Showing posts with label places to eat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label places to eat. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Inspire Me Tea

We're back from our vacation, and I think I'm experiencing post vacation depression disorder! I wonder if there really is such a thing. I'm really just in a little bit of a post-vacation funk. It was so much fun that it's hard to come down from such a great time. Today I'm doing things around the house, laundry and whatnot, but also thinking of some fun London places to visit. One place on my list is afternoon tea at the Haymarket Hotel. A friend told me about tea at the hotel and said it's sort of like having tea inside an Anthropologie. I could handle that. It does look inspiring, doesn't it? I wonder if they have high chairs for the wee tea drinkers.

Sunday, August 30, 2009

Columbia Road Flower Market

This morning we went to the Columbia Road Flower Market, a spectacular market in Shoreditch near Brick Lane. We had heard a lot about it and saw beautiful pictures, and it was just what we expected. What a treat! The flowers were beautiful, and the street was lined with great shops and cafes. Columbia Road was packed with people as they made their way through the rainbow of colors, looking for the best deal from vendors who were shouting the prices of their various pots and stems. We also had a great brunch at Campania, which was delicious. I can't wait to go back!











Monday, April 14, 2008

Kyoto

Real geisha in Kyoto! Okay, maybe they're not real--people do pay to get made up like this for fun. But aren't they so pretty with all the pink blooming behind them? This last weekend we went to Kyoto. As our guide book says, "Kyoto is where you find the Japan of your imagination: raked pebble gardens, poets' huts hidden amid bamboo groves, arcades of vermilion shrine gates, geisha disappearing into the doorways of traditional restaurants, golden temples floating above tranquil waters." It was just that. Well, it was just that with hundreds and hundreds of other people soaking it up. Our book didn't leave out that part either. It warned us that Kyoto is an incredibly popular tourist destination, especially during spring. Still, the scenery beyond the masses of people was beautiful. Andrew was a great tour guide for our weekend. Although we picked out which places we'd see together, I was a little more indifferent just because I was up for anything and there were so many choices. Also, Andrew's great at navigating the various train stations and maps we used. He has a compass too. It actually came in handy a number of times. So here's a peek at what we saw.

Comfortable geisha shoes, I think not. Wooden platform flip flops, ugh. And these are sooooo expensive. We passed a shoe store that only carried these, and all of them were between $200-$500! Other places probably sell them cheaper as this was in Kyoto and looked like a specialty geisha shoe shop.

We visited a number of shrines and temples. I looked on the map to double check which ones are shown here, but it's hard to remember just by looking at the names on the map. So for the sake of me not making a fool of myself by naming them wrong, I'll just say I know we went to Kodaiji Temple and Kiyomizu-dera Temple and the surrounding shrines of each, and the next few pictures are from those areas.



The buildings aren't just beautiful outside, but inside as well.


The landscape.


On Saturday night we stayed in a Machiya, a traditional Japanese house. Thanks again to Frances for telling us about this place! We were going to stay in a hotel until she mentioned this place. It was fun to stay in a real Japanese style house. Below is the front door of the house.


The bathroom was our favorite part. All cedar. It smelled great. What you do is sit on the little stool (or stand up) and shower first, then get in the bath. The tub didn't look too comfortable, but it actually was!

Our bedroom. Futons with fluffy comforters.

The sitting area off the bedroom.

The kitchen. Behind that door is the bathroom.

The entryway.

The view from the living room to the garden.

This is a lovely canal that ran through the main restaurant district near our place. In the water are big lights that throw light on the trees above at night. It looked really pretty at night and during the day.

The wonderful restaurant where we ate lunch, Heikichi, which was on Kiyamachi road. We got to sit on tatami mats! This actually wasn't very comfortable. I was wearing a dress and had a hard time sitting nice and lady like, and Andrew's legs fell asleep! Still, it was fun and lunch was great.

Our meal was delicious and probably our favorite Japanese meal so far. We got a lunch set. We had no idea what we were ordering because the menu was only in Japanese and our waitress didn't speak English (and as you probably figured out by now, we don't speak Japanese beyond basics like thank you, which I still have trouble with for no good reason). The lunch was a stew of meatballs with tofu and green onions on top, a side of rice with fish, miso soup and a cabbage and mung bean sprout salad. The meatballs were great! So was the sauce they were in.

On Sunday we went to Fushimi-inari-taisha, which was dedicated to the gods of rice and sake in the 8th century by the Hata family. There are dozens of stone foxes throughout the shrines, which is the god of cereal grains. There are also hundreds of torii, the big orange wooden gates that you see in the pictures. They line a few miles of pathways throughout the shrines. This place was beautiful. The pictures don't capture the atmosphere and the landscape very well, but there were far less people here than the temples and shrines we went to on Saturday, and Fushimi-inari-taisha is nestled in the woods where you can hear birds chirping, water rushing and just take in the beauty of the surroundings in a more peaceful way.


Origami garlands.
Torii lining the paths.


After we left the shrine, we walked to a cafe that Andrew picked out in our guide book and we passed this funky house.

We went to Cafe Bibliotic HELLO! I loved this place. I would like to live in here. It would make a really neat loft apartment. The desserts and tea we had were great, but they also had sandwiches that looked great too. If you go to Kyoto, I really recommend making a stop here. It's just a few blocks from the Imperial Palace Park. You can kick back and flip through the books and magazines they have as well.


Goodbye Kyoto!

Friday, April 11, 2008

Japanese Food is Good!

A few nights ago we ate at a lively restaurant called Kaikaya where the chef enthusiastically posed for me when I asked if I could take his picture. The restaurant is on the not so crazy busy side of Shibuya on a little winding side street filled with other nice looking restaurants. Andrew read some good reviews about Kaikaya online, so we thought we'd give it a try. We sat at the counter and were thoroughly entertained while we ate a delicious meal. The service was a little slow, especially when we were ready to leave, but we still liked the food a lot and had a great time. We're not sure just how Japanese this food is, if at all really, because there were more westerners eating there than any other Japanese restaurant we've been to. In any case, it was very good.

Andrew's sake. They let it overflow into the little square cup. So you get a big sake!


Andrew's sashimi. I didn't have any of it (or the sake), but Andrew said is was amazing. The baby isn't allowed to have any sashimi or sake.


Our fish in the broiler. Poor fishies.


Our fish before.


Our fish after. This was delicious! The butter, lemon, garlic sauce part was the best. We had a few other small plates--a salad and a prawn appetizer--but I didn't get pictures of those.

Cooking away. It was fun to sit at the counter and watch.

One nice thing is they have an English version of the menu. Not every place does, which can be fun if you're up for a surprise. But in my preggers condition, I'm not up for any raw meat surprises. Well, I'm not up for raw meat surprises in any condition. (We've found raw chicken and raw beef dishes on menus at a number of places we've been to.) Oh, and heads up to non-smokers--you're out of luck here. People can smoke in restaurants in Tokyo, and there seem to be a whole lot of smokers. Every place we've been to allows smoking in the restaurant, and a lot of places don't have a non-smoking section, which makes me fussy, but I'm trying to get over it. (I hate cigarettes, even though I used to puff away on those nasty cancer sticks myself.)