View allAll Photos Tagged beigel

I'll get back to Thatcher someday probably on my Sven's extras Flickr site.

 

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Not such a well kept secret. Queuing for a Salt Beef and Pickle Beigel.

Stopped here for lunch and shot this whilst eating my Cream Cheese & Smoked Salmon beigel over the road.

 

Shot on iPhone 7 after my camera battery ran out.

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Explore #336 Cheers!

Inside the back of London's very popular 24-hour Beigel Bakery (what us silly Ashkenazi Jews call a "Bagel")

London, England.

Olympus OM-D E-M10.

 

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Which..... is spelled Beigel there. Go figure!

 

This 2nd Generation Bagel Shop is where

we went to try a Lox (smoked salmon to the Brits) + Cream Cheese Bagel, before our Battersea Power Station Architecture Tour began.

 

Some quick comments: (since you asked...)

.

A) They are/were not able to offer a sliced tomato & Red Onion- or capers to what most consider-"Standard" elements of said Jewish delight on a sliced Bagel (Beigel).?

B) off- camera, to the right, stood

a rather large troll (man)in a Fluorescent Vest, whose

assigned task was to "keep the line orderly".

A-bit-Daft, (IMHO) and as you can see, when there's

literally only 3 people in your 24-hour-shop do ya really need to be bossed about one's line-up performance at 09;00 on a weekday?

C) The "ladies" behind the counter - were as snarly and surly,

and just rude as any 24-Chicago Hot-Dog Place ( think, The Weiner Circle in Chicago) I've been, but wasn't quite prepared/forewarned to do verbal abuse at 0:900 hours on a Monday. (But I could!!)

 

D) The Lox + Bagel was fine.

Coulda been better with a Slice of Red Onion and a Tomato, though. And- she did cut in in 1/2-per my request!.

OY-Vey!

Brick Lane

 

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I captured this candid shot on one of my visits to the Columbia Road Flower Market. The whole area around Shoreditch is a fascinating place to wander around the different markets, the hipster shops, the graffiti alleyways and to grab a salt beef beigel or enjoy a curry in Brick Lane.

 

© 2016 Alex Stoen, All rights reserved.

 

No Group Invites/Graphics Please.

 

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Possibly the last Jewish bakery in the East End, Rinkoffs was founded in 1911 by Hyman Rinkoff, whose picture is on the wall. The business is still run by the Rinkoff family.

 

www.bakeryinfo.co.uk/news/archivestory.php/aid/8572/Russi...

Thread art by Perspicere looking down on Brick Lane beigel eater, with a broken finger? or maybe about to hang out some washing.

Where, The Bagels are made. (BEIGELS as well!)

 

24-hour bakery known for traditional Jewish-style filled bagels such as "salt-beef" (we call Corned-Beef /or Pastrami) and smoke Salmon (we call Lox)

 

Beigel Bake

159 Brick Lane

London England

 

www.beigelbake.co.cuk

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Walking past Beigel Bake something really drew me to this girl glancing out of the window.

 

I wasn't sure what to do processing-wise but ended up using Nik Analog Efex Pro

Cook's been with me for so long, I really can't remember. Her first range was an old cast iron number; wood fired — no knobs or dials, seat-of-the-pants cooking, proper skills! Then it was gas; big, semi-professional — oven the size of a suckling pig or whole lamb if she desired, cast iron trivets you'd be proud to lift in the weight room. Now, the Estate's kitchen has gone all electric at the great expense of bringing in the power underground and replacing Cook's beloved cookware — hardly any of it, including her treasured copper ware and stove-top coffee pots, her 'coffee engines', work on the newfangled induction cooktop.

 

Today, she has the day off. Why not? Now she's shouldered the housekeeper's duties, following the "incident", she's more than earned a day off. Besides, with her out of the kitchen, I've made bagels.

 

I used that spelling because that seems to be "on trend". My recipe is for beigels, same thing, archaic spelling. It is said to be etymologically derived from German — meaning ring, or bracelet. Mine are traditional beigels, not pumped up mega-bagels — polite, 2 ounce beigels. They're an easy morning's work for me; probably half that for Cook.

 

When she gets back, how much trouble will I be in for violating her kitchen? I'm hoping a fresh bagel, some creamcheese and lox will win her over. Besides, I haven't left a very big mess.

Damn. Processing my photographs from the last two weeks and now I feel like a decent beigel. I'll have to pick up another dozen for the freezer soon.

Sony A7s Leica Summicron 35/2 v3

A simple picture but I like these little encounters. Wandering off the main road into a housing estate I've never seen before was a beigel shop that's been there for a 100 years. A modest place, now run by Abdullah from Algeria who was happy to chat and have his picture taken.

www.joaoalmeidafotografia.com

modelo: Ni Leão

Maquilhagem e cabelo: Marta José

East End boys and West End girls...

 

Takeaway salt beef bagels on Brick Lane.

Beigel Bake, unbeknownst to me

prior to a Google-Maps, review-search, is a fairly-famous

place in London's culture.

First- it's open 24 hours.

Second, some find that, great for a late night-after-The-Clubs-Close snack.

Finally- for me- who wanted a London BAGEL (with a schmear + Salmon (we call it "Lox") for breakfast, a unique Culinary adventure experience. My personal Food Tour if you will.

 

Hexar af - Trix

scene outside of bagel shop on Brick Lane

Southend, Essex.

Taken with my Fujifilm X-T30 II camera and a XF18-55mm lens.

Parkland student: My generation won't stand for this

Alfonso Calderon Speech

www.youtube.com/watch?v=kf1KJvFsKEY

How the Survivors of Parkland Began the Never Again Movement

By Emily WittFebruary 19, 2018

 

David Hogg is one of the students of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High, in Parkland, Florida, who started the Never Again movement, to advocate for gun control, after a mass shooting at their school.

By Sunday, only four days after the school shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, in Parkland, Florida, the activist movement that emerged in its aftermath had a name (Never Again), a policy goal (stricter background checks for gun buyers), and a plan for a nationwide protest (a March for Our Lives, scheduled for March 24th). It also had a panel of luminary teens who were reminding America that the shooting was not a freak accident or a natural disaster but the result of actual human decisions.

The funerals continued in Parkland and surrounding cities—for the students Jaime Guttenberg and Joaquin Oliver and Alex Schachter and the geography teacher Scott Beigel—with attendance sometimes surpassing a thousand people. On a local level, at least, the activism did not overshadow the grieving. The tragedy affected this student body of more than three thousand people in different ways: some students lost their closest friends, others hallway acquaintances. And the student leaders knew, with the clarity of thought that had distinguished them from the beginning, that the headline-industrial complex granted only a very narrow window of attention. Had they waited even a week to start advocating for change, the reporters would have gone home.

Also, different people express grief in different ways. The activists are grieving, too, but it’s not a coincidence that a disproportionate number of the Never Again leaders are dedicated members of the drama club. Cameron Kasky is a theatre kid. Before he went on Anderson Cooper, he was best known as a class clown. “I’m a talker,” he told me. “The only thing I’ve had this whole time is the fact that I never shut up.” Kasky started writing Facebook posts in the car after he and his brother, who has special needs, were picked up after the shooting by their dad. “I’m safe,” he wrote in the first, posted two hours after the shooting. “Thank you to all the second amendment warriors who protected me.” For the rest of the day, in between posts about missing students and recalling the experience of hiding in a classroom with his brother, Kasky’s frustration grew: “Can’t sleep. Thinking about so many things. So angry that I’m not scared or nervous anymore . . . I’m just angry,” he wrote. “I just want people to understand what happened and understand that doing nothing will lead to nothing. Who’d have thought that concept was so difficult to grasp?”

The social-media posts led to an invitation from CNN to write an op-ed, which led to televised interviews in the course of the day. “People are listening and people care,” Kasky wrote. “They’re reporting the right things.” That night, Thursday, after the candlelight vigil ended, Kasky invited a few friends over to his house to try to start a movement. “Working on a central space that isn’t just my personal page for all of us to come together and change this,” he posted. “Stay alert. #NeverAgain.” He had thought of the name, he later told me, “while sitting on the toilet in my Ghostbuster pajamas.” In early interviews Kasky had criticized the Republican Party, but he and his friends had decided since that the movement should be nonpartisan. Surely everyone—gun owner or pacifist, conservative or liberal—could agree that school massacres should be stopped. The group stayed up all night creating social-media accounts and trying to figure out what needed to be said, “because the important thing here wasn’t talking about gore,” Kasky said on Sunday. “It was talking about change and it was talking about remembrance.” It was then that they decided to petition for more thorough background checks. As Alfonso Calderon, a co-founder of Never Again, who was there that night, told me, “Nikolas Cruz, the shooter at my school, was reported to the police thirty-nine times.” He added, “We have to vote people out who have been paid for by the N.R.A. They’re allowing this to happen. They’re making it easier for people like Nick Cruz to acquire an AR-15.”

Further Reading

New Yorker writers respond to the Parkland school shooting.

 

They launched their new Facebook page just before midnight on February 15th. “Thank you to everybody who has been so supportive of our community and please remember to keep the memory of those beloved people we’ve lost fresh in your minds,” Kasky wrote.

While Kasky, Calderon, and their other friends huddled among snack wrappers in a gated-community war room, another student was developing a different plan. Jaclyn Corin is the seventeen-year-old junior-class president at Marjory Stoneman Douglas. She woke up the morning after the attack to the confirmation that her missing friend, Joaquin Oliver, was among them.

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l#NUNCA MÁS

Estudiante de Parkland: Mi generación no tolerará esto

 

Discurso de Alfonso Calderón

www.youtube.com/watch?v=kf1KJvFsKEY

Cómo los sobrevivientes de Parkland comenzaron el movimiento Never Again

Por Emily Witt, 19 de febrero de 2018

 

David Hogg es uno de los estudiantes de Marjory Stoneman Douglas High, en Parkland, Florida, que comenzó el movimiento Never Again, para abogar por el control de armas, después de un tiroteo masivo en su escuela.

El domingo, solo cuatro días después del tiroteo en la escuela Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, en Parkland, Florida, el movimiento activista que surgió después tuvo un nombre (nunca más), un objetivo político (verificaciones de antecedentes más estrictas para los compradores de armas), y un plan para una protesta nacional (una Marcha por Nuestras Vidas, programada para el 24 de marzo). También tenía un panel de adolescentes luminarias que le recordaban a Estados Unidos que el tiroteo no fue un accidente extraño o un desastre natural, sino el resultado de decisiones humanas reales.

 

Los funerales continuaron en Parkland y las ciudades circundantes, para los estudiantes Jaime Guttenberg y Joaquin Oliver y Alex Schachter y el profesor de geografía Scott Beigel, con asistencia que a veces supera las mil personas. A nivel local, al menos, el activismo no eclipsó al duelo. La tragedia afectó a este cuerpo estudiantil de más de tres mil personas de diferentes maneras: algunos estudiantes perdieron a sus amigos más cercanos, otros a conocidos del pasillo. Y los líderes estudiantiles sabían, con la claridad de pensamiento que los había distinguido desde el principio, que el complejo industrial general solo otorgaba una ventana de atención muy estrecha. Si hubieran esperado incluso una semana para comenzar a abogar por el cambio, los reporteros se habrían ido a casa.

 

Además, diferentes personas expresan su dolor de diferentes maneras. Los activistas también están de duelo, pero no es una coincidencia que un número desproporcionado de los líderes Nunca Más sean miembros dedicados del club de teatro. Cameron Kasky es un chico de teatro. Antes de ir a Anderson Cooper, era mejor conocido como un payaso de la clase. "Soy un hablador", me dijo. "Lo único que he tenido todo este tiempo es el hecho de que nunca me callé". Kasky comenzó a escribir publicaciones en Facebook en el automóvil después de que él y su hermano, que tiene necesidades especiales, fueron recogidos después del tiroteo por parte de su padre. "Estoy a salvo", escribió en el primero, publicado dos horas después del tiroteo. "Gracias a todos los guerreros de la segunda enmienda que me protegieron". Durante el resto del día, entre mensajes sobre estudiantes desaparecidos y recordando la experiencia de esconderse en un aula con su hermano, la frustración de Kasky creció: "No puedo dormir. Pensando en tantas cosas. Tan enojado que ya no estoy asustado ni nervioso. . . Estoy enojado ", escribió. "Solo quiero que la gente entienda lo que sucedió y entienda que no hacer nada no conducirá a nada. ¿Quién hubiera pensado que ese concepto era tan difícil de entender?

Las publicaciones en los medios sociales dieron lugar a una invitación de CNN para escribir un artículo de opinión, que dio lugar a entrevistas televisadas en el transcurso del día. "La gente escucha y las personas se preocupan", escribió Kasky. "Están informando las cosas correctas". Esa noche, el jueves, después de que finalizó la vigilia con velas, Kasky invitó a algunos amigos a su casa para tratar de iniciar un movimiento. "Trabajar en un espacio central que no es solo mi página personal para que todos nos unamos y cambiemos esto", publicó. "Quédate alerta. #NeverAgain. "Había pensado en el nombre, más tarde me dijo," mientras estaba sentado en el inodoro en mi pijama Ghostbuster. "En las primeras entrevistas, Kasky había criticado al Partido Republicano, pero él y sus amigos habían decidido que el movimiento debería ser no partidista Seguramente todo el mundo, propietario de armas o pacifista, conservador o liberal, podría estar de acuerdo en que las masacres escolares deberían detenerse. El grupo se quedó despierto toda la noche creando cuentas en las redes sociales e intentando averiguar qué se necesitaba decir, "porque lo importante aquí no era hablar de sangre derramada", dijo Kasky el domingo. "Hablaba de cambio y hablaba de remembranza". Fue entonces cuando decidieron solicitar una verificación de antecedentes más exhaustiva. Como Alfonso Calderón, cofundador de Never Again, que estuvo allí esa noche, me dijo: "Nikolas Cruz, el tirador de mi escuela, fue denunciado a la policía treinta y nueve veces". Y añadió: "Tenemos que votar". personas que han sido pagadas por la NRA Están permitiendo que esto suceda. Están facilitando que personas como Nick Cruz adquieran un AR-15 ".

Otras lecturas

Los escritores de New Yorker responden al tiroteo de la escuela Parkland.

Lanzaron su nueva página de Facebook justo antes de la medianoche del 15 de febrero. "Gracias a todos los que han apoyado a nuestra comunidad y por favor recuerden mantener en sus mentes el recuerdo de las personas queridas que hemos perdido en sus mentes", escribió Kasky.

Mientras Kasky, Calderón y sus otros amigos se acurrucaban entre los envoltorios de bocadillos en una sala de guerra de la comunidad cerrada, otro estudiante estaba desarrollando un plan diferente. Jaclyn Corin es la presidenta de clase media de diecisiete años de Marjory Stoneman Douglas. Se despertó la mañana después del ataque para confirmar que su amigo desaparecido, Joaquín Oliver, estaba entre ellos.

Brick Lane, East London.

Taken with my digital Fujifilm X20

Coffee, and a sesame bagel with strawberry cream cheese... Yum!

 

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Contrary to common legend, the bagel was not created in the shape of a stirrup to commemorate the victory of Poland’s King Jan Sobieski over the Ottoman Turks in 1683. It was actually invented much earlier in Kraków, Poland, as a competitor to the Bublik, a lean bread of wheat flour designed for Lent. In the 16th and first half of the 17th centuries, the bajgiel became a staple of the Polish national diet.[5]

 

There was a tradition among many observant Jewish families to make bagels on Saturday evenings at the conclusion of the Sabbath. Due to Jewish Sabbath restrictions, they were not permitted to cook during the period of the Sabbath and, compared with other types of bread, bagels could be baked very quickly as soon as it ended.

 

That the name originated from beugal (old spelling of Bügel, meaning bail/bow or bale) is considered plausible by many, both from the similarities of the word and because traditional handmade bagels are not perfectly circular but rather slightly stirrup-shaped. (This, however, may be due to the way the boiled bagels are pressed together on the baking sheet before baking.) Also, variants of the word beugal are used in Yiddish and Austrian German to refer to a round loaf of bread (see Gugelhupf for an Austrian cake with a similar ring shape), or in southern German dialects (where beuge refers to a pile, e.g.: holzbeuge, or woodpile).

 

In the Brick Lane district and surrounding area of London, England, bagels, or as locally spelled "beigels" have been sold since the middle of the 19th century. They were often displayed in the windows of bakeries on vertical wooden dowels, up to a metre in length, on racks.

 

Bagels were brought to the United States by immigrant Jews, with a thriving business developing in New York City that was controlled for decades by Bagel Bakers Local 338, which had contracts with nearly all bagel bakeries in and around the city for its workers who prepared all the bagels by hand. The bagel came into more general use throughout North America in the last quarter of the 20th century, at least partly due to the efforts of bagel baker Harry Lender and Florence Sender, who pioneered automated production and distribution of frozen bagels in the 1960s.[8]

 

In modern times Canadian-born astronaut Gregory Chamitoff is the first person known to have taken a batch of bagels into space on his 2008 Space Shuttle mission to the International Space Station.[9] His shipment consisted of 18 sesame seed bagels.[10][11]

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bagel

Read about the East End Jews HERE. This is one of the last remnants of their once bustling presence as they've mostly resettled in North London over the years. Notice the original spelling of bagel. The pronunciation of the word is different too.

 

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