Malvern – a suburb east of downtown Joburg, sandwiched between Kensington and the industrial suburbs of Denver and Cleveland – is rather downtrodden. Jules Street, the main road through Malvern, is populated mainly by chop shops, small factories/warehouses, and dilapidated apartment blocks.
Unless you’re shopping for auto parts or a used car, there are very few reasons to go to Malvern (especially for those of us on the west side of town). But Pure and Cool Roadhouse is one of those few reasons.
Entrance to the roadhouse on Stanhope Road, just off Jules Street.Pure and Cool Roadhouse.William Ratsoma, a waiter at Pure and Cool, has been working there for 43 years.
Early Dinner and Milkshakes at Pure and Cool
Thorsten and I drove out to Pure and Cool on a Friday afternoon, fighting surprisingly heavy month-end traffic to get there before sunset. Our friend Gail, who lives in Kensington, met us there for a milkshake.
I like the way Gail’s lime-green milkshake contrasts with her pink hair. Thorsten and I ordered chocolate milkshakes and they were great.
Those signature dormer windows are a clue that Pure and Cool was once a Doll House branch. Check out some great pictures of the original Orange Grove Doll House, which sadly closed in 2017, in this Sunday Times article.
We went to Pure and Cool at an odd hour, after lunch and before dinner. But there was still a steady trickle of customers pulling up in cars and eating at the cluster of tables on the edge of the lot.
These two young guys pulled up together in twin VW Citi Golfs, had a quick snack, and left again. I like to think they were on their way to a drag race. For some stupid reason I didn’t go over and ask them.
Pure and Cool has a fantastic menu. It offers the usual burgers, pizzas, and toasted sandwiches that all roadhouses have, along with a list of special sandwiches with names like “Winston Spl”, “Kennie Spl”, and “Jughead Spl”. I went with the “Popeye Spl”, a toasted sandwich with mince (ground beef with a tangy sauce, kind of like Sloppy Joe), egg, cheese, and tomato for R53 (about $3.85).
The Popeye Spl – simple but deceptively delicious.Thorsten pronounced his beef prego roll (basically a steak sandwich with a Portuguese name) to be "okay". You can’t win ’em all. The chips were great though.
I was a little disappointed when my sandwich arrived and it didn’t come with chips. But I didn’t need chips, as it turned out; the Popeye was perfect on its own. The bread was perfectly toasted, the egg was perfectly fried, the meat was perfectly seasoned. Even the tomato slices were perfectly red and juicy – highly unusual in South Africa. I find that South African sandwich tomatoes are usually a disappointing shade of pale pink, with taste to match, even in “nice” restaurants.
I felt super happy after eating the Popeye. I think it was the most flavorful roadhouse sandwich I’ve had yet.
Can you tell I’m happy? (Photo: Gail Wilson)
Unfortunately the lights in the Pure and Cool neon sign aren’t working right now. Nonetheless, I loved the building with its jaunty red stripes and old-school painted signs. I took tons of pictures.
2021 or 1981? Hard to tell.A lonely Pure and Cool staff member.At least the sign at the entrance lit up.
The streak continues: I have yet to visit a roadhouse that doesn’t delight me. Please give Pure and Cool a try. They’re on Uber Eats.
Pure and Cool is at 105 Stanhope Road, Malvern East. Call 072-064-2820.
I guess it’s wrong to say I’ve never blogged about 44 Stanley; I’ve mentioned it countless times over the years (see here and here) when writing about specific restaurants or shops that are there. But I’ve never written a dedicated post about 44 Stanley as a destination and it’s about time I did – especially now, with the holidays upon us.
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It makes me smile, when I see it.