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Business ideas? - Just for fun!

3rd Edition. Vital content training & pack guides avoid common mistakes, bed bugs etc
I am surprised that you don't seem to know roti. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roti

Another flat bread, unleavened and from the Indian subcontinent

Or more generally, flatbread. See https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flatbread

Although some flatbreads that you may have come across when you head down for your kebab and lager, such as Pita are leavened.
 
I had an Indian friend years ago who grew up in India. She taught me to make their flatbread, but she called it chapata.
 
The one from Galicia (the round) and the one from Castilla & Leon. Individually numbered and made by the same people that make the ones you see on your walk.
I had an Indian friend years ago who grew up in India. She taught me to make their flatbread, but she called it chapata.
I make a slightly modified version using a little mashed potato to replace some of the flour. Very similar to the Scottish potato scone but thinner. It stops the flatbread from becoming dry and brittle quite so quickly. Last year in Norway I discovered lompe which are very similar but with a higher ratio of potato to flour. Delicious! It quickly became a staple for my picnic meals in a country where food can be very expensive.

 
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Yes, they even have Greek gyros...a favorite of mine.
I love gyros in Crete. So maybe a Mexican Burrito stand 7 kms from Carrion, and a Greek Gyros stand after another 7 kms? With "free" raki (Greek moonshine) and mescal (Mexican moonshine, you know, with an ugly insect at the bottom for added flavour) at the respective places? Will add 2 € per serving to increase my profit...

Will rise my profit to more than +1 mill more € per year.

Boy, the future's so bright, I have to wear shades...
 
Fail to prepare? reduce your risk by buying this book full of practical info.
2nd ed.
With "free" raki (Greek moonshine) and mescal (Mexican moonshine, you know, with an ugly insect at the bottom for added flavour) at the respective places?
Once I have my orujo distillery set up maybe we can make a deal. Possibly even produce a special Camino-themed spirit using Cimex instead of Comadia in the bottle?...
 
Once I have my orujo distillery set up maybe we can make a deal. Possibly even produce a special Camino-themed spirit using Cimex instead of Comadia in the bottle?...
I'll accept your moonshine production & delivery to my franchise for a solid 10 cents/centilitre (giving me a 45% profit). We can add permethrin to the booze and thus solve the bedbug problem: No bedbug will ever dare to approach our customers (pilgrims). It will be a win-win blockbuster, bringing a new era to the Caminos: A bedbug-free Camino. Pour in some Cimex for good measure. Also consider to add amphetamin, so people can walk longer days and have worse blisters, Will be good for my Compeed vending machines.
 
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@Bradypus and @alexwalker, you guys are going way past any knowledge I have of spirits, but when I hear Orujo mentioned, @Tincatinker always pops into my mind. If you make it...he will come.
Delicious! It quickly became a staple for my picnic meals in a country where food can be very expensive.
I love it when a man enjoys cooking or baking.
 
€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.
I love it when a man enjoys cooking or baking.
I love to cook. Especially baking. And after spending a few months in India way back in a previous century I especially love to cook Indian-style food. Things like samosas, idli, chapatti, naan and daal. But I also love to bake bread, pizzas and bagels. My wife has no interest in cooking so I have pretty much free rein in the kitchen. Suits me!
 
Yes, they even have Greek gyros...a favorite of mine.
Yep pretty much every type of food you could ever imagine in London, probably along with New York and maybe LA, the world leaders. With colleagues we used to go out for dinner each month and go to a restaurant of a different nationality each time working through the alphabet. So A = Armenian B Brasilan, etc!
 
A selection of Camino Jewellery
Those are fantastic credencials, well done. Almost like the quilts different generations make and pass on to the next. But exactly this point is what I had in mind, see how creative people make their credencials if allowed to.
 
Or maybe, since it's the Portugues, these guys...they're franchising too!

 
3rd Edition. Vital content training & pack guides avoid common mistakes, bed bugs etc
What!? Are you trying to start another war? Ouzo is Greek, Raki (rhymes with barker) is Turkish. I defy anyone to tell the difference.
At least in Crete, you will almost everywhere be served a shot or 2 of raki at the end of a restaurant meal. Ouzo is more expensive to give away...
 
An umbrella rental company: in each albergue you can either rent an umbrella before walking under rain, or giving it back after arriving to the albergue.
No need to carry an umbrella, you just have it when you need it.
"Umbrella-on-demand" could be the name of the company.
(Note: My idea is not free of royalties, it costs a ración of pimientos de Padrón plus a caña)
 
Oh yes ! Timber built nice toilets 1e with paper and warm water to wash your hands
 
Get a spanish phone number with Airalo. eSim, so no physical SIM card. Easy to use app to add more funds if needed.
I also have an idea for umbrellas, but it would be a stand selling sun protective hands free umbrellas at the start of the Meseta in the warm season.
 
A selection of Camino Jewellery
Once I have my orujo distillery set up maybe we can make a deal. Possibly even produce a special Camino-themed spirit using Cimex instead of Comadia in the bottle?...
I believe someone is already making a Camino-themed spirit (a gin) using plants found along the Camino. I think I heard about it on one of the Camino-themed podcasts a while ago.
 
...and ship it to Santiago for storage. You pick it up once in Santiago. Service offered by Casa Ivar (we use DHL for transportation).

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