This week I have been

Reading

Campaign Ruby, by Jessica Rudd, for our online book club Better Well Read Than Dead. She certainly loves name-dropping her labels.

Watching

The Plan, which reminded me that I haven't dropped enough hints to C recently about how much I want the BSG box set on Blu-Ray.

Listening to

The Pogues

Discovering

...to my great disappointment, that Jared Leto is in 30 Seconds To Mars. Why, Jared, why?

Eating

  • Mee pok at Coconut House
  • Matt Stone's fresh, Spring-y quinoa salad from this month's Australian Gourmet Traveller. (I decided that dinner was more than a "light meal", though, so added some fried haloumi for a meat-free Monday.)
  • Suckling pig rolls at Collins Quarter, which are on for another three or four weeks on Wednesdays (and at $5 a pop are a bargain). They will be followed by Spring lamb!
  • Baguette with pork rillettes from Le Traiteur - the crunchy, acid pickles go so perfectly with the rillettes
  • Eggplant with minced pork from KL Bunga Raya
  • Ipoh Hor Fun (again!) at Gurney Drive. Perfect on a wet and steamy September Saturday.  C had the Hainanese Chicken Rice and the rice was beautifully flavoured.
  • Some sticky ribs and fish-flavour pork from Fucshia Dunlop's Sichuan Cooking
  • Compost cookie batter, with Lanka mix, wasabi peas - thanks to Penny for that idea! - Twisties, Mars Bar, Clinkers and Oreos. Oh, and some Special K.  That'll teach me to try to be super-organised for morning tea. (Some did make it to the oven, I promise)

North Melbourne – the down side

North Melbourne has been my home now for about nine years. When we first moved here, it bore only a superficial resemblance to the suburb I’d worked in 12 or so years before. The Town Hall pub had changed – it was still a bit grungy, but in a comfortable way. The 80s pink and black “El Dorado” on Leveson Street, once a stop on the after-work drinks circuit for cheap pots and massive plates of nachos, was undergoing a transformation into a polished concrete-and-glass bistro/pub. The Court House, which I’d remembered as my alcoholic boss’ last resort when escaping the office and which was always my last resort on the many occasions I had to trawl the pubs to retrieve him, closed soon after we arrived to re-open as a renowned and soon-to-be-hatted restaurant attached to a cosy pub bar.

Since we’ve lived here, there have been more changes. The lovely Libertine opened around the corner, Sosta Cucina took over where a rather uninspired noodle bar once stood, Oskar opened and continues to thrive, Burger Republic – now Urban Burger – covers meat-in-bread cravings, coffee is roasted, pastries are made, and a number of interesting little bars and cafes of all sizes have settled in to the area. Things continue to change, with the newsagent moving (twice) in the past six months, leaving all sorts of possibilities for their vacated premises. I’m sure those vacancies won’t be filled, as I would like, by bookshops or hardware stores, but I’m fairly confident that we’ve reached saturation point with hairdressers so I remain optimistic.

Some things haven’t changed.
Continue reading North Melbourne – the down side

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