The Anonymous Widower

The Fastest Gluten Free Pasta In The East

I eat quite a bit of gluten-free pasta in Carluccio’s, but in some ways the best place for this is their restaurant in Cambridge.

Normally, when you ask for gluten-free pasta, they advise you there will be a little wait, but not yesterday.

So just as I was settling down to have a long sip of lemonade, which had just been delivered to my table,  I was surprised to see the pasta arrive. This was probably only after about five or six minutes after I’d ordered it.

As I used to live in the area and be a patient of a gastro-enterologist at Addenbrookes, I know the area has a high number of coeliacs. Why this should be so, I know not!

But I also know that the restaurant uses methods to get the pasta to the table quickly.

The pasta was excellent incidentally and tasted exactly the same as in their other restaurants.

April 17, 2013 Posted by | Food, Health | , , , | Leave a comment

Margaret Thatcher’s Legacy

You could argue for years about Margaret Thatcher.

But it wasn’t what she did or didn’t do, that she leaves behind. In the course of history, there are only a few politicians, philosophers and sad to say despots and dictators, who have changed the world.

Margaret Thatcher showed that no rule or thought in traditional thinking is sacrosanct, when it comes to shaping the world.  Since then we’ve seen lots of radical ideas work, that would have never even been thought of, had not Margaret Thatcher and a few others shown that you could do something different.

Would Tony Blair have been able to reform a Labour Party, stuck in the 1920s, without Margaret Thatcher showing what radical thinking could do? Or Ken Livingstone, reinvent himself, to make a comeback as the London Mayor. I suspect, if Margaret Thatcher hadn’t been a radical Prime Minister, we’d have had a succession of useless worthies in the last few years.

I’ll only give one example of where Margaret Thatcher ditched conventional thinking.

In 1982, conventional thinking, said that to attempt to retake the Falkland Islands after the Argentine invasion was utter madness, and many on all sides of the political spectrum said that to give the islands away was the best solution. How many people today, think that the decision to retake the islands was wrong? Not many I suspect! I’ve even met an Argentinian, who felt that we did his country a favour, by effectively getting rid of the evil dictatorship of General Galtieri.

Without Margaret Thatcher my life today would be very different.

After I had sold my first successful software; Pert7 to ADP, I received an offer to go to the United States to write a PERT system for a large US computer corporation.

How they got my number or the fact I’d sold out, I don’t know?

Soon after, I was approached to write a PERT system, which later became Artemis, so I turned the Americans down.

I suspect that if that hadn’t happened, I’d have eventually moved across the Atlantic, as it was just impossible to provide for a growing family with the tax rates, then in force.

i didn’t move, as neither C or myself could have ever lived abroad permanently.

But Margaret Thatcher’s Tax and other reforms enabled me to stay in the country of my birth. If tax rates were still as the eighty percent plus they were in the nineteen seventies, I doubt many of the brightest in the UK, would not have gone to where pastures were greener.

One aside here is a story from my accountant of the 1980s.  A confirmed Socialist, he was not a supporter of Margaret Thatcher, but felt the tax reforms of the time were very good for the country.  Although tax rates were lowered, her Chancellors were good at closing the myriad loopholes that had been developed by clever members of his profession. There may be a lesson here for today’s politicians, who need to both maximise the tax take and keep voters happy.

 

 

April 17, 2013 Posted by | World | , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Cambridge Annoys Bus Passengers

Yesterday, I wanted to go to the football at Ipswich, but as there is no decent place to eat near Portman Road and I didn’t want to travel out in the rush hour, I decided to go to to Cambridge for lunch and then have a drink with an old friend at Thurston, just outside Bury St. Edmunds.

I haven’t been to Cambridge for a few months and when I got there I found I couldn’t find the bus stop to get me to the centre. I had missed the only information in the station.

Bus Information At Cambridge

Bus Information At Cambridge

There was nothing else and no-one to ask.

I did find a fellow passenger, who showed me to the stop, but she added the new stop position, meant that she regularly missed her train, because of there being no drop-off in front of the station, as there used to be.

It does strike me, that the new traffic layout at the station has been designed to get the buses out of the way of cars and taxis.  But then how many councillors and City officials responsible for signing off the new layout actually use the buses.

I think with Cambridge’s unique traffic problems and large numbers of visitors, that something better could have been done.

But whatever is done, some better information in the station is needed.

April 17, 2013 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , | Leave a comment

I Missed The Match

I didn’t get to the match at Ipswich on Saturday, as although the Eurostar was on time in London, by the time I got home, it was too late to get a train to the start of the match.

The delays hadn’t been serious, but I wasted ten or fifteen minutes because of a broken Cashpoint, queues at WH Smith for my paper and then no taxis at Kings Cross. I then had to take the Victoria line to Highbury and Islington station and I waited another ten minutes for a bus to get home.

Of course, if they had left luggage lockers, at any of the stations, like St. Pancras, Kings Cross, Liverpool Street or Ipswich, I could have quickly dumped my case and got to the match on time.

But as Ipswich Town lost, I wasn’t too bothered by the evening.

April 16, 2013 Posted by | Sport, Transport/Travel | , , , | Leave a comment

Food At Last

It was a short walk from the Gare de Paris Est station to the Gare du Nord and the 11:07 Eurostar for London.

I made it easily and an hour or so later, I was having lunch.

DSCN1744

Food At Last

It was actually tofu, which I’ve never had before.  But it was good to have a meal I could trust. The tea was very good too.

What I always think, is why if Eurostar can do gluten free food so well, why can’t other train companies?

April 16, 2013 Posted by | Food, Transport/Travel | , , , , | 1 Comment

The Final Insult From Germany

The only thing, I consumed on the train was water, Coke and an orange juice in the morning. But others were luckier!

The Final Insult From Germany

The Final Insult From Germany

The muffin could have been nice. The notes say the following.

Contains colouring. Contains antioxidant. Contains preservatives. With presevative, curing salt. Contains sweetener. Contains caffeine.

Nothing at all is said about gluten.

I suppose gluten is compulsory in Germany!

April 16, 2013 Posted by | Food, Transport/Travel | , , , | 5 Comments

The Sleeper From Munich To Paris

It takes over ten hours, but as I wanted to be back in London in time to get to Ipswich for the Hull game on Saturday, it was the only way I could do it.

I had booked the sleeper on Deutsche Bahn’s excellent web site at bahn.de. I had a self-printed paper ticket, that worked well. These are some of the pictures I took on the journey.

We arrived in Paris on time at 09:30.  I had slept reasonably well.

April 16, 2013 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , | 1 Comment

The Problems Of Eating On The Move For A Coeliac In Germany

Just because I’m a coeliac, it doesn’t mean that I don’t want to eat gluten-free food on the move.

In the UK, there are a lot of options.

I can get gluten-free bars like EatNakd or Eat Natural in many places.

At stations, there is usually a good choice at Marks and Spencer of various snacks, which often include sandwiches.

There is also the coffee chains, like Starbucks, where I can usually find a bite of something.

And on top of that most pubs can probably rustle up something to go with half of decent cider or a glass of wine.

But in Germany, I found little to eat on the move.

As I returned from Ulm, I was very hungry, as I hadn’t eaten since breakfast. But there was nothing obvious at the station.  So I looked at this vending machine.

Vending Machine At Ulm Station

Vending Machine At Ulm Station

I got a bag of crisps, which at least said they were glutenfrei.

Note though there is only one flavour in the machine and they were paprika.  But I was so hungry, that I ate three packets.

Back in Munich, I had time to kill, as the sleeper to Paris didn’t leave until 22:50.

I should have done the sensible thing and go to the pizza restaurant, but I thought that I’d find something. I did and it was this salad.

A Revolting Salad At Munich Station

A Revolting Salad At Munich Station

It was one of the most revolting I’ve ever tried to eat. Especially, as the only implements were my fingers. The picture doesn’t really do justice to the salad and especially the cheese and ham mixture on the top.  Alternative layers of revolting cheese and ham had been sandwiched together and sliced up.  In the end I gave up and put it in a bin.

I should have been entitled as I was on a First Class sleeper, to use of the DB Lounge. But after installing myself there at about 20:50, I was promptly turfed out, as it shuts at 21:00.  So I was left to fend for myself in the cold for nearly two hours.

Incidentally, I could have gone back to the hotel and its warm bar, but there had been an altercation in the subway linking the station to the city centre, so I had to stay put.

It was then, that I met half a dozen Watford supporters on a stag do. They were trying to buy a sausage without bread from a fast food stall and not getting much joy, as apparently, it was against the rules. They were just getting fed up with their restricted diet of beer, bread and sausage.

I had been in Germany for two days, and I’d never found anything acceptable to eat on the move.

If it hadn’t been for the wonderful pizza, I might have starved. I can’t live by coffee with two sugars alone.

I think the rule is you must plan, where you are going to eat. Germany doesn’t seem to be like the UK, Italy, The Netherlands, Belgium and France.

On the other hand, I tried to plan at Ulm and that didn’t work out! Years ago, I didn’t plan in Berlin, but the hotel was good and sorted out two of the best gluten-free restaurants I ever went to with C.

April 16, 2013 Posted by | Food, Transport/Travel | , , , | 6 Comments

Ulm Rathaus

Often in Germany, the town hall or Rathaus is the second best building after the cathedral.

As you can see the Rathaus in Ulm is no exception.

April 16, 2013 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , | Leave a comment

A Charming Statue

I found this in the back streets of Ulm.

It’s such a simple idea for a fountain and sculpture, I’m surprised I’ve not seen something similar before.

April 16, 2013 Posted by | World | , , , | Leave a comment