Showing posts with label Australia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Australia. Show all posts

Travel the World: A few of the most beautiful libraries

Updated: January 2025.
 
Endless rows of bookshelves with kilos if not tons of books. Libraries are an ode to lifelong learning; they are temples of education. On a city trip, libraries are ideal places to spend some quiet time. The amazing atmosphere one experiences, when surrounded by books amplified by stunning architecture, is an exquisite experience. Follow me around the world. If you are a curious traveller, a bookworm, and a fan of architecture, you are going to want to visit all these magnificent libraries.

Travel the World. A few of the most beautiful libraries - The Touristin

Travel the World - A few most beautiful bookshops

Book Vibes Only. If you like to travel and if you like reading, check out what comes now. Books are like friends. I find non-readers highly suspicious. Why would one want to miss out on all these stories?

Travel the World. A few most beautiful bookshops

Stylish Vegetarian-Friendly Breakfast Places in Melbourne

Updated July 2023.

Days start best with coffee, and Melbourne is the place to be for coffee lovers. Melbourne is that kind of town where you go to bed and start dreaming of tomorrow’s morning coffee and breakfast spots. Read Speciality Coffee. Travel and See What The Fuss is All About. Vegetarianism is common in Melbourne, it is easy to live green. I have selected the best vegetarian-friendly spots in Elwood, Fitzroy, Williamstown, South Melbourne, Prahran, South Yarra, Abbotsford and Albert Park. Breakfast creates a state of euphoria for most Melburnians, it is so popular to go out for breakfast, and one often has to queue on every given day during the week to get a table. Booking on weekends is obligatory unless you would like to wait, hungry and craving your first coffee, in a rather long line. Sometimes one can't book and they make you wait in line, it is all part of the Melbourne experience.

I have chosen places where you can also meet with all your carnivore friends. Remember, we are all in this world together, no matter what we eat. I mainly focused on where to get the best Avocado Smash since this is one dish everybody needs to try at least once when in Melbourne. It is a massive hit. Financial advisers have been saying for years that kids should stop having these since they otherwise will never get a foot into the property market. Chefs create ever-fresh versions of it. My choices of cafés are in no particular order, I love all of them, whereas the first café truly deserves to be ranked as the number one spot on the list.

Travel Australia. Stylish Vegetarian-Friendly Breakfast Places in Melbourne

Ultimate Byron Bay Travel Guide for First-Time Visitors

Updated July 2023. Reading time Ultimate Byron Bay Travel Guide for First-Time Visitors: 21 minutes.

This travel guide is full of up-to-date travel information and travel inspiration for first-time visitors to Byron Bay in Australia.

Everyone needs a little sunshine in their life, especially when the weather turns icy cold and daylight hours dwindle north of the equator. Swimming in the Pacific Ocean, riding down waves (in my case baby ones), and meeting interesting people to talk about creative endeavours, drinking Ginger Necktar. A dense green bush that grows right down into the beach. The sweet smell of frangipanis in the air. In summer the water temperature is at 24 degrees Celsius. A legendary vibe. An iconic lighthouse. Cute wildlife. Talented street buskers. Trendy cafes and restaurants that use single origin coffee and organic products. People who care about their community and the environment. Hang on, where is that place? Book a trip to the Southern Hemisphere, and make your way to Byron Bay, the easternmost point of mainland Australia in the state of New South Wales. A place for dreamers and drifters and for everybody else. I find summer extra sweet when I jump straight in from winter. In Byron Bay you get to live a Bikini kinda life but there are also events like the Bluesfest, the Writers Festival and The Falls Music and Art Festival. This town makes me feel like flying.

Travel Australia. Ultimate Byron Bay Guide for First-Time Visitors

Melbourne Guide For First Time Visitors


You find Melbourne, the capital city of Victoria in the south-east of Australia. Established in 1835, Greater Melbourne is now the home of nearly five million people. You end up in the Azores in Portugal would you dig a tunnel to the other side of the world.

Which are the most beautiful parts of Melbourne? Good question. Depends on who you ask. There are as many answers as there are fish in the sea. Obviously. As always in life, it depends. There are no universally valid answers. Do you have many children, one, two, three, four or maybe even five? Then, you might fancy a rather quiet, leafy suburb, it sounds like you're going to be delighted with neighbourhoods like Kensington, Kew or Hawthorn. Do you want to be where the action is, do you want to go out every night? Then probably St Kilda, Fitzroy, Prahran or Carlton is your thing. That's so generalized now. Melbourne has countless neighbourhoods. Every single one has something somewhere, and more or less exciting and less exciting corners. Charm is the thing most of them have.

Travel Australia. Melbourne Overview For First Time Visitors

The Unfair Traveller - Symptoms and Treatment - Travel Etiquette

Travelling is what I love to do, in recent months alone I visited seven different countries, and you can well imagine that I spend a lot of time in, on and around public transport, like train stations, bus stops, airports, planes, boats and trains. I always expect the very worst things that can happen to me on my travels. I’m fully aware that I’m at risk of experiencing profoundly disturbing or utterly bothersome things, as soon as I leave my home. I love that with my expectation comes a feeling of being prepared (up to a certain extent).

A town by the sea seen from a plane window.

The Unfair Traveller - Symptoms


Looking at the state of things when travelling I have serious doubts that we will ever achieve world peace.

How Can Tourists Act Water-Sensitive During a Drought and Water Crisis?


When you talk to people about their reasons to visit places, a big one is the weather. The endless summer, the warm days, the big blue sky and the brightest sunshine one can imagine. These are the perfect conditions for a summer vacation for tourists who wish to get away from the grey and miserable weather at home.

Let us say for example Cape Town, a place in a water-scarce region, and when we visit, we should remind ourselves that we are vacationing in such one. It is hard for people living in countries with sayings like “Oh, it is summer, the rain is warmer,” and where people look like they had just been lying in a river when they get back from grocery shopping on a rainy day.

Travel in drought-stricken regions. How to Act Water-Sensitive

Eyewitness Melbourne, Australia: Ash from Coffee Cup Gallery




Who wouldn’t want to drink great coffee, great as in specialty coffee? The thing is when you are from Melbourne or have lived in Melbourne it is near impossible to go back to drinking ordinary coffee, no, it is not possible at all. No surprise, that Melburnian Ash loves coffee, and as often in life he had a fantastic idea while drinking a cuppa. He started the Instagram account Coffee Cup Gallery, where he posts a coffee cup from coffee places in Melbourne, and that is how I met him. Being always on the lookout for all things coffee related ... Ash's account is especially awesome to keep in touch with the coffee scene in Melbourne and for checking out the hottest coffee places in town.

Ash was so very lovely to tell us about his hometown Melbourne in Victoria.

Top questions to find out whether sustainable travel is still en vogue

Sustainable travel thoughts, beach, australia, cape tribulation.

There are endless moments when I realize that it isn’t easy to do everything right for everybody. On a sunny morning, I was at a delicious café, meeting a friend for breakfast. After a few moments three grown-ups, dressed a bit earthy, as in Birkenstock and slightly wrinkled shirts came along and sat down at the table closest to ours. It seemed as if they were on a visit to Berlin, probably staying at one of the nearby hotels. They were the sort of people searching for breakfast at a place where all the locals hang out. Soon the waiter served the group three coffees and three croissants. They looked at it

Travel to see these seven very magnificent nature experiences


1. Okavango Delta in Botswana


The Okavango Delta is Africa’s greatest wilderness, its biggest oasis. It is a not to be missed journey. I would even go so far as to say it is an experience of a lifetime. I drove there twice from Cape Town in South Africa. I once went to the area around Moremi and Savuti (coming from Maun) and on my second visit to Botswana I went to the Chobe National Park, entering from Kasane. The whole area is close to Namibia, Angola, Zambia and Zimbabwe.

This Yellow-billed hornbill was a regular visitor when I camped in the Savute area. When I first saw it I couldn’t believe birds like this exist, it was like in a film. In African mythology/folklore, the Yellow-billed hornbill is the optimistic one, it stands for the belief that everything will be alright in the end. That is the spirit, right? 

Yellow-billed hornbill sitting on the tree branches of a lush tree.

2. Vivonne Bay in Australia


More than a third of Kangaroo Island is dedicated to conservation parks. It feels heavenly isolated from the rest of the world.

Some say this beach on Kangaroo Island is Australia’s best. But wait till you discover all the other ones, I have yet to set eyes on an ugly beach in this country. Their beauty becomes your standard and it gets pretty hard to travel and appreciate other beaches. OK, there are also all these stunning beaches in South Africa. Clear water, and an endless sandy beach. I visit on a pretty overcast day; imagine this place in bright sunshine. I went here for a long beach walk after I visited Seal Bay, home of one of Australia’ largest sea lion colony.

To get to Jervis Bay and to catch the ferry to Kangaroo Island, I drove the 800 kilometres from my Melbourne home. Those were the days. Did you know that the time difference between South Australia and Victoria is 30 minutes? Discussions about a time zone shift are ongoing.

Secluded and wide white sand beach with blue-green water under a blue sky with big fluffy clouds.

3. Namib-Naukluft National Park in Namibia


This park is Africa’s largest conservation area. The sand here is 5 million years old. That puts most things in perspective, right? Some of the dunes are 400 metres high, and they are red in colour due to its iron oxide content.

The most photographed dune in the world, which gets its names from the distance to the entry gate of the park is right behind me. I took this photo of my Land Rover parked at Dune 45 after I drove along a (soft) sandy 4×4 track to Sossusvlei.

I love driving through Southern Africa; there is so much to experience. This type of travel gives you a true sense of the vastness of this part of the African continent. From here I made my way to the Etosha National Park, close to Angola, and later all the way back to Cape Town in South Africa

Read more about Namibia: Survival of the fittest.

White and lonely Land Rover parks under a tree next to a large red dune in the Namib-Naukluft National Park in Namibia.

4. Arthur’s Seat in Scotland


It is the highest point in the 640 acre Royal Park in Edinburgh. The dormant volcano sits 251 m above sea level, and I was happy that it is so very great for hiking. Read all about my adventures finding perfect food in Edinburgh.

High cliffs in front of a town with green hills and the sea in the background.

5. Corsica in France


On a hike from Bonifacio to a sort of nearby lighthouse along the limestone and granite cliffs at the Strait of Bonifacio (a protected Marine Park), I made the major mistake not to carry enough fresh water with me.

The walk along the cliffs is beautiful, the view is breathtaking, the vegetation, a mix of shrubs, herbs and alpine flowers is really special. I took far too many photos and was far too long in the sun. I came to a beautiful beach, and silly me decided to go for a swim. You can imagine how thirsty I was. I was too embarrassed to ask the other swimmers (there were only a very few around) for a drink.

It was a roughly two-hour walk back to town, but on the way, I had the feeling to collapse (true). All the time, I wondered how I could end up like this. I travelled extensively through Australia, I travel to terribly remote areas in South Africa, Botswana and Namibia and now I am going to collapse in France. I remember well that I could hardly walk anymore, but I thought: "toughen up princess." I just made it to a fountain. I was in heaven to drink that cold water. 

Visit Corsica, it truly is a magical place. Now is a great time to Corsica - here is why.

A bach in a small bay between vegetation on cliffs with the sea in the background.

6. Muriwai Beach in New Zealand


Roughly 1,200 pairs of gannets nest here from August to March each year. It is the most wonderful experience to watch them fly over the Tasman Sea and to see how they navigate to find a landing place in the midst of their colony. Can you see the surfers in the ocean, waiting for the next wave? The 50 kilometres long stretch of coast is of outstanding beauty, and the beach is black volcanic sand. As I turned away from the viewing platform, to walk back down to the beach, I saw a young rabbit, sitting in the green, chewing a big leaf. What a place this is.

That night, I camped on a beach in Waihihi Bay. I cooked Gnocchi (you can prepare a lot even with small equipment). As I tucked my toes into the sand at dinner time, the sunset over the South Pacific was the loveliest orange, pink, and purple. Sweet memories. Not too far from here, you can dance on an active marine volcano.

A colony of Gannets nest on cliffs towering high over the ocean.

7. Wilsons Promontory in Australia


If you like breathtaking scenery, beaches that are to die for (the water here is a protected marine national park) rainforests, and plenty of opportunity for bush walks, this National Park in on the southernmost tip of mainland Australia is the place for you. And after that, you might plan to go on a road trip from Melbourne to Uluru.


Boulders and cliffs along a blue-green coloured ocean. There is a white sand beach in the middle.

Where can I have more magnificent nature experiences? Can’t wait to hear from you.

From Berlin with love

The ANZ Travel Chat. Talk food with real foodies


Have you heard of the Australia and New Zealand Travel Chat on Twitter? In short that is the #ANZTravelChat. Having lived in Australia for seven years, I am so happy to connect with these guys. This week the chat is all about food. What else? Australians are so very obsessed with everything food related, there is always talk about the hottest restaurants, new bistros or pubs, and of course about where to get the best espresso based drinks. 

Join Jessica Lipowski (meet her here as an eyewitness of Amsterdam, The Netherlands) and the rest of the Australia and New Zealand Travel Chat Community on Wednesday, November 18th at 9am Berlin / 8pm Sydney / 10pm AKL / 5pm HKG / 11am JNB to talk about glorious food. Jessica works on a book about 66 immigrants in the Netherlands that own a restaurant in Amsterdam.

The questions we are going to talk about


Q1: What is the best food you have ever tasted? Where were you and how did you come across it? Share a photo. #ANZTravelChat

Q2: Have you ever travelled to a destination specifically for the food? Tell us where you went and why. #ANZTravelChat

Q3: What is the most adventurous food you’ve tried while travelling? Would you eat it again? #ANZTravelChat

Q4: What is the best street food you’ve tasted in your travels? Where can you find it? #ANZTravelChat

Q5: Have you joined a food tour or cooking class while travelling? Share your experience. If you haven’t, would you like to? #ANZTravelChat

Q6: Have you ever tasted a dish while travelling and tried to make it again when you returned home? Tell us about it. #ANZTravelChat


Jump onto Twitter, use the hashtag #ANZTravelChat and look for Jessica and Dorothée. Come as you are, we can’t wait to meet you in the Twittersphere. Why not connect with founder Saxon while you are there?

From Berlin with love

Nominated for the Sisterhood of the World Bloggers Award (4): The Touristin


The Sisterhood of the World Bloggers Award goes to female bloggers around the world. I was seriously surprised that I have been nominated a fourth time (within a few weeks) and this time by Maria from Travel with G. Thank you so very much for thinking of me Maria, I love to talk to you whenever we meet in the virtual world, be it on twitter or Instagram  and I hope we meet one day in the real world. It feels so special that someone in another country thinks of you right? 

As per the rules, I answered Marias' ten questions about travel, created a new list of ten questions and awarded ten female bloggers. Go and visit their blogs and please say hi.

And this is what Maria was interested in.

Travel Australia: A sea of flowers in the outback

I want to lay you down in a bed of roses … you know that song. I have yet to sleep in a bed of roses in the outback, but I saw hundreds of other flowers, flowering bushes and trees. 


Yellow, white and pink wild flowers in bloom on high red sand dunes.

Wildflowers in the outback of the centre of Australia


The wildflowers in the outback of the centre of Australia, in Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia and the Northern Territory are in bloom from September. If it rains a lot during winter (that is June, July and August in Australia) the Red Centre can be easily called the green centre. And that are the moments when the chests of locals of the region swell with pride. There is usually hardly any rain in the outback. They well know that many visitors will never experience the area like this. They say that the sea of flowers is the most special sight.

You know, the Ozis tend to sometimes carry their description of places (slightly) too far, certainly they just want to be kind (and surely excel). I decided I had to see for myself whether the Outback turns green in spring.

There are so many different kinds of flowers out there in the backcountry of Australia. I really don’t want to disappoint you, but this is not a botanist-Info platform, so I just name a few of the flowers to set you in the mood. Tiny Purslane, Broad-Leaf Parakeelya, Goodenia vilmoriniae, Yellow Top, Tall Mulla Mulla, Large Green Pussytail, Sturt's Desert Pea, Schenkia australis, Minnie Daisy, White Paper Daisy, Woolly-Headed Burr Daisy, Poached Egg Daisy, Bush Tomato, Australian Bluebell, Yellow-keeled Swainsona, Rosy Dock, Sturt's Desert Rose, Desert Grevillea, Scholtzia uberiflora. The interested reader might browse a plant encyclopedia or contact the Australian Native Plant Society now.


Poached Egg Daisy


But hang on. Let me at least introduce a really super cute one I found. I saw one wildflower that looks exactly like a fried egg. Strictly speaking, it is reminiscent of an oversized daisy and a fried egg. I later found out, that it is colloquially probably called Poached Egg Daisy because of that. The plant from the family of daisies grows in sandy ground and measures about 4 cm on average and is 15 to 50 cm high. The actual name of the plant is Polycalymma stuartii, and was named after the Scottish explorer and surveyor John McDouall Stuart


A yellow white-rimmed Poached Egg Daisy flower growing on a red sand dune.

It is enchanting indeed, to see all the colourful blooming flowers and tall grasses in the red sandy ground. Flowers that cover the plains like a carpet and grow up all the way to the mountain ranges in the distance. Heavenly.

Heat. Drought. Dust. And yet, the flowers, shrubs, trees blossom and grow all over the place. They make it seem to be the easiest thing in the world, to survive under these conditions.

The flowers are standing on the red dunes and their cheerful and lively spirit create an even better mood, than the one you are customarily in when on a road trip through the Red Centre. If you can do it somehow, go and make your way up there … now. Read: How to drive from Melbourne in the State of Victoria to Uluru in Northern Territory.

From Berlin with love

Is travelling all about the food?

If you ask me which country in the world has got the best food I would say Cambodia. The food I had there was simple, lots of vegetables and rice and all these exciting flavours. But again, how can I pick just one country? 

What about those perfectly cooked Paccheri Pasta in cream of Provolone del Monaco cheese garnished with black truffle slivers I ate in Italy? Once I tried Avocado Toast in Australia I was lost forever, it is now a breakfast staple of mine. My olive addiction started in Spain ... And then there are Koeksisters in South Africa, grilled vegetables, halloumi cheese and balsamic glaze in Athens, Greece, homemade bread in Botswana … and the list goes on. 

In Australia, breakfast is only complete with Avocado toast

Foodie moments enhance the experience of travelling


All these foodie moments surely enhance the experience of travelling, since most dishes were created over a period of time, most often centuries, and are deeply rooted in each countries culture. 

If you travel you often find food you have never seen before. That is what happened when I went to Cambodia, where I saw they sold fried Tarantulas at the roadside and on markets. A Cambodian lady at a market in Phnom Penh told me the country’s population started eating spiders during the Khmer Rouge regime when food was scarce to most people. Whenever I tell this, people get all disgusted and say they would never eat things like that. I always answer, don’t be a hypocrite, it is just the same as eating a cow, a rabbit or a pig. To me, there is no difference at all. It is funny how people’s perception of things gets blurred easily out of, let’s call it, ignorance.

Visit local food markets


When you visit local food markets you can be sure to learn most about the country you visit. This is where people do their grocery shopping, no matter their income or their age or gender. You will surely meet a wide variety or to be more precise representative sample of the local population. Some of my favourite markets are the Farmers Market in San Francisco, USA, the Mercate del Rialto in Venice, Italy, the Churchill Island Farmers’ Market in Victoria, Australia, the Toul Tom Poung (Russian Market) in Cambodia, the Neighbourgoods Market in Cape Town, Torvehallerne in Copenhagen, Denmark, and the ever so popular Viktualienmarkt in Munich, Germany.

Recently I travelled to Positano in Italy for no other reason than to visit restaurants, and I had the best foodie time ever. Now I know where to eat in one of Italy's prettiest villages. It takes a lot of effort, true, to visit a place for its food alone, but try it, there is nothing to lose.

Where is your favourite foodie place? 

From Berlin with love

Travel Australia - Road trip Melbourne to Uluru

Jumping on a plane to fly up to Uluru? Everybody can do that, I decided to drive and had a fantastic time. I give you a quick overview of the trip. I drove up in a 4 WD, most of the route would be doable in an ordinary 2WD, but I wanted to drive along the Oodnadatta track. I stayed on campsites during the whole trip, and cooked my own breakfast, lunch and dinner on most days.

1,000 kilometres. Melbourne – Hahndorf – Port Germein, South Australia


Everything in Hahndorf, a small town a short ride from the capital city Adelaide is blue and white. The food is typical German, that is probably not that exciting for tourists from Germany. The waitress in a restaurant tells me that their ancestors immigrated to Australia from Prussia around 1870. She has never been to Germany, she speaks no German but she sees herself as a German. I am stunned. I did not know that sauerkraut taken over a longer period of time has such a blatant effect. Have you

Uluru. To climb or not to climb?

Hoping to disprove a by tourists long-held superstition, I jump into my car and drive all the way up from Melbourne to the World Heritage Site Uluru in the Kata Tjuta National Park. You know there are still people who believe their Australia vacation only to be complete after they climbed the big red rock? I visit Uluru, and all I can say is that it really is possible

Wildlife Conservation in Australia. Eat as much chocolate as you can

The night before the wedding bride and groom must be as excited as kids are the night before the Easter egg hunt. In many places, people eat rabbit-shaped chocolate and brioches for Easter, but not so much in Australia. Right, it is on the other side of the world, they have all the right in the world to do it differently over there.


Ms and Mr Hare and probably also their helpless offspring are not very popular

Sustainable travel – Wildlife is Wildlife


With only a few weeks off work per year, people try to make the very best of it. Most dream to be in greener surroundings, at least once a year. And when they go away on vacation it has to be special. Wouldn’t you want to make-up for the rest of the year, which you had to spend at that desk and in that concrete desert with not even a single tree in sight? Most of us live so far removed from any form of nature that we get excited every time we see a sparrow. I do.

Travellers love to book excursions where they can pet lions or cheetahs. They love to go on trips where they visit dolphin- and monkey-shows at zoos and what else there is one can do with animals. Everyone gets back from that trip and believes this was the experience of a lifetime because very obviously they spent their precious time with the creatures they love most. And that selfie is going to show all of your peers what an adventurous nature you have.

Heart beats fast – Fluffy, furry and friendly travel companions

Whose heart does not beat faster at the thought of a happy, fun-loving, friendly dolphin? Flipper, we all know him from that TV show. It looks super cute when an elephant splashes water all over you. It is heart-warming really, and one might think the elephant loves to play with you. I once held a baby

10 of the most vibrant food markets in the world

Farmers' and also food markets are places where traders are passionate about their wares. I try to explain this with a mushroom. These markets are places where someone not only sells you any mushroom but the mushroom that person truly believes is the best mushroom out there. Farmers know the story behind the mushroom, they might even remember the day they started mixing the right ingredients for the compost before they put them in their dark rooms. Or they can recall the very day they went out to gather mushrooms in the forest. They know how much effort it takes to get the perfect product, they respect their food naturally. It is so very lovely to see this pure affection for a product. My secret tip for a great experience at farmers markets is, to start chatting to the farmers. You will most certainly hear the most amazing stories about the food. A visit at a market is about connecting growers and consumers. Do you get that at your local supermarket?

These markets are places where locals and visitors have been buying their wares for decades if not centuries (at least that is the case in some parts of the world). If you are on vacation and visit a market you will be part of that community, if only for a short time. You sure will be able to try food staples you can only get at this particular place, and you will most certainly be longing for these things forever. It is almost as if you tasted the place, literally. A market tells you a lot about a town, you will find out about the relation people have with their food. Why do people eat? What do they want to express? Do they want to express anything at all?

How to best describe food markets? Take passionate farmers and regional food and scatter them around a beautiful landmark. Add the excitement and hunger of locals and visitors, and finish off with the scent of herbs, spices, bbqs and freshly brewed coffee. If that isn’t a recipe for a feast, I don’t know what is.

Come with me on a tour around the world, and see the most vibrant food markets ...

I would like to eat a Berliner please. What?

You are excused if you get confused these days. Is it a Krapfen? Is it a Pfannkuchen? Is it a Berliner? All three are wrong and all three are right, depending on where you are in Germany … or in the world (wait, we will get to that point later). We are talking about jam doughnuts here.

Berliner, Krapfen, Pfannkuchen? It is a jam doughnut

How to buy a Berliner in Berlin

Ever tried to order a Berliner in Berlin? This is obviously not a smart thing to do. If you are after a Berliner, try to be a bit more subtle, and start with flirting, it might turn out to be the love of your life. In Berlin, you have to order a Pfannkuchen (pancake), when you would like to have a Berliner (made from yeast dough). Who knows why they call a Berliner a pancake? A pancake as most people know it is called egg cake in this part of Germany.

How to buy a Berliner in Cologne

Visit Cologne in North Rhine Westphalia and order a Pfannkuchen, because you are well prepared, you know that is what they call these thingies in the capital city of the country. I really feel for you, because you'll get a totally different dish, you'll get a pancake made from flour and eggs (Pfannkuchen). Not fair I know, please order a Berliner and you'll get a Berliner made from yeast dough (a Pfannkuchen in Berlin).

If you think this is sorted, think again, the best is yet to come ... 

A jam doughnut dusted in icing sugar on a nicely decorated porcelain plate.
Looking closer. It is still a jam doughnut

How to buy a Berliner in Munich

Ever tried to get a Berliner in Munich? This is not going to happen. I am not saying there aren't any Prussians living in the capital of Bavaria. If you would like to eat a Berliner or a Pfannkuchen (are you still with me?) please order a Krapfen. I am not making this up, but this is what they call them in the southern part of Germany. But, and now please listen carefully, if later on, you would like to eat the exact same jam doughnut in North-Rhine Westphalia, please don’t forget it is called Berliner. If you order a Krapfen in North Rhine Westphalia, you will get a totally different type of pastry, one made from choux pastry dough. I am telling you, craving a jam doughnut made from yeast dough, isn't for the faint-hearted, you are entering a foodie-maze.

How to buy a Berliner in Melbourne

In Melbourne I went to a "French" bakery where they sell beignets made from yeast dough (Berliner, Krapfen, Pfannkuchen). I ordered: "I would like to have two beignets please." The lady behind the counter looked at me: "Sorry, can you say that again please." And so I said it again "I would like to have two beignets please." She smiled shyly and said: Sorry, but I didn't get that one." I said it again: "I would like to have two beignets please." She looked at me and replied helplessly: "I am so sorry, we don't sell these." I pointed at them and said: "Sorry, you do, here they are, right in front of you, labelled as beignets.” She looked at me now obviously relieved: “I see. You would like to have two jam doughnuts.” Big smiles on both sides: “Yes please, thank you very much”. In France beignets are made from choux pastry, hence the bakery in Melbourne should have offered them to their customers as jam doughnuts and not as beignets, but I don’t want to be the smart-ass immigrant. I take my jam doughnuts and leave the bakery, they are delicious.

Wherever you eat these things, enjoy. What are yeast pastry jam doughnuts called in your part of the world? Can’t wait to hear from you?

From Berlin with love