Thursday 26 May 2011

Raw fish

I am craving sushi 24/7 these days. I can't get enough of that raw fish. Cook the fish & pah I'm over it. But gimme it raw, and i'm an emotional, slathering mess. Yeah yeah, EVERYONE likes sushi these days because it's cool & healthy ra da ra da. Well, I like sushi because my Japanese friend, Mari, is, well, Japanese. Am I claiming to be the first non-Japanese-ian to start the sushi trend? Yeah, go on then, I am. Just like I claimed to start the re-trend in converse & parka jackets. No one has yet to prove me otherwise.
 
So why all these cravings at the moment? With bebe? No. Negatory.
It might have something to do with this guy: Ken Kawasumi.


Pretty dishy. And Ken too, he's not bad.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


 
 
 
He is the principal of Tokyo Sushi Academy. OMG STOP NOW! HOLY COW! HOLY MOTHER OF PEARL! HOLLA! ETC.! Yes, there is a sushi academy. Hang on, that deserves some caps lockage - A SUSHI ACADEMY.
Kenny K is the dude. He not only makes amazing sushi (tick), he is the champion of it & won awards n such (tick tick) BUT he also creates little chaps like these:

A man who combines fun and food? Ken I'm coming over. I need some sushi tutorials, one on one. We'll hit it off Kenny boy. Let's roll in that rice paddy. Ahem.



Aah gotta love pandas!

 
 
 
 
 



 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
My point, if I choose to make it, is thus - if you're going to Tokyo, check this place out. Tokyo Sushi Academy. They do courses, and they "speak English" too, according to the website. Impeccable. 
Or if you aren't planning your far flung trip just yet, lest not forget all the fun you could be having with raw fish. (Typed with total innocence. You dirty lot.)

Yum.



Friday 20 May 2011

Helen

Please throw some love over to my favourite, Helen & her blog britgirlbondi
 
She's way too cool. Even though she is from (*chokes on a peanut*) Essex, follow her - she's a very clever girl. 
 
I'm a sad camper that she no longer resides in London town.
Nevertheless, the Legend of Helen continues...

 

Sunday 8 May 2011

Next chapter

Hello I'm back. Where oh where have I been? Hmm now let's see. 
 
Athens. Has cool bars. They love crepes. Who knew? 

Madeira. Apparently, I still qualify for parent-child holiday. I crashed my folks' holiday. If you are over 60 & like flowers, this is the place.

And now, back in Blighty, I have been wallowing in self-poverty & dredging up the remains of my bohemia. In other words, I have been forced into CREATIVITY, confined to my tower by lack of dollar on Oyster card.

Writing, writing music, making sweet music, making sweet...no no none of that. 
Maaaan, I feel like Dylan on Lucozade, Cohen with vertigo, Hendrix in Madeira...

NO SERIOUSLY. In a vain attempt to stifle my strong urge to jack it all in & go straight down to the Next sale & purchase a polyester, slightly-too-short-at-the-ankle trouser suit, I have resorted to my roots. Gotten into my time machine & landed back where it all began, all this creative nonsense. Read on, read on...

I hope you are sitting comfortably. Uncomfortably is also ok.

Once upon a time, there was a naughty, tomboyish, puzzling sort of girl who spent all her free time running wild in the heart of suburbia. She liked to think of herself as the rebirth of Joan Baez, the remake of Joni Mitchell, the rekindled Carole King. Secretly, she knew she was none of these, but didn't care to mention it in case anyone noticed. 

With her much-loved guitar sidekick & her quick ear for a double-edged lyric she would make up tunes, as many as time would allow. Tunes about boys, tunes about her, tunes about nothing much. 
Her hair was long, a bit matted, her nails always bitten, her mind always off somewhere, anywhere. She had a sharp wit, a mean one often. But for all her outer bravado, mouth & opinion, inside she was shy & thought the whole thing was a bit foolish. 
Her guitar playing too clumsy, the idea of it all hugely narcissistic, she certainly didn't want to make a fool of herself. So she kept all these tunes, songs, lyrics to herself & never told a soul. 

Eventually they were forgotten. That's what happens when you don't pass things on.

It was only when she had grown up a bit, experienced a bit more & a bit more after that, did she realise that her little head was too full. Too full of tunes, songs, lyrics, boys, herself, nothing much. She should release it all back into the ether where it belongs. 

It had been a while. But she began the long task of writing it all down, using different, better words, playing her hackneyed clumsy guitar so this time it could not be forgotten.