Sockhopper
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- Nov 16, 2008
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"A steak dinner for two at an average place costs about 50- 100 dollars.":
Here on the French Riviera last night at a resto next to moored, pricey yachts near Cap Ferrat in the French Riviera,we
paid the equivalent of $US87 for dinner for two - a half litre of local wine, 2 seafood starter plates, 2 main courses of fresh fish and grilled scallops, truffled mashed potato, and grilled,fresh vegetables, followed by 2 espressos and a taster plate of 4 homemade desserts off the menu. Water is free always. All (steep) taxes and tips (wait service) are included
in that $US 87 bill. This is a normal price to pay here for what's a good but not luxe dinner in French terms.
Prices here are close to Parisian prices but on a recent stay in Paris, we were surprised to find that meals out in Paris are priced at noticeably less than they are here along the Riviera. That dinner last night was our celebration one of our now having lived here for5 years, although we'd planned to retire on small pensions to BA until all those foreign
currency clampdowns legislated by Arg in 6 months from 2011-2012 swamped our plan overnight.
We can't afford Buenos Aires. Mainly, we could not risk a landlord there demanding more money in rent in any month he
thinks he needs to do that. Here, we are treated as the legal residents and immigrants that we are, not as people who
ought to be well-off just because their income (tiny or large) is sourced abroad.
Spain is way cheaper than France. We often travel an hour by train to Italy whose fabulous cooking, drinks etc cost 2/3 ofFrench prices. We buy all our Italian groceries and plants there too. Saving however one can here and there is the best wecan do.
Here on the French Riviera last night at a resto next to moored, pricey yachts near Cap Ferrat in the French Riviera,we
paid the equivalent of $US87 for dinner for two - a half litre of local wine, 2 seafood starter plates, 2 main courses of fresh fish and grilled scallops, truffled mashed potato, and grilled,fresh vegetables, followed by 2 espressos and a taster plate of 4 homemade desserts off the menu. Water is free always. All (steep) taxes and tips (wait service) are included
in that $US 87 bill. This is a normal price to pay here for what's a good but not luxe dinner in French terms.
Prices here are close to Parisian prices but on a recent stay in Paris, we were surprised to find that meals out in Paris are priced at noticeably less than they are here along the Riviera. That dinner last night was our celebration one of our now having lived here for5 years, although we'd planned to retire on small pensions to BA until all those foreign
currency clampdowns legislated by Arg in 6 months from 2011-2012 swamped our plan overnight.
We can't afford Buenos Aires. Mainly, we could not risk a landlord there demanding more money in rent in any month he
thinks he needs to do that. Here, we are treated as the legal residents and immigrants that we are, not as people who
ought to be well-off just because their income (tiny or large) is sourced abroad.
Spain is way cheaper than France. We often travel an hour by train to Italy whose fabulous cooking, drinks etc cost 2/3 ofFrench prices. We buy all our Italian groceries and plants there too. Saving however one can here and there is the best wecan do.