I would usually spend 24-48 hours in any
given city on my work travels; enough time for one or two meals, half a dozen
coffees, and a partial night’s sleep. Passing monuments such as the Coliseum on
my taxi ride to the airport without being able to so much as slow down for a
picture was a painful experience to which I had become quite accustomed. My
work trip to Glasgow – the last before I left American Apparel – inspired in me,
however, precisely the opposite feeling.
I
won’t deny the rumour that the city’s lack of culinary variety, and my extended
stay in it, contributed to my resignation from American Apparel (in fact, I just started that
rumour myself with this very sentence). To be fair to me, I gave it a good
running chance. For the first week, I stopped into a different beautiful old
building every night on my way back to the hotel, each one offering a different
foreign fare: Italian, Spanish, Thai, Indian. I thought, like in most
metropolitan areas I was familiar with, that these restaurants had been
independently established by someone originating from these respective places,
here to offer Glasgow a taste of their home cuisine. Looks can be very
deceiving, I discovered. Each one of these restaurants was actually part of a
bigger chain, with commercially printed menus, and food that had likely arrived
in their kitchens pre-prepared (or so it tasted). Between these and the TGI
Friday’s, Hard Rock Café, Pret à Manger, and Starbucks, it seemed as though
there were no local, freshly prepared options in Glasgow’s downtown area. I
even stopped in at a place that had “Haggis, Neeps & Tatties” on special –
whatever that means – thinking perhaps the Glaswegians save all of their effort
in the kitchen for local delicacies. Well, let me tell you, they most certainly
do not. I have no words to describe that meal, but I do have a photo of it and
I think its physical appearance is accurately representative of its flavour.
| The Atholl Arms' offer of the night |
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| My coworker about to dive in to her "Haggis, Neeps & Tatties" |
The next week, having lost all hope, I
ate exclusively at the hotel (the Citizen M) – whose inviting lounge and
friendly staff almost made up for the fact that I spent a month alone in a room
clearly designed for a teenage couple’s weekend sexcapades. The first night
offered chicken curry: not the kind you would find at an Indian restaurant,
rather the kind you might cook for yourself at home, but an altogether fairly
tasty dish. The next night the only available hot meal was once again chicken
curry. The following four nights promised more chicken curry. On the seventh
consecutive night of chicken curry I finally understood that the Citizen M was
either initiating a New Age chicken-curry Atkins-diet-inspired cleanse, or had,
as the room led me to believe, never intended its guests to stay more than a
single night [of foodless sex] at a time.
Just as my palette was preparing a counter-strike
to this onslaught, I discovered in the same day the two near-daily stops that
would allow me to survive the next few weeks in Glasgow. The first of these was
Riverhill Coffee Bar on Gordon Street. From the day I discovered it, to
the day I left Glasgow – barring the not too infrequent days I didn’t have time
to eat lunch at all – I had my midday meal in this blue-fronted café. Twelve
consecutive occasions, and not one bite was a disappointment. A different
extensive variety of homemade baked goods, soups, salads, tarts, sandwiches,
and wraps was offered every day alongside what is most certainly the best
coffee in the city. I waited until my complimentary full English breakfast from
that morning had completely worn off, around 4pm, and by this time could
usually secure one of the five available seats in the café. My personal
favourite choices were the egg and chorizo on bagel, spinach salad, and medium
latte with a Nanaimo bar for desert.
After work at the store I would return
to Gordon Street for my dinner break at the Republic Bier Halle, famous
for its large selection of local microbrewery beers, often served cold, not a
single one of which I tried because the taste of liquid yeast is not one that I
find all too appealing, I’m sorry to say. What brought me back every night was
the fire-oven baked thin crust pizza served with chilli oil; and the fact that if I arrived
before 10pm I had a second pizza free of charge to last me through my night of
computer work (let’s not forget I’m a gormandiser with a proclivity to
penny-pinch).
Nevertheless, I was very thankful to
leave Glasgow when I finally did. Even I couldn’t have continued to eat pizzas and Nanaimo bars every day. If you do find yourself in the unfortunate
circumstance of being both hungry and in Glasgow, I highly recommend you make a
beeline for Gordon Street, just off Buchanan.




Interesting. Man, that Hagis @ nearly seven pounds is pricey! I guess that was par for the course.
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