Monday 30 April 2012

A Sedate and Ghostly Beauty

London itself looks best in the dark. It’s a pretty safe city, and you can walk in most places after sunset. It has a sedate and ghostly beauty. In the crepuscular kindness, you can see not just how she is, but how she once was, the layers of lives that have been lived here. Somebody with nothing better to do worked out that for every one of us living today, there are 15 ghosts. In most places you don’t notice them, but in London you do."
-from the NY Times "A Profile of London" by A. A. Gill 


I was thinking of this quote this week. Strange to think that I`ve been in London for over seven months now. I can`t say that London feels like "home" - there are too many of those moments when I get lost or when I just don`t understand this place (sometimes it`s just the expressions - did you know people here say that a gullible person is "a mug" ??). Yet there are moments - lots of them - when I wouldn`t want to live anywhere else in the world. Crossing Waterloo Bridge at night always does that for me [London at night is, as Gill says, a ghostly, beautiful city]. And seeing Tower Bridge. Also, going to the Opera, to see La Bohème, on Opening Night, in the company of royalty. It just doesnt get much better than this. 



I`ve been trying to take self-timed pictures for the last few months. Clearly my photography skills need some work! In the photo above I was trying to show how beautiful and sunny it was today - finally! for the first time in a whole month. I was on a lunch break - I volunteer at an NGO called War on Want two days a week, it keeps me from spending all my time at the LSE library.

 Here I am with my friend HJ. We went to eat Dim Sum in Chinatown on Sunday & I realized it has been a while! Going for dim sum is just not the same when I`m not eating with my extended Chinese family. But it was pleasant nonetheless - the Ha Chaun Fan was pretty good, although I was a bit disappointed with the Cha Siu Bow (they were tiny). 


This week we have dissertation workshops where we get input from other students about our dissertation proposals. I`ve been a bit behind in my research schedule! But I think we'll have a really good discussion since most of my group members are working on climate change /resilience/ South East Asia like me. 


I`m also thinking of going to Rome sometime in June. Blame it on Roman Holiday and Audrey Hepburn! In between revising for exams, I`m going to allow myself to spent a few blissful moments imagining myself on a scooter whizzing past the Piazza del Popolo, indulging in gelato, and dancing on a boat in a long red skirt. 


Sending my love to my family. I am thinking of you.
Love
Miss Engagée 

Tuesday 17 April 2012

Michelin Stars: the London Foodie Tour

Ash Baked Celeriac, Vanilla Black Restaurant

Toasted Cauliflower Mille Feuille, Vanilla Black Restaurant

Dessert . Vanilla Black Restaurant

Fish, Fifteen Restaurant

Pork Dish, Fifteen Restaurant
J'ai SUPER bien mangé cette semaine grâce à la présence de ma mère et de ses copines , qui sont venues visiter Londres et profiter d'une scène gastronomique de plus en plus riche et variée.

We ate at a number of excellent restaurants! Top of my list were Vanilla Black (in the central Holborn area) and Chez Bruce (in Wandsworth common, which has been described as a "jewel in the gastronomic wasteland" of south London). We also ate at Jamie Oliver's restaurant Fifteen, which was quite pleasant although the selection was too meat-heavy for my taste. And we had breakfast at Tom's Kitchen in Chelsea, which is lovely, affordable and located in a gorgeous neighbourhood.

Mom and I did a few things besides eating - went to see Jersey Boys and perused Borough Market's extensive selection of cheeses, olive oils, veggies and artisanal breads - but the highlight of this trip was the food, without a doubt. I feel so lucky and spoiled to have such a wonderful mom. I hope that my friends and I will keep in touch, like Mom and her girl friends from university, and go on trips together even when we live in different countries.

xxx Miss Engagée

Monday 9 April 2012

Playing Tourists

British Museum

One of the most fun things about living in London is that I get visitors! I had the pleasure of spending time with my Québécois relatives for a few days this week. It was my little (taller!) cousin's first time in Europe so we had a lot of fun showing her how things are done over here. Yours Truly is thinking of becoming a tour guide, it was really great to show off my knowledge of my little London Town, telling lurid tales about Jack the Ripper, Henry the Eight, Guy Fawkes and all the other characters that have made their mark on England's capital.
View from St Paul Cathedral's Golden Dome

Nous avons fait du tourisme "non-stop" pendant quelques jours. Avec ma copine N, nous avons visité Camden et Brick Lane, deux des quartiers qui m'attirent beaucoup, malgré leur côté un peu kitsch. Avec la famille, nous avons visité la célèbre cathédrale St Paul, lieu de pèlerinage pour plusieurs, et site du mariage de Lady Diana et du Prince Charles il y a plusieurs années de cela. 


Nous avons également assisté à une représentation de la comédie musicale "Singing in the Rain".

I adore going to see shows in the West End and "Singing in the Rain" was a really good one to see with my cousin and friends. The crowd went wild during the famous rainy dance scene! although I think I preferred the tap dancing duo/trio between the male lead and his sidekick Cosmo (along with an elocution teacher....à la Henry Higgins in My Fair Lady, only this guy was helping his students prepare for the arrival of talking pictures).

We also went for tea at Bea's of Bloomsbury, which I quite recommend. Their scones were beyond delicious and the tea I drank, Dragonwell, was splendid.

The author of Dracula, Bram Stoker, lived here. 




My aunt and I walked around Kensington/Chelsea, very posh neighbourhoods where a number of notable characters have lived/frequented, such as Mick Jagger and Bram Stoker (not at the same time, of course).


My cousin and uncle did the London Eye experience and quite enjoyed it. We ended our last day together with a walk along the Thames followed by dinner at Nando's (my cousin's choice - it seems a young pop star is a fan of their chicken). We had rain for part of their trip, but the last day was sunny and relatively warm. All in all, a most delightful study break!
Nous avons terminé notre visite ensemble par une photo à la station King's Cross. Nous y avons vu la plateforme 9 3/4, rendue célèbre par la série Harry Potter! 


xx Miss Engagée