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

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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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There’s always one day on a trip where the wheels come off.

Not dramatically. Not in a blaze of glory. Just… quietly. Like your dignity slipping out the back door while you’re face down in a pillow, bargaining with your own liver.

Yesterday was that day.

I’d love to tell you I was out soaking up culture, wandering ancient ruins, locking eyes with history like some kind of enlightened traveller. But no. I was horizontal. Deep into a hangover that felt less like a consequence and more like a personal attack. The kind where even your shadow feels too loud.

I cracked open the new Dan Brown novel thinking I’d read a chapter. Just something gentle. Something to remind myself I’m still a functioning adult with cognitive abilities.

Six hours later, I hadn’t moved. Not for food. Not for water. Not even out of shame.

Just me, a fictional conspiracy, and a head full of regret marinated in rakı.

I’m going teetotal for the next few months, I swear. Proper reset. Clean living. Herbal tea. The whole fraudulent performance.

We’ll see how long that lasts. 😛

Dalyan, though… Dalyan gets under your skin in a way that’s deeply inconvenient when you’re trying to leave.

It’s not flashy. It’s not trying to impress you. It just quietly delivers—again and again—until you realise you’ve accidentally fallen in love with the place.

Take Sofra Bar. On paper, it’s just a casual bar. In reality, it’s the kind of place where one drink becomes seven, where conversations stretch into the early hours, and where bad decisions feel like excellent ideas at the time. The staff don’t just serve you—they adopt you. Temporarily. Like a slightly chaotic, rakı-fuelled family.

Then there’s Cagri Restaurant Dalyan—home of the best calamari I’ve had in years. No nonsense. No overthinking. Just perfectly cooked, lightly crisp, tender in the middle. The kind of dish that makes you stop mid-conversation and reassess your life choices. Why don’t I eat this more often? Why do I live somewhere cold? Why am I like this?

WHY NOT RESTUARANT lives up to its name in the most dangerous way possible. Because once you’ve had their Adana kebab—smoky, spiced, unapologetically bold—you start applying that same logic to everything else.

Another drink? Why not.
Dessert? Why not.
Life decisions? Let’s not get carried away.

And then there are the pancake ladies at the Dalyan Saturday Market. No branding. No marketing strategy. Just decades of experience, a flat griddle, and the kind of quiet confidence that comes from knowing you’re about to ruin every other gözleme you’ll ever eat.

You sit. You wait. You watch. Dough stretched by hand, filled, folded, cooked. No shortcuts. No nonsense. Just food that tastes like it belongs exactly where it is.

And that’s Dalyan.

A place where you plan to “take it easy” and end up with stories you’ll never fully explain. Where the food is honest, the people are warmer than the weather, and your best intentions—hydration, moderation, early nights—don’t stand a chance.

Now I’m heading back to United Kingdom—Blighty, as we affectionately call it—to do something wildly ambitious: behave myself.

Finish the book. Get it published. Be a professional adult human being.

At least until the next trip.

Because let’s be honest—places like Dalyan don’t let you go. They just wait patiently for your return… and quietly prepare the rakı.
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Day 8:

First things first—I’ve officially broken my own rule and I apologise.

All week I’ve been smugly tapping away at these posts like some sort of disciplined, well-adjusted human being with structure and routine. And then, like all good habits, it went straight out the window the moment raki got involved.

So yes—this is late. And yes—I’m blaming Sofra Bar.

And also raki.

Mostly raki.

The day started with something resembling responsibility, which already felt suspicious. Interview day. The kind of thing that, in a normal life, you prepare for properly…notes, focus, hydration, maybe even a vegetable at some point… which I did, kindof.

Instead, I went in carrying the faint echo of the previous night’s decisions and what I can only describe as misplaced confidence. And yet, somehow, it worked. I don’t know how. It felt… good… great in fact! Natural. Like I wasn’t trying to be anything other than exactly what I am—slightly chaotic, very human, and oddly convincing when I’m not overthinking it and of course passionate. I highly recommend doing job interviews on holiday.

So now we wait. Fingers crossed. Toes crossed. Possibly a few internal organs crossed just to be safe.

We headed into town mid-afternoon, the sun doing that lazy, golden thing that makes everything feel slightly cinematic. And then the loudspeakers kicked in.

Not gently. Not subtly.

Proper crackling, echoing, slightly ominous public announcement energy—the kind that immediately makes your brain jump to worst-case scenarios, especially when you don’t understand a word of what’s being said.

A deep, authoritative Turkish voice boomed across the streets like we’d just entered the opening sequence of some dystopian video game. My brain, already operating on fumes and paranoia, immediately went:

Right. This is it. Fallout 5: Dalyan Edition. Find bunker. Secure snacks. Make peace with loved ones.

Turns out it was a perfectly reasonable announcement about military F16s doing training exercises nearby and not to be alarmed.

Ah. Good. Casual. Love that for us.

Nothing says “relaxing seaside holiday” like the faint possibility of being buzzed by fighter jets while clutching a lukewarm water bottle and questioning your hydration choices.

Lunch took us to Çağrı, which is essentially two restaurants stitched together in the most brilliantly casual way. You can sit wherever you like and order from either menu, which feels slightly rebellious, like you’re getting away with something even though it’s entirely allowed.

Andy went for a meaty pide—one of those dishes that arrives looking deceptively simple and then quietly blows everything else out of the water. Perfectly spiced, rich without being heavy, the kind of food that doesn’t need to show off because it already knows it’s good.

I had the calamari. This was the best so far. Tender. Delicate. Not a hint of rubber. It practically whispered apologies for every bad calamari I’ve ever been served.

Although—and I will die on this hill—it would have been transcendent with the garlic sauce from WHY NOT RESTUARANT.

I am now emotionally invested in pairing foods across restaurants like some kind of unhinged culinary matchmaker.

Back to the hotel, and into what has become my favourite part of the day: the siesta.

There is something deeply civilised about accepting that the middle of the afternoon is not for productivity but for surrender. Curtains drawn, air still, the faint hum of outside life continuing without you while you disappear for an hour or two. It feels indulgent in the best possible way.

I am absolutely not ready to give this up when I go home.

We headed back out later with a very clear plan: a couple of drinks, maybe some food, an early-ish night.

Which is, of course, exactly how every questionable evening begins.

On the way, we were stopped by a local woman who recognised us from the blog. She thanked us for the things we’d written about Dalyan—about her town, her home. And there was nothing performative about it. No expectation. Just genuine warmth.

It caught me off guard.

There’s a difference between writing for people who pass through a place and being seen by the people who actually belong to it. It felt… grounding, I suppose. A quiet reminder that this isn’t just a backdrop for our little adventure—it’s someone else’s everyday life.

It meant a lot.

Then we went to Sofra.

And whatever intention we had of behaving like reasonable adults dissolved somewhere between the first drink and the decision to stay for “just one more” and “Let’s see how the game turns out.”

We left at 2am.

Somewhere in that six-hour blur, we collected a handful of our gentle readers and made several decisions that should probably never be reviewed in daylight.

At some point, a microphone appeared, which is never a good sign.

Karaoke happened.

Not gently. Not quietly.

At some point, in a moment of what I can only describe as misplaced confidence, I decided to serenade our lovely hotel barman—who had innocently joined us after his shift—with You’re So Vain.

Now. Let’s be clear. He is not vain.

He is, however, now permanently traumatised.

That poor man stood there, smiling politely, while I belted out lyrics like I was auditioning for a role no one asked for.

To the neighbours: I am so, so sorry.

To the barman: I will never speak of this again if you don’t. 😉

Sometime around 2am, we finally left, fuelled by equal parts alcohol and bad decisions. And then came the hunger.

Not the polite kind you can ignore. The kind that demands immediate action.

There was a place still open, advertising stuffed mussels, which under normal circumstances would have been irresistible. But with a stomach already swimming in raki, it felt like a gamble I wasn’t willing to take. I’m reckless, not suicidal.

So I went for a köfte sandwich instead.

And it was exactly what I needed. Warm, spiced, messy in all the right ways, with a sauce that somehow managed to cut through everything and bring me back to life. It didn’t just taste good—it felt necessary.

How we got back to the hotel is… unclear.

There are fragments. A vague memory of being guided. Possibly by our long-suffering barman. Possibly by instinct.

It’s something I’ll need to investigate once I regain the ability to sit upright without regretting it.

For now, I’m horizontal, slightly broken, and very aware that despite everything—every questionable decision, every unnecessary drink—I wouldn’t change a single second of it.
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Day 7.

You ever get woken up by a sound so aggressive, so wildly committed to being heard, that your brain just… gives up trying to label it?

That was us.

Next door. Something between a donkey in emotional crisis and a human being having the kind of morning that requires electrolytes and a long sit-down afterwards. No build-up. No mercy. Just—full volume, straight through the wall like we were part of it.

I lay there, eyes open, staring at the ceiling like: this is how people end up in documentaries. 🤣

Cold, too. Not “oh it’s a bit brisk.” No. That damp, creeping cold that gets into your bones and makes you question your life choices. Naturally, we decided to go to the beach. Because logic had clearly left the building sometime around the donkey incident.

We took the bus to Iztuzu. A vehicle that rattled like it owed someone money. Windows slightly fogged, seats with that weird shiny fabric that sticks to your skin like regret.

And of course—we got on the wrong bus.

Because why wouldn’t we.

There was a lady with a baby—very convincing, very confident—who assured us, with the authority of someone who has absolutely no reason to lie, that yes, this was the bus to the beach.

It even had a turtle sticker on it.

A turtle sticker.

At that point, what are you supposed to do? Launch an investigation? Interview witnesses? No. You see a turtle, you commit.

So we climb on, sit down, settle in like two people who have absolutely no business travelling unsupervised.

The bus hasn’t even left yet and the driver shows up. Looks at us. Looks at our money. Looks back at us again like we’ve just tried to pay for a haircut in Monopoly cash.

We hand over the fare, confident. Ready. Prepared to be legitimate participants in Turkish public transport.

He just waves us off.

Not aggressively. Not rudely. Just this calm, almost philosophical dismissal—like, no… this isn’t your journey.

Tells us to get on the next bus.

That’s it.

No explanation. No apology. Just a quiet rejection of our entire plan.

So now we’re standing there, holding our money like idiots, while the lady with the baby—who I still believe knew exactly what she was doing—sits there, completely unbothered, probably thinking, another successful operation.

At this point it stops being frustrating and starts being impressive.

Because there’s a particular kind of travel humiliation that sneaks up on you slowly. You’re not lost yet—but you’re clearly not where you’re supposed to be either.

We shuffle off. Pride slightly dented. Faith in turtle-based navigation systems severely shaken.

And get on the next bus like people who have learned absolutely nothing. But we eventually get there.

We arrive and head to DEKAMER. The turtle hospital.

Now, here’s the thing. You walk in expecting something quaint. Maybe a few sleepy turtles, a nice sign, a bit of conservation guilt.

No.

This is a trauma ward.

Real damage. Shells cracked open like dropped plates. Deep gouges from propellers—clean, surgical, horrifying. One turtle just hovering weirdly in the water, like it’s forgotten the basic mechanics of being a turtle.

And yet… calm. No panic. No drama. Just these people—quietly, methodically putting broken things back together.

It’s the kind of place that makes you feel small in a very specific way. Like… oh right. This is what actual good looks like. Not your emails. Not your meetings. This.

I lasted about 30 minutes before my brain went: this is too much reality, we need carbs. But not before Andy and I emptied our pockets and wallets and begged everyone to save these poor creatures!

The cafeteria saved us. Gozleme. Meat and cheese. Fresh off the griddle, slightly blistered, folded over like it’s hiding something good.

You bite in—steam hits your face, cheese stretches, meat salty and perfect—and suddenly you’re not thinking about fractured shells or the general incompetence of humanity. You’re just… eating. Alive. Grateful in a very basic, animal way.

Which is probably the most honest feeling there is.

Afternoon?

Chaos, but with marshmallows.

Piña coladas. Several. Cold enough to make your teeth hurt, sweet enough to convince you you’re doing fine in life. Coconut, rum, denial. And Sofra Bar roasted the marshmallow! Yay!

I had my notebook out. Properly. Like a serious person.

“Interview prep.”

There were bullet points. Big words. Strategy. Leadership. Vision.

At some point I wrote down “be authentic” and immediately took a sip of a drink that tasted like melted ice cream and poor decisions.

I don’t know what I was researching by the end. I remember opening my phone to look up something impressive and ending up deep in a hole about why octopuses hate each other.

That feels like it might come up in the interview. You never know.

Dinner.

Luz Food And Cocktails

Walk in and it’s like someone designed a restaurant based on a very specific philosophy: what if we just… didn’t rush anything. Ever.

Garden vibes. Low lights. People moving at half speed. Not lazy—no, that’s the wrong word. Intentional slowness. Like time is a suggestion, not a rule.

It had that Cheech and Chong energy—but not in a gimmicky way. More like… everyone here has already figured out that stress is optional and has opted out.

You feel it immediately. Your shoulders drop. Your breathing changes. You stop checking your phone. You stop caring.

Dangerous, honestly.

Menu hits you like a good idea you can’t afford.

Everything sounds right. Everything sounds excessive. You want it all, and you know you’ll regret nothing.

Chips and salsa first. Fresh. Bright. Tomatoes that actually taste like tomatoes. Lime cutting through everything. A little heat that sneaks up on you instead of announcing itself like an idiot.

Then a Caesar salad, because apparently I like to pretend I have boundaries.

It was aggressive. In a good way. Dressing unapologetic. Anchovy doing its job properly. No restraint. I respect that.

Then the Cusco chicken.

And this is where things got serious.

Lime. Cumin. Paprika. Beer. It hits every part of your mouth at once—sharp, smoky, slightly bitter, deeply savoury. Skin crisp, meat juicy, the kind of dish that makes you pause mid-bite and just stare at it like it owes you an explanation.

This isn’t food trying to impress you. It’s food that already knows it’s better than you.

Then the oxtail tacos.

With roasted apple.

Which sounds like someone lost a bet.

But no. It works. Of course it works. Rich, sticky meat collapsing under its own weight, and then this soft, sweet apple cutting through it like a knife through bad decisions.

I stopped talking at some point.

Just sat there. Eating. Drinking. Slightly drunk, slightly overwhelmed, fully aware that this—this exact moment—is about as good as it gets without winning the lottery or committing a crime.

No rush. No pressure. Just flavour, alcohol, and the quiet understanding that nothing outside this table matters right now.

We left eventually. Had to.

And as we walked back—

There it was again.

That sound.

Louder this time.

More… committed.

I didn’t ask questions. Some things in life are better left unexplored.

Like how many piña coladas with marshmallows is “too many.”

Or what, exactly, is happening next door.
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DAY 6: The hangover that should have ended my career (but somehow didn’t)

There is a particular flavour of regret reserved for the morning after a night involving far too much Rakı. It’s not just a headache—it’s a full-body, existential audit. Your mouth tastes like you’ve been licking aniseed-scented regret off a nightclub floor, your brain feels like it’s been gently sautéed, and your memory… well, your memory becomes less a reliable narrator and more a crime scene with missing evidence.

Somewhere in that fog—somewhere between the fifth drink and what I can only assume was a deeply confident but entirely undeserved sense of charm—I answered a phone call. Not just any phone call. A job interview call.

Now, I don’t remember the details. I remember the ringing. I remember thinking, you are in absolutely no state to speak to another human being, let alone one assessing your professional worth. And then, like a complete idiot with Wi-Fi access and misplaced confidence, I answered it anyway.

What followed, I can only describe as a masterclass in accidental performance. Because this morning—when I woke up feeling like I’d been embalmed rather than rested—I discovered a calendar invite sitting politely in my inbox. Which means that either I managed to string together coherent, intelligent sentences while chemically compromised… or they’re running a very different kind of recruitment process than I’m used to.

Either way, I’m through to the next round. God help them.

We slept in, which is putting it mildly. This wasn’t a gentle drift into late morning—this was a full-scale collapse. The kind where your body simply refuses to participate in the day until it’s negotiated a peace treaty with your poor life choices. By the time we surfaced, Dalyan had already been up for hours. Bread had been baked, coffee had been poured, cats had completed their morning patrols, and we were still horizontal, blinking at the ceiling like two people who had absolutely lost control of their narrative.

The day unfolded slowly, as all proper hangover days should. We took refuge by the pool with books we only half absorbed, drifting in and out of sleep in that hazy, slightly surreal state where you’re never entirely sure if you’re awake or just having a very boring dream. Every now and then one of us would sigh heavily, shift position, and re-evaluate life decisions without actually learning from them.

Eventually, hunger forced us into motion.

Now, I have always maintained a firm, almost moral stance on one thing: I did not travel thousands of miles to eat a full English breakfast in Turkey. It’s culinary cowardice. It’s what happens when people are too afraid to engage with the world beyond baked beans and familiarity. I have judged those restaurants. I have judged the people in them. I have, if I’m honest, judged quite harshly.

And yet, there we were. Hungover. Tired. Unwilling to walk more than a few metres without filing a formal complaint.

We stopped at the first place we saw: WHY NOT RESTUARANT.

The name alone should have been a warning. It’s not exactly a bold culinary statement—it’s more of a shrug. A kind of edible indifference. And out front, like a betrayal in laminated form, the words Full English Breakfast stared back at me.

Under normal circumstances, I would have walked straight past. Possibly muttering something self-righteous under my breath. But hunger, especially the kind brought on by poor alcohol management, has a way of dismantling your principles piece by piece.

So we sat down.

And then—because the universe enjoys humbling people—we were served one of the better meals we’ve had here.

The calamari arrived first, golden and crisp, not a trace of that rubbery disappointment that so often accompanies it. But it was the garlic sauce that stole the show. This wasn’t a gentle, polite hint of garlic. This was aggressive. Weaponised. The kind of sauce that announces your presence in a room before you even enter it. I’m fairly certain I’ve eliminated the possibility of romance with a sexy vampire within a two-mile radius, but it was worth it.

Andy ordered the Adana kebabı, and watching him eat it was like witnessing a man reassess his entire belief system. Bite after bite, a slow nod of approval forming, until eventually he declared it the best he’d had so far in Dalyan. This is not a statement he makes lightly. This is a man who has approached kebabs on this trip with the seriousness of a critic and the appetite of a small army.

Half the price of the more “refined” places. Twice the satisfaction.

And just like that, my smug little rule about avoiding full-English-breakfast establishments quietly died at the table. Maybe…

The rest of the afternoon drifted by in that gentle, slightly surreal haze that only a hangover can produce. It was during this time—somewhere between sips of water and silent reflection—that I noticed something deeply peculiar about Dalyan’s restaurant culture.

They are either cat restaurants… or dog restaurants.

There is no overlap. No coexistence. No neutral territory.

Cats stretch out across chairs and tabletops like they own the establishment—which, in fairness, they probably do. Dogs, on the other hand, sit patiently beside their humans, occasionally glancing around as if quietly judging the entire operation. It feels less like a coincidence and more like a deeply entrenched, unspoken divide. A kind of furry Cold War playing out across dining spaces.

By evening, we had regained enough composure to venture out properly, and dinner took us to Limon Garden Restaurant The LEMON BBQ Garden Restaurant—a place that leans unapologetically into atmosphere. Soft lighting, a garden setting, the kind of environment that encourages you to sit up straighter and pretend you’ve had a far more productive day than you actually have.

I ordered the Beyti kebabı—lamb, grilled and wrapped in lavash, then drenched in tomato sauce and yogurt. It’s the kind of dish that feels indulgent without being showy. Rich, comforting, deeply satisfying.

Andy, meanwhile, went for the Çökertme kebabı, which arrived looking like something between a masterpiece and an act of excess. Marinated strips of meat layered over crisp matchstick potatoes, all tied together with garlic yogurt and tomato sauce. It was, quite frankly, ridiculous. In the best possible way.

We ate slowly, quietly, the kind of content silence that comes from knowing you’ve made a very good decision.

And for the first time since arriving in Dalyan, there was no Rakı in sight.

Instead, I sat there with an iced tea and sprite, sipping it like someone who has seen things—terrible, boozy things—and has decided, at least for one evening, to make better choices.

An early night followed. No drama. No debauchery. Just the quiet, fragile dignity of two people attempting to recover from themselves.

Because tomorrow, apparently, I have to be employable.
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