Gravy stains and tall tales await you!

Embark on a real foodie journey with Julie Harris

Welcome to Gravy stains and tall tales: A real foodie journey, where every dish comes with a story, and every stain has a memory. This blog isn’t about perfectly plated food or spotless kitchens – it’s about the messes we make, the laughter that echoes around the dinner table, and the unforgettable meals that leave a mark long after the plates are cleared.

From pub grub to family recipes passed down through generations, we’ll explore the real, unpolished side of food – the mishaps, the triumphs, and the tall tales that make every bite worth savouring. Pull up a chair and dig in!

Explore

The blog…

Dive into delightful recipes that blend Canadian heritage with British flair! Julie’s creations promise to tantalize your taste buds and spark joy in your kitchen.

The recipe collection

Get behind-the-scenes glimpses of pub life and learn how Julie transformed her dreams into reality, one dish at a time.

The book…

Lies, theft and shit on the ceiling: A Canadian’s journey to pub ownership in England

Coming soon!

Unleash the foodie within

Indulge in the authenticity of homemade meals and the warmth of shared tales.

Crete, day three: Sweat, sand, and stuffed zucchini flowers

Crete, day three: Sweat, sand, and stuffed zucchini flowers

admin May 20, 2025 4 min read

Some days you wake up on a Greek island and decide to walk straight into madness. A 1.5-hour hike from the quiet charm of Piskopiano Crete Greece to Stalis Beach, Crete doesn’t sound crazy — until you’re halfway there, uphill,…

Crete, day two: Sun, snails, and the sacred order of Beef Limonata

Crete, day two: Sun, snails, and the sacred order of Beef Limonata

admin May 19, 2025 3 min read

Some days, travel is about climbing mountains, dodging scooters, chasing museums. Other days, it’s about surrender. Total, unapologetic surrender to the fine art of doing absolutely nothing. Today was the latter. The pool at Amazones Village Suites**** is more than…

Crete, day one point two: Wine, ants, and the gospel according to Nikos

Crete, day one point two: Wine, ants, and the gospel according to Nikos

admin May 18, 2025 4 min read

If paradise had a lobby, it would probably look something like the Amazones Village Suites**** in Piskopiano Crete Greece. Not the fake, polished, soulless kind of resort paradise — but the real deal. Perched up a hill with sea air…

Crete or Bust: A tale of delays, diverts, and damn good tomatoes

Crete or Bust: A tale of delays, diverts, and damn good tomatoes

admin May 17, 2025 3 min read

4am. Handcross. Dark. Quiet. The kind of quiet that hums in your ears and makes your thoughts louder than they should be. But there’s something romantic about starting a journey before the world wakes up — like you’re stealing a…

DAY 15-17: SEX-CRAZED MONKEYS, HOT SPRING FACEPLANTS & THE DEATH OF POLITENESS (ft. Shanghai Layover Madness)

DAY 15-17: SEX-CRAZED MONKEYS, HOT SPRING FACEPLANTS & THE DEATH OF POLITENESS (ft. Shanghai Layover Madness)

admin Apr 5, 2025 5 min read

There’s something beautifully deranged about ending your Japanese pilgrimage face-down in monkey crap. But let’s rewind. Final leg of the trip: Yamanouchi, home of the snow monkeys. These are not the polite, Zen-inspired creatures you’ve seen in travel brochures. These…

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Right. Let’s address the elephant in the room.

I’ve been missing.

Not dead—despite what a few of you probably assumed after the radio silence—but buried. Properly buried. Up to my neck in notes, grease stains, half-drunk glasses of red, and the kind of late-night, slightly unhinged storytelling that only makes sense somewhere between midnight and regret.

Because, and here’s the bit that sounds suspiciously like a respectable excuse—I’ve been writing a book.

An actual, honest-to-God book. The kind with pages and chapters and the looming threat of someone, somewhere, judging your comma placement like it’s a moral failing. It’s due out this summer, assuming I don’t throw the manuscript into a fire and walk away dramatically at the eleventh hour.

Writing a book, it turns out, is a lot like running a kitchen during a Sunday lunch rush. Chaotic. Sweaty. Occasionally brilliant. Frequently held together by caffeine, stubbornness, and a low-level sense of impending collapse.

There were days I forgot what daylight looked like. Days where meals consisted entirely of “whatever’s within arm’s reach and not actively moving.” Days where I became convinced that this was either the best idea I’ve ever had… or a catastrophic misjudgment that would haunt me forever.

So yes. I disappeared.

Not because I lost interest. Not because I ran out of stories. But because I was knee-deep in creating something bigger, messier, and far more dangerous: a collection of stories that probably shouldn’t be told… but absolutely will be.

And now—mercifully, gloriously—I’m coming up for air.

Which means we’re back.

And not quietly, either.

Because this Friday, I’m off again.

This time to Dalyan.

Now, if your frame of reference for Turkey is the all-inclusive chaos of Marmaris—sunburnt Brits, neon cocktails, and the faint smell of regret baked into plastic sun loungers—then Dalyan is its cooler, slightly aloof cousin who reads books and doesn’t shout.

It’s quieter. Lower key. The kind of place that doesn’t need to scream for your attention because it knows exactly what it is.

We’re talking winding rivers lined with reeds. Ancient Lycian tombs carved into cliffs like someone casually decided to build a mausoleum mid-mountain. Turtle beaches. Mud baths that promise rejuvenation and deliver something closer to organised chaos with a side of sulphur.

And I’m going pre-season.

Spring.

Which means fewer crowds, cooler air, and that brief, magical window where everything is just starting to wake up—flowers pushing through, markets finding their rhythm, locals not yet exhausted by the annual invasion of flip-flops and bad decisions.

Ten days.

Ten days of eating things I can’t pronounce, drinking things I probably shouldn’t, and getting myself into situations that will, without question, become stories.

Some of them questionable. All of them honest.

So consider this your warning.

Or your invitation.

Or both.

I’ll be starting Friday. Ten days. No filters, no sanitised travel brochure nonsense—just the good stuff: food, people, chaos, and whatever else inevitably goes sideways.

Stay tuned. We’re back!

It’s about to get interesting again.
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Happy New Year, you beautiful degenerates.

May the coming year be soaked in good booze, bad decisions, questionable street food, late nights, earlier mornings than planned, and stories you’ll swear never happened—but absolutely did.

Eat the thing you’re told not to.
Order another round.
Talk to strangers.
Burn something slightly.
Laugh too loud.

Here’s to a year of flavour over fear, joy over judgement, and debauchery done with purpose.

See you at the bar. 🥂
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STOP EATING YOUR OWN: A NOTE FROM THE BACK OF THE KITCHEN

There’s a moment in every failing kitchen when the knives stop being used on food and start getting tested on each other.

You see it in the eyes first. The sideways glances. The whispered bitching. The sudden urge for everyone to be head chef despite barely being able to run the pass. The enemy isn’t the burnt steak anymore—it’s the guy standing next to you holding the tongs.

That’s where the British Right is right now.

And it’s ugly.

Somewhere along the way, the conversation stopped being about ideas, outcomes, or the people who actually live with the consequences of policy. Instead, it turned into a circular firing squad—accusations of dictatorship, purity tests, ego-driven walkouts, and shiny new “movements” that look suspiciously like the old ones, just with different letterheads and louder voices.

Let’s be clear: calling your own side “dictators” doesn’t make you principled. It makes you reckless. And lazy. It hands ammunition to people who didn’t earn it and don’t deserve it.

This isn’t how you win anything.

I’ve worked in enough kitchens, watched enough revolutions—culinary and otherwise—to know how this ends if no one grows the hell up. You fracture. You splinter. You lose. And the people you claim to hate most inherit the keys while you’re still arguing over whose name goes on the menu.

The emergence of breakaway parties, independents rebranding themselves as saviours while carrying the same manifesto in a slightly different font, isn’t brave. It’s not bold. It’s not even new. It’s vanity masquerading as conviction.

And yes—these splinter groups are gaining ground. That should terrify you, not excite you.

Because public opinion is not loyalty. It’s weather. It changes fast, violently, and without apology. One bad headline, one stupid soundbite, one poorly timed ego-trip, and the wind shifts. Always has. Always will.

Reform—or whatever name you want to hang on the main mast—has a strong hold right now. That’s not a moral victory. That’s a moment in time. And moments get squandered when too many people insist on being the loudest voice in the room instead of the last one standing.

Here’s the part no one likes to hear: Labour is not being beaten by brilliance on the Right. Labour is being saved by stupidity on it.

While you’re busy fighting over leadership, tone, and who gets to sit at the head of the table, the opposition doesn’t have to do a damn thing. They just wait. They watch. They let you bleed out on the kitchen floor.

This isn’t about personalities. It’s not about who’s more “authentic” or who shouts the hardest into a microphone. It’s about outcomes. Power. Direction. Whether you actually want to govern—or just be right on Twitter.

Egos need to be checked. Public spats need to stop. The performative outrage needs to be dialled down before it consumes the entire operation. You don’t win by humiliating your allies. You don’t build trust by lighting matches in a room full of gas.

Unity doesn’t mean obedience. It means recognising the real enemy and refusing to do their work for them.

So here’s the blunt truth from the back of the kitchen, where the food is ugly but honest:
If the Right keeps tearing itself apart, Labour doesn’t need to defeat you. You’ll do it yourselves—efficiently, publicly, and with the kind of self-righteous confidence usually reserved for people who never see the bill until it arrives.

Put the knives down.
Face the right direction.
And decide—once and for all—whether you’re here to win, or just to be heard while everything burns.

Nigel Farage
Nigel Farage: Supporters' Group
Rupert Lowe Rupert Lowe, saying, what you are thinking!
Ben Habib (Advance U.K.) for PM U.K. Ben Habib & Advance UK Party Supporters Group.
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Review: Tamasha’s Handcross (née The Royal Oak Inn)

There are restaurants that feed you. And then there are restaurants that slap you across the face, pour you a pint, and remind you why you left the house in the first place. Tamasha’s is the latter.

I should know—I used to own the place back when it was The Royal Oak Inn. A creaky, quintessential English pub where the beams were low and gravity did unspeakable things to a man’s pint if he forgot to duck. Now? It’s reborn as a Bangladeshi fever dream—richly decorated, humming with life, and yes, featuring a goddamn fish tank built into the floor. Forget your Instagrammable neon wings or “press for prosecco” buttons—these lunatics put a 20-year-old koi collection under your feet, plus a baby sturgeon named Spike who greets you like the maître d’ of Atlantis.

The food? Excellent. The kind of meal that makes you look at the sad jar of supermarket curry paste in your kitchen and wonder what the hell you’re doing with your life.

• The pappadom and pickle tray should come with a warning label: addictive.

• The onion bhaji? Best I’ve ever had, anywhere. Golden, crisp, whispering sweet nothings in your ear as you crunch your way to nirvana.

• The biryani—spiced with the kind of confidence most chefs only dream about—melts down to pure meat-butter on the tongue.

• And then there are the house specials, each one a bullet with your name on it.

But the crown jewel, the pièce de résistance, the thing that makes me want to pitch a tent under those cursed low beams and live there forever—the Tamasha naan. Fluffy, charred, stuffed with cheese and minced lamb, kissed by fire and the culinary gods. The kind of bread you cradle like a newborn and don’t share, not even with your mother. Pair it with a cold Kingfisher at the bar and some godawful daytime TV glowing up from the floor (yes, the floor), and you’ve achieved enlightenment.

My only gripe? They’ve ruined my favorite sport. The old Oak’s low beams used to claim pint after pint, forehead after forehead, providing endless entertainment as patrons knocked themselves senseless on their way to the loo. I lost count of the number of free beers I handed out, replacing dropped pints for dazed customers with fresh lumps on their skulls. Now the beams wear “Watch Your Head” signs. Where’s the fun in that?

Tamasha’s is not just a restaurant. It’s a resurrection. A place where Bangladeshi hospitality meets English pub bones, and the result is magic. If you don’t walk out grinning, full, and just a little bit in love with a sturgeon named Spike—you’re dead inside.
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