September 8th, 2009 - Easy - 1 Comment
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Imbiss Food

There is a certain magnetism of the city of Berlin. People may arrive for a short visit, spending a few days straddling the saddle of a beaten-up bike, only to leave months or even years later. It seems that the diversity, complexity and unpredictable nature of the city is not only hard to leave, but hard to describe. In the true Berliner spirit of creativity and expressionism, the mammoth project 24h Berlin does a pretty fascinating job at documenting and presenting a day in the life of this weird and wonderful city.

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September 1st, 2009 - Easy - 2 Comments
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Sorry vegos, but no self-respecting Berlin blogger could possibly omit the subject matter of the glorious German sausage.  With more Wurst varieties than you could snap a tong at, Easy thought they should introduce you to some of their favourites.

A traditionalist and understated member of the wurst family, the Thuringer Bratwurst is a slender and seasoned staple of the Deutsche diet.  A combination of finely chopped pork, beef or veal, you can find the Thuringer Bratwurst awkwardly wedged within a too-small brötchen, messily dressed with lashings of spicy senf.

Without a doubt, the most infamous of the Berlin sossies is the Currywurst.  Completely submerged in a paper plate full of special curry sauce (tomato ketchup), you can barely taste the meat for the Keen’s Curry powder liberally coating this dish.  Delicious, ubiquitous and the perfect late night companion after a Berlin bender (don’t forget the pommes).

The Weißwurst is a small breakfast chap, hailing from the southern region of Bavaria.  A combination of finely minced veal and pork, it is flavoured with assorted delicious herbs and spices before being stuffed into a pork casing.  The traditional method of eating the Weißwurst is to cut both ends off and suck the meat out of the skin.  These days, the more common (and discreet) approach is to cut the sausage lengthways, and roll out the meat from the skin.  I guess what we are getting at is that you don’t eat the skin.  Note to reader: Bavarians warn that the Weißwurst should not hear the midday church bells chime.  This is an A.M sausage only.

Another example of morning meat over here is the Blutwurst. Made of blood.  Likened to the Black Pudding more prevalent on Anglo-Saxon breakfast benches, the Blutwurst is usually made from cow or pig blood, and is cooked down until congealed.  Other goodies thrown in for good measure are fat, suet, herbs, spices and the odd ground-up trotter or snout. If you can get past the sanguine nature of this guy you will be pleasantly surprised at its deliciousness.

PS:  Whilst researching this entry, we stumbled across a description of “Blood Tongue.”  We could not resist copying and pasting it into this as it contains some of the most disgusting arrangements of words we have ever read.  ‘Head cheese’, for example.

“Blood Tongue or Zungenwurst is a variety of German head cheese with blood. It is a large head cheese that is made with pig’s blood, suet, bread crumbs and oatmeal with chunks of pickled ox’s tongue added. Has a slight resemblance to blood sausage.” Wow.

August 26th, 2009 - Easy - 4 Comments
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Craving a  little sartorial eye-candy but enjoying the comfort of your own home, haven’t done the washing (or procrastinating on the bosses dime)? Here are a couple of Berlin based blogs to get your fashion on and while away the time.  Obviously not an exhaustive list, they are still an insight into the wonderful world of Berlin street fashion. We recommend popping them in your ‘Other Stuff’ bookmark folder, right next to your astrological compatibility calculator, and getting comfy with a cuppa. Best part is, teeth-brushing, hair-doing and general bathing is optional. Gotta love the Internet.

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August 19th, 2009 - Easy - 0 Comments
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Whilst the rest of Berlin are eating ice-creams and hanging in parks, soaking in the final weeks of summer for the year, we here at Easy HQ have been inundated with friends and family and therefore repetitive and robotic trips to Check Point Charlie, The East Side Gallery and one of the “you know, BIG clubs,” etc.  Why are we telling you this? Well, because we ran out of time to attend something that would appeal to the MOOKS team, so here we are, writing about one of our favourite low-key past times – sitting on a bridge.

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August 11th, 2009 - Easy - 0 Comments
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Amidst the bustle of map-clutching tourists, superbly styled young things and fragrant hippies, it’s hard to imagine the area now occupied by Berlin’s biggest and busiest flea market was a complete no-man’s land up until about twenty years ago . The area was once part of the heavily guarded ‘death strip’ along the infamous Berlin wall; a vast and eerily silent stretch of land in the former East German district of Prenzlauer Berg. After the fall of the wall in 1989, the public reclaimed the land and now, every Sunday, Mauerpark plays host to what on a sunny day can feel like half of Berlin – the ubiquitous bargain hunters, artists, performers, tourists (and the dodgiest bike salesmen in town).

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August 5th, 2009 - Easy - 0 Comments
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So you’ve probably gorged yourself on an ungodly amount of döner kebaps, flooded your system with outrageously affordable Weissbier, and danced like a space drone to some questionable minimal techno at an über-club. Next step for you, aspirational Berliner, is to find yourself a sexy ride to complete the transformation. Allow us to introduce you to Damen-Salon. Sitting pretty in the made-up suburb of ‘Kreuzkölln’ (pretty much Neukölln, but trendy like Kreuzberg), is the quaint and buzzing workshop of Manuel and his fellow bike lovers, Brian and Jens. The one-time ladies beauty salon is now the think-tank for some of Berlin’s – if not Europe’s – finest two-wheeled steeds.

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Easy

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