My favourite fruit and vegetable stall

When I first lived in Barcelona, way back in 2002, I lived just around the corner from this fantastic hole-in-the-wall fruit and veg stall. Back then the Santa Caterina market was still a building site so it was the obvious place to shop. This worked in my favour as the señora who ran it (now supposedly retired but usually somewhere around keeping a proprietary eye on the place) was very patient with a newbie guiri and attempted to teach me the names of the fruit and vegetables I was buying. I remember having terrible trouble with ‘zanahoria’ for some reason, but then I don’t really like carrots that much anyway.

Apparently she – the matriarch – moved to Barcelona when she was eleven (I won’t give her age away, but that was well over sixty years ago!) and worked on a stall several doors away. They moved to another location nearby before finally settling into the space they occupy now. Now, in 2010, it’s still going and it’s still a family business. In the early days it was apparently very difficult to get hold of stock, and the variety was limited – sometimes they would have nothing but oranges for sale. Now everything comes via Mercabarna, but the son explained that they are noticing a return to more ‘old fashioned’ ways of shopping, specifically that many people now come with their own shopping bags or baskets, buy smaller amounts more often, and are more concerned about provenance.

Unlike a lot of the very busy stalls in the market, here they take their time with each customer, checking that the produce they have selected for you is acceptable (How ripe do you want your avocados? To eat today or tomorrow? Or to make guacamole?), and offering advice (Red onions should always be kept in the fridge as they go off more quickly than other kinds of onion). If new fruit is in season then be prepared to try a couple of cherries, strawberries or even an apricot and give your opinion (riquissimo, por supuesto). There is often an…errr…’topical’ comedy still life:

I have no idea if the place has a name – it really is just a hole in the wall on c/Dels Mestres Casals I Martorells which runs from the Santa Caterina market up to Sant Pere.

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Cake (part 1 of an occasional series): La Tarta

Hidden away on c/Portal Nou (number 33) there is a trade pâtisserie that provides cakes and sweets to hotels, restaurants and private parties. About a year ago they opened a shopfront where they attend to potential new private customers, and display and sell a selection of their wares, and I only discovered it (cake! how did it take me so long!) when friends Madame J and The Lovely N gave me a gift voucher. Aahhhh…the gift of cake – they know me well.

It’s hardly a cafe – there is a tiny shelf which functions as a table with a couple of stools; if the space isn’t already occupied then you can have a cup of coffee or glass of Cava and try a slice of Sacher torte, crystalized ginger dipped in dark chocolate, almond cake or maybe just a couple of chocolate truffles. Recommended if you need a celebration cake – they take orders, so go in and have a chat.

Chocolate Truffles. Yum.

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Bookmark Cake (part 1 of an occasional series): La Tarta

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Soap

Soap is one of those quotidian items that can become a simple luxury. Last year I tried to cut down on packaging by buying those big ‘family-size’ bottles from the supermarket, but generically-scented shower-gel made for a joyless bathtime experience, and cheap, thin liquid hand-soap was a miserable reward for my ‘hands-that-do-dishes’.

I’d noticed the little soap shop on Plaça Sant Felip Neri a couple of times – I usually take a detour through the plaça if I’m ever wandering around in that area – so I decided to call in. It turns out that they are a small family company – third generation soap makers. They have a workshop at the back of the shop where they make the soap from natural ingredients, and it comes in several different shapes and sizes and an impressive variety of scents and colours. Sadly Dr. Doingtheshopping  is slightly obsessive-compulsive and when it comes to soap insists that it “must-be-white-and-have-no-scent-AT-ALL”, but then, I’m not buying it for him!

The soaps are made from a base of coconut oil and palm kernel and smell fantastic. Bars of soap start at 3 euros and they also do various gift boxes including soap ‘petals’ which are a lovely idea for the bath. Minimal and recycled/recycleable packaging too, which is all too rare in this city:

Out of the bag – the details of the company are stamped on one side:

…and the ingredients are cunningly stamped on the other side:

I’m currently alternating between ‘citron’ with it’s acid, lemony-saturated scent, and the skin-and-scalp-tingling ‘menta’. Can’t wait to use them up so I can buy another…right, I’m off for another shower!

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