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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!

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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.

Travel partnerships, hosted experiences and story-led brand collaborations reaching a valuable female 45+ audience. View Julie’s media kit and work together.

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.

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Alone, overdressed, and mildly unhinged… my first attempt at dining alone.

admin Apr 24, 2026 6 min read

It starts hours before the actual event. Not the dinner. The idea of the dinner. You’re in your hotel room, standing in front of a mirror, trying on versions of yourself like outfits. This one looks too try-hard. That one…

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You only live once. The clock doesn’t care

admin Apr 22, 2026 5 min read

It usually begins the same way. A message, sent late in the evening, when the house is quiet and the day has finally stopped asking anything of you. You can almost picture it without trying. Someone on the sofa, glass…

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Dalyan, Day 9: The hangover reckoning and why this place won’t let you leave

admin Apr 12, 2026 3 min read

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…

Day 8 in Dalyan: Interviews, fighter jets, karaoke crimes, and the köfte of redemption

Day 8 in Dalyan: Interviews, fighter jets, karaoke crimes, and the köfte of redemption

admin Apr 11, 2026 6 min read

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…

Day 7 in Dalyan: Turtle trauma, marshmallow piña coladas, and whatever was dying next door

Day 7 in Dalyan: Turtle trauma, marshmallow piña coladas, and whatever was dying next door

admin Apr 9, 2026 7 min read

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…

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France is deeply unfair.

You wander into a random roadside shop expecting disappointment and somehow leave with:
🥖 bread that could repair emotional damage
🧈 butter made by dairy sorcerers
🐟 canned sardines better than most restaurant meals
🍷 wine cheaper than bottled water back home
🫘 beans people speak about like national treasures

Meanwhile in Britain we’re still emotionally recovering from meal deals.

Also, the French absolutely judge you if you eat between 2 p.m. and 7 p.m.

Adapt or starve.

#France #FrenchFood #Foodie #TravelFrance #Vendee #FrenchCuisine #FoodTravel #JulieWentAnyway #GravyStainsAndTallTales #TravelReels #FoodReels #MoulesFrites #FrenchCulture #SlowTravel #HiddenFrance #EuropeanTravel #FoodBlogger #AnthonyBourdainVibes #EatLocal #Wanderlust #FrenchButter #Sardines #TravelWriter #VisitFrance #RoadTripFrance
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17 hours ago

I arrived in the Vendée thinking I was culturally adjacent.

France disagreed almost immediately.

Now technically, yes, I speak French. Or at least the durable Franco-Ontarian version forged somewhere between snowstorms, bilingual school systems and a lifetime of switching languages halfway through sentences without noticing. I arrived carrying the quiet confidence of a French Canadian abroad. Not arrogant exactly. Just smug enough to assume this would all go smoothly.

It did not.

The first clue came at a bakery.

I walked in confidently, ordered a baguette and immediately watched the woman behind the counter blink twice in alarm like she’d just discovered a moose attempting to order pastries.

That tiny pause. That subtle facial twitch.

The French equivalent of:
“Ah. One of those.”

This became the rhythm of the trip.

Every interaction felt like a tiny linguistic duel neither side fully acknowledged.

Franco-Ontarian French is a strange beast. A little leaner. A little more adaptive. The linguistic equivalent of surviving winter with duct tape and determination. You grow up switching between English and French so quickly your brain eventually stops respecting borders entirely.

Entire sentences become bilingual hostage situations.

You start in French. Panic halfway through. Throw in English nouns. Return triumphantly to French verbs. Somehow everyone still understands each other.

In France, particularly western France, people speak with terrifying precision. Entire syllables are handled delicately like antique porcelain.

Meanwhile I’m stomping around sounding like a bilingual lumberjack who learned diplomacy in a hockey arena.

At one café, I ordered something using a perfectly normal Canadian French expression and accidentally triggered what looked like a minor existential crisis in the waiter.

He stared at me.

I stared at him.

The waiter then slowly repeated the sentence back to me in proper French the way you might gently correct a confused toddler trying to identify farm animals.

“Ahhhhhhhh…”

Long pause.

“Vous voulez dire…”

And there it was again.

That look.

Not mocking exactly. More fascinated. Like I was some long-lost colonial cousin who’d wandered back from sea carrying unusual dialects and questionable gravy-based cuisine.

To be fair, the French do have legitimate concerns about poutine.

Mention poutine in France and reactions range from curiosity to open emotional distress. I attempted to explain it to one French man over wine.

“Cheese curds. Fries. Gravy.”

Silence.

“But… why?”

A reasonable question honestly.

Trying to defend poutine to the French is difficult because France already possesses one of the world’s great food cultures. You are essentially explaining nightclub chips to a civilisation built on butter and sauces requiring emotional commitment.

And yet I stand by poutine completely.

Particularly at 2 a.m.

Particularly after poor life choices.

Especially after poor life choices.

The Vendée itself only amplified this strange cultural dance. It’s not Paris. Nobody here is performing Frenchness for tourists. People actually live here. Fishermen stomp around harbours in rubber boots. Elderly women cycle through town carrying baguettes with military efficiency. Men argue passionately over tides, bean varieties and whether lunch has been sufficiently respected.

The food was magnificent in that deeply unfair French way.

Tiny roadside bakeries producing butter capable of repairing emotional trauma. Sardines packed lovingly into beautiful tins like jewellery. Mogettes swimming in cream and garlic beside thick slices of ham.

At one tiny harbour restaurant, I ordered seafood and wine entirely in French only to have the waitress answer me immediately in English.

Not because she was rude.

Because she pitied me.

“You can speak English if you want,” she said gently.

Which somehow felt worse.

The strange thing about travelling alone is that it removes witnesses.

Nobody is there to save you linguistically.

Nobody steps in to rescue the conversation while you desperately attempt to explain yourself using a mixture of hand gestures, confidence and whatever French your brain can still locate under pressure.

So you commit.

You sit in cafés longer.

You accidentally end up discussing regional bean preparation techniques with old men named Gérard.

You spend fifteen minutes trying to explain why Canadians refrigerate milk in bags while a French bartender looks physically unwell.

And because you’re alone, people approach you more. Or perhaps you simply become less guarded. More available to the weird little conversations travel is actually made of.

One afternoon I found myself trapped in a full discussion about dogs with an elderly French woman after she spotted the Old English Sheepdogs.

Now, I understood perhaps sixty percent of this conversation. Possibly less. But she was committed. Suddenly we were discussing grooming, weather, England, regional cheeses and at one point, I believe, Napoleon.

The dogs, meanwhile, accepted compliments with the quiet confidence of minor celebrities.

That’s another thing. The French adore dogs. Not in the strange performative Instagram way. In the practical European way where dogs simply exist beside people everywhere without needing emotional support certificates or birthday cakes.

The dogs entered cafés more easily than I did.

At times the whole experience felt oddly familiar and completely foreign simultaneously. Like visiting distant relatives who resemble you enough to be unsettling but pronounce your surname differently and silently judge your barbecue choices.

There’s affection there.

But also confusion.

And honestly, travelling alone sharpens all of it. Every misunderstanding becomes funnier. Every small success feels oddly triumphant. Ordering correctly feels like winning a minor diplomatic negotiation.

By the end of the trip, I realised the relationship between French Canadians and the French is basically identical to the relationship between British and American English.

Same roots.

Same language.

Completely different species after midnight and two bottles of wine.

And honestly? I loved it for exactly that reason.
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