Gravy stains and tall tales await you!
Embark on a real foodie journey with Julie Harris
Welcome to Gravy stains and tall tales: A real foodie journey, where every dish comes with a story, and every stain has a memory. This blog isn’t about perfectly plated food or spotless kitchens – it’s about the messes we make, the laughter that echoes around the dinner table, and the unforgettable meals that leave a mark long after the plates are cleared.
From pub grub to family recipes passed down through generations, we’ll explore the real, unpolished side of food – the mishaps, the triumphs, and the tall tales that make every bite worth savouring. Pull up a chair and dig in!
Explore
The blog…
Dive into delightful recipes that blend Canadian heritage with British flair! Julie’s creations promise to tantalize your taste buds and spark joy in your kitchen.
Travel partnerships, hosted experiences and story-led brand collaborations reaching a valuable female 45+ audience. View Julie’s media kit and work together.

The book…
Lies, theft and shit on the ceiling: A Canadian’s journey to pub ownership in England
To be published on 21 June 2026
Unleash the foodie within
Indulge in the authenticity of homemade meals and the warmth of shared tales.
Alone, overdressed, and mildly unhinged… my first attempt at dining alone.
It starts hours before the actual event. Not the dinner. The idea of the dinner. You’re in your hotel room, standing in front of a mirror, trying on versions of yourself like outfits. This one looks too try-hard. That one…
You only live once. The clock doesn’t care
It usually begins the same way. A message, sent late in the evening, when the house is quiet and the day has finally stopped asking anything of you. You can almost picture it without trying. Someone on the sofa, glass…
Dalyan, Day 9: The hangover reckoning and why this place won’t let you leave
There’s always one day on a trip where the wheels come off. Not dramatically. Not in a blaze of glory. Just… quietly. Like your dignity slipping out the back door while you’re face down in a pillow, bargaining with your…
Day 8 in Dalyan: Interviews, fighter jets, karaoke crimes, and the köfte of redemption
First things first—I’ve officially broken my own rule and I apologise. All week I’ve been smugly tapping away at these posts like some sort of disciplined, well-adjusted human being with structure and routine. And then, like all good habits, it…
Day 7 in Dalyan: Turtle trauma, marshmallow piña coladas, and whatever was dying next door
You ever get woken up by a sound so aggressive, so wildly committed to being heard, that your brain just… gives up trying to label it? That was us. Next door. Something between a donkey in emotional crisis and a…
Facebook Posts
I’ve been conspicuously absent from these posts up until now, but it seemed like a suitable time for me to make my presence known and chime in about some of my experiences in this hallowed example of British culture and tradition.
I’m Andy, the unintentional full time part time landlord, maintenance guy, carpenter, tiler, plumber, electrician, gardener, barman, cellarman, occasional chef and full-time Printed Circuit Board Design Engineer. Thanks Dad. I wouldn’t have been able to do any of that stuff without you passing on your knowledge and wisdom.
In addition to these various tasks, I was also the pub gofer. This is not some charming, yet odd British spelling of the cute little rodent. It is a playful phonetic spelling of the two words “go for”. Gofer lettuce, gofer cucumber, minced beef, beer, cider, toilet seats.
We inherited a rather dispirited ice machine when we first took over the pub. Despite its rather downtrodden appearance, it would, from autumn through to early spring produce sufficient quantities of first-class ice cubes in a dutiful fashion. Any cube that hit the floor would become the property of Juno who would chase it around the floor joyfully until it melted. At some point, as the daytime temperatures rose, just when you needed ice the most, the machine would go on strike. Gofer ice. On the hottest days of the year, the pub would be lively, the beer gardens packed. Gofer ice. Lots of ice.
Those people who were not at the pub were having garden parties and barbeques. They wanted ice too. Everyone wanted ice. Off to the supermarket in town to buy as much ice as I could get my hands on. A whole trolly full of ice often requiring a visit to every supermarket in town whist people looked on in sweaty, irritated wonder. The greedy, selfish git! How could anyone want that much ice? Although there were people who wanted a couple of cubes in a G&T, there were those who wanted pints of ice!
Cider. A few years earlier, an Irish cider producer had come up with a great marketing plan in the middle of one of the hottest summers on record. Encourage people to drink their, not so great tasting cider, poured over an entire pint glass full of ice. A whole pint! 568ml, 20 fl oz! It was a phenomenal success. Thirst quenching, refreshing and flavour masking. Within a couple of weeks there was a nationwide shortage of this particular cider. People were waiting at supermarkets for the delivery trucks to arrive and cider rationing was born!
Many beer drinkers, myself included, suddenly change poison as soon as the sun comes out. If I’m wearing jeans, it’s beer. Shorts, it’s cider. A person drinking 10 bottles of cider in an afternoon needed a lot of ice. 50 people drinking 10 bottles of cider in an afternoon needed a shopping trolly full of ice. The next day? Gofer ice.
A pub is like an iceberg. 80% of an iceberg is underwater, out of sight. As a customer, you only see the 20%. When you run a pub, or help to, you see just how big that that thing really is. Here’s to summer!
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HOW I ACCIDENTALLY BECAME A PUB LANDLADY
Nobody grows up in Canada thinking:
“You know what my future holds? A collapsing English pub, a screaming dishwasher, forty-seven drunk villagers arguing about cricket, and a giant sheepdog stealing Yorkshire puddings.”
And yet…
here we are.
If you’d told younger me that one day I’d be running an English pub in a tiny village where people communicate almost exclusively through passive aggression and cryptic weather observations, I’d have laughed directly into your face.
At the beginning, I thought pubs were basically restaurants with carpets.
I was catastrophically wrong.
An English pub is not a business.
It’s an ecosystem.
Part community centre.
Part therapy office.
Part marriage guidance service.
Part United Nations summit with more lager and occasional shouting.
People don’t just come to the pub for food or drink.
They come to announce divorces.
Celebrate births.
Mourn deaths.
Start fights over parking.
Discuss parish council drama like it’s international espionage.
And God help you if you accidentally sit in someone’s “usual seat.”
I learned this very early on.
One afternoon, a lovely old boy walked in, stared at a stranger occupying his stool, and just stood there silently holding his pint money like a disappointed Victorian ghost.
No confrontation.
No words.
Just a level of visible emotional devastation usually reserved for war documentaries.
The poor tourist eventually moved after sensing he’d somehow committed a cultural hate crime.
Then there was the concept of “rounds.”
Now, in Canada, people buy drinks normally.
Like civilised people.
In Britain, one person buys eighteen drinks, forgets entirely whose turn it is, and by midnight everyone is operating on a complex accounting system based entirely on trust, resentment, and vibes.
I spent the first six months in a state of complete panic trying to understand who owed what.
At one point I accidentally skipped Dave during rounds and thought I’d caused an international incident.
The man looked at me like I’d insulted his ancestors.
And then came Sunday roasts.
Sweet Jesus.
I thought I knew roast dinners.
I did not.
An English Sunday roast is less a meal and more a sacred religious ceremony involving gravy floods, territorial behaviour over crispy potatoes, and at least one person dramatically claiming:
“It’s not as good as my mother’s.”
Nobody’s mother has ever been identified.
But apparently she was the greatest chef who ever lived.
The pub itself was chaos from day one.
The dishwasher screamed like it was being exorcised.
The cellar flooded whenever it rained.
One chef disappeared mid-shift and was later found asleep behind the bins.
The karaoke machine nearly caused a divorce.
Twice.
And somehow, despite all this, I fell hopelessly in love with the place.
Because pubs aren’t really about beer.
They’re about people.
The lonely widower who only speaks properly once he’s had half a bitter.
The exhausted nurse eating chips at the bar after a brutal shift.
The farmers covered in mud.
The old couples sharing puddings.
The locals who would absolutely kill each other during parish meetings but still show up to help if your pipes burst at 2am.
And somewhere in the middle of all this madness was me:
A Canadian woman trying to survive village life while covered in gravy stains and fryer burns.
Honestly?
I still don’t fully understand how it happened.
One minute I was living a relatively normal existence.
The next I was arguing with beer delivery drivers, learning how to calm drunk rugby players, and yelling:
“JUNO DROP THE SAUSAGE RIGHT NOW”
across a packed dining room.
But maybe that’s the thing about pubs.
You don’t really choose them.
They absorb you slowly.
One regular at a time.
One chaotic Friday night at a time.
One slightly sticky pint glass at a time.
Until one day you realise…
You’re not just serving the village anymore.
You’ve somehow become part of it.
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Well apparently the entire hospitality industry collectively needs therapy after Bank Holiday weekends because this one seems to have struck a nerve. 🍺
If you’ve ever:
* worked in a pub
* survived Sunday lunch
* heard phantom ticket machine noises
* or emotionally collapsed beside a dishwasher…
…this one’s for you.
Honestly, I thought I was just shouting into the internet wearing a sweaty chef jacket. Turns out half the country has hospitality PTSD.
More pub chaos, chef trauma and village lunatics over on TikTok:
@[YOURHANDLE]
And yes… most of these disasters made it into Lies, Theft and Shit on the Ceiling.
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Nobody talks enough about the psychological recovery period AFTER a Bank Holiday weekend in hospitality.
The public goes home happy and sunburned.
Meanwhile chefs are staring silently into the middle distance, pub landlords are emotionally unraveling beside industrial dishwashers, and somebody is still hearing phantom ticket machine noises three days later.
Honestly, by Tuesday morning every hospitality worker deserves:
* therapy
* electrolytes
* and witness protection.
More pub chaos from Gravy Stains and Tall Tales 🍺
www.julieharris.co.uk
#pubtok #hospitalitytok #cheflife #britishhumour #publife #storytime #KitchenChaos #bankholiday #uktiktok #restaurantlife
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People romanticise old British pubs until they’ve stood inside a medieval kitchen during a heatwave watching three chefs slowly descend into psychological collapse beside a deep fat fryer.
The Royal Oak Inn in summer was less “country pub charm” and more “low-budget hostage situation with gravy.”
Tiny windows.
No airflow.
Ancient brick trapping heat like Satan’s conservatory.
Meanwhile outside, customers sat in the beer garden cheerfully ordering:
* steak pie
* lasagne
* roast dinners
* and enough gravy to embalm a Victorian duke
Because apparently when British people get hot, their natural instinct is to consume heavier carbohydrates.
The only air conditioning in the entire building was in the cellar, which meant every member of staff suddenly became deeply passionate about “checking stock.”
I once found a chef sitting beside the beer barrels eating ice cubes in complete silence like a traumatised Arctic explorer.
Honestly, if you’ve never worked hospitality during a heatwave, you haven’t truly experienced human suffering.
Naturally… this kind of chaos made it into Lies, Theft and Shit on the Ceiling.
More pub madness at:
www.julieharris.co.uk
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