I discovered an oasis of peace at the Cultural Port Cetate, in the village of Cetate, Romania
I discovered an oasis of peace at the Cultural Port Cetate, in the village of Cetate, Romania
Hello travelers
There are so many places I want to go that I don't think my whole life is enough to fulfill all my desires, as a joke.
A few years ago I was watching on TV a program based on recipes, but not just any recipes but some very old, bohemian ones.
The host of the show was the owner of the Cultural Port Cetate, a very special man, especially since he is also a poet appreciated in Romania, the bohemian recipes were reinterpreted by him and cooked in the company of other very famous Romanian stars, honestly it was a show that I watched all the time.
So I kept this place in my mind, I really wanted to visit it but also to taste some traditional dishes.
What is Port Cultural Cetate?
The answer to this question will come from the owner himself in the following.
The Culture Port Cetate rose from the ashes of the former port of grains which had come into existence around 1880, back in the days when wheat couldn’t sprout out of asphalt the way it does today, and the Viennese croissant was baked with the very flour coming by paddle-steamer all the way from Cetate.
In 1945 the port was closed down and its offices converted into barracks for the border patrol, while the wheat grain unexpectedly changed its adventurous course Moscow-wards. The grain merchants registered with the port, about one thousand of them, including large numbers of Greeks and Jews, took their cue to emigrate or alternately languished away in communist prisons.
After the revolution of December 1989, the main office building of the port, designed by Italian architects, was vandalized by the locals and demoted to a shed accommodating twelve porkers and two cows.
That’s what it looked like when I happened to stumble across it—sans doors, sans glass, sans roof, sans everything, with the forlorn looks of a dame of noble birth gone to seed and uttering a mute protest bringing to mind the lament of a Romanian prince’s wife ravished by Sinan Pasha’s bashi-basouks: 'Alas, alack, the heathens have disgraced me!'
With the money I made by selling the shares I owned in a political satire magazine going by the name of 'Academia Caţavencu', where I used to contribute a weekly editorial for eight years running, I was able, in 1997, to purchase the ruin and have it transformed into a haven for the arts. In the absence of grain, we’ve been trying to fill our barns with sculptors, writers, painters and musicians, and, as in the year 2000 the Romanian government was all set to market the idea of a theme park in Transylvania—Dracula Park—we retaliated polemically, for the sake of argument, by starting an Angel Park on the banks of the Danube, an area strewn with statues of angels, assuming that Romania was not the exclusive seat of the devil—angels, too, must have haunted it, at least marginally.
The people of Cetate, located just across the river from Bulgaria and only a few kilometers’ distance from Serbia, claim that local cocks crow in three languages—Serbian, Bulgarian, and Romanian—which makes the idea of a multinational port of culture fit the location like a glove.
Our pottery kilns are competing with ovens where rams are roasted, courtesy of the farm run by a poet who’s lost his wits to husbandry, while the heated tirades of foreign authors invited to participate in the debates are quenched with the wine coming straight from Dinescu’s vineyards. All things considered, next to Rimbaud the slave merchant, Dinescu the wine merchant is but a babe in arms. So have no qualms about gracing his humble abode with your presence.
I do assure you that all artistic events taking place in Cetate will be faithfully attended, as customary, by the neighbouring woods, the river Danube, the sparrows and the crows—whose propensity for culture is already proverbial.
Rightly so, the history of this place is amazing, how from a ruin, something that had no future, a man with vision managed to turn it into something fantastic.
We came here especially to discover the location but also the surroundings of the location especially as it is located right next to the Danube river, being surrounded by a landscape as hard to describe.
Come join me to show you how the restaurant looks like inside, in fact there are several spaces that are used for customers to serve the meal, in a dream setting, as if you are in a fairy tale.
What do you say, would you dine in such a place?
This time we chose to have something to eat outside, the weather outside was gorgeous so we stayed outside.
Do you like the setting of the tables?
This seems to make the experience even more amazing.
I can't end this blog without showing you what we have served here.
First time I drank bitter cherry syrup, very good.
We ended with a dish of dried beans, a traditional Romanian dish.
THE END!
If you liked what you saw and read here please don't forget to give a LiKe, Follow, reBlog or a Comment, for all this I thank you, and until the next post I say goodbye.
P.S. The attached picture you have just seen are taken by me with my mobile phone(Samsung Galaxy S21), and the text is also designed by me.
Yours @triplug😉
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Thank you very much.
Hey @triplug you are welcome.
Thanks for using @worldmappin 😘
Wow. That place is fantastic and historic. You captured the place so well.
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That sounds like a serene escape, finding such a peaceful oasis in the heart of Cetate must have been a refreshing break for the soul @triplug . Romania never ceases to surprise with its quiet treasures. Can't wait to see more of your travels. 💛
Well, it's not just a place to eat ,, it's a kind of “time portal” to a quiet and artful bohemian world .. 😍
I'm really curious about the original vibe... I can really feel the aura of poets and history that is still attached to the old walls ..
I thought it was just an ordinary tourist spot, but it turned out to be full of stories ,, from ruins to a gathering place for artists .. Crazy, how cool !!
I really like places like this .. Makes me want to write about similar experiences too, who knows we can inspire each other 🙌
Wow1 What a fantastic experience. The place sounds magical. I love how you shared the history and your personal memories with it. The cherry syrup is interesting, I'd like to try this soon.
Glad you liked it and thanks for stopping by.
Thank you very much for visiting.
Hiya, @ybanezkim26 here, just swinging by to let you know that this post made it into our Honorable Mentions in Travel Digest #2583.
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Thank you very much @ybanezkim26 and @worldmappin.
You are very welcome @triplug! it was well deserved. ☀️
Keep up the great work 💪
It's so amazing to see utensils that big 😮 The food also looks tasty 😍 I'd love to dine there 💖 And thanks for sharing the wonderful history of this place ✨
I'm so glad you liked it, and yes, those big utensils were used as props in the filming of a food-themed show.