified by virtue of the current 'punters' and I reckon 'we' (and of course by that I mean everyone else in ED (East Dulwich)except me 'cause I rent) should just take it for what it is. It's a place that will take a while to serve you and may be a tiny bit 'homemade' about the whole thing. I think for me that's what I seek in a 'caff' It's 'culturally' a workmans Cafe, and that's OK by me.

How best to stop it becoming more popular? Or do I mean exclusive? Well do I?

I suppose a rumour that teams of tooled-up 'yoof' congregate there might be a start.

  • 1 month later...
blue brick cafe always looks lovely, but I went there on sunday when it was about half-empty/half-full, waited to be served, noticed everyone else was waiting for drinks or remainder of their food orders, read the paper, finished the paper, checked I had indeed sat there for over half an hour without being acknowledged, and left. it's a shame, because it looks like a cute cafe, but what you really want from a cafe is food and drink...

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

    • The eyesore is left, right and elsewhere of said box.😉
    • I don't think you are miserable; the fireworks 'thing' seems to be growing. It used to be that you knew when they would likely happen and they were relatively rare, two or three times a year, for just one evening each time. Now, not only do there seem to be more and more large organised events, with extremely loud fireworks, even making Halloween a must do fireworks date- but people just seem to randomly let off four or five really loud ones at odd times of the night, for around 6 months of the year. Given the environmental impact, I'd have thought the council might want to encourage use of low noise fireworks at large events. I really, really hope something can be done.
    • Would this not be a complaint better aimed at the council? Isn't it an anti social behaviour issue?  I think of myself as pretty live-and-let-live and feel like a miserable cow for saying this, but I do think I might complain. Personally I love the sound of fireworks but our dog is under the table, shaking like a leaf night after night and collapses in the street when he hears the noise.  I'm worried his heart'll give out.
    • The lower / no bang noise fireworks sound great.    Is there anywhere local selling those?
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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