Page 33 - Wizz Magazine: October 2012

OCTOBER-NOVEMBER 2012
WIZZ MAGAZINE
33
and – most importantly – what to eat.
We have great local cuisine,” he explains,
which reflects the complex cultural
influences here. The trick is to know where
to go for the local specialities!” The sun is
close to setting and so we head towards
the banks of the River Vardar, which
bisects the city centre, and settle into
one of the riverside restaurants. Skopje’s
Ottoman heritage is immediately evident
in the appetiser
meze
luscious salads
and freshly baked flatbread. “You must
try some of this as well, it’s very typically
Macedonian,” insists Dime, offering me
a terracotta bowl of
pinjur
,
a delicious
dish of baked peppers, tomatoes, parsley
and garlic. Simple ingredients, elegantly
combined and full of flavour.
Afterwards we stroll along the riverside,
where new buildings and bridges are
springing up seemingly overnight. The
city centre is undergoing an architectural
renaissance, part of Skopje 2014, an
ABOVE:
ECOLOGISTS DIME MELOVSKI AND NATALIJA
ANGELOVA IN THE OLD BAZAAR
BELOW:
STATUE OF
BYZANTINE EMPEROR JUSTINIAN I, WHO WAS BORN
NEAR SKOPJE
MACEDONIAN
FOOD IS
EXCITING AND
FULL OF
FLAVOUR”
DIME MELOVSKI
urban revamp that has already seen the
installation of
that
statue, along with a
triumphal arch, a string of brand new
neo-classical buildings and an army
of statues commemorating famous
Macedonians. There’s a little bit of
everywhere in this project – Budapest’s
waterfront, Paris’s Arc de Triomphe and
London’s Trafalgar Square all spring to
mind – and now, with the completion of
Skopje’s new Bridge of Art, complete with
statues dotted along its length, Prague and
its famous Charles Bridge have become
part of the mix. The scale and cost involved