2009-07-20
Ski at Sahoro
Sahoro is a popular resort with foreigners largely due to the fact that the only Club Med in Japan is situated at the base of the resort. The mountain itself is not as large or demanding on the slopes as the other major resorts, however it offers foreign customers plenty of services not found anywhere else in Japan. The lift network provides fast access with the gondola taking you to the top of the mountain in under ten minutes. The resort is extremely well suited to families, with a variety of activities offerred to infants and children.
Hotel Sahoro and Club Med both offer high class services and lodging. For those who prefer a busy schedule the Club Med will provide you with non-stop acivities all day long. For those requiring a less demanding schedule the Hotel Sahoro is the perfect place to stay.
2009-07-06
Istanbul, Turkey
If you go to Istanbul, Turkey here are 5 places of great interior design that you won't want to miss out while you are there. Check them out! These places are recommended from an Interior Designer in San Diego.
1 & 2 . The first place is the Sofa Hotel and its restaurant, Longtable. It is located right across the street from the Fashion Design Institute of Istanbul.
Address: Tesvikiye Caddesi No. 123
The Hotel Sofa, Lobby Kati
34367 Nisantasi, Istanbul, Turkey
Ph: +90 212 224 81 81
3. Mabel Cikoclata is a chocolate store that has been around since 1947. They have such distinctive and delicious chocolates.
Address: Vali Konagi Caddesi 32/1
Nisatasi, Istanbul, Turkey
Ph: +90 212 225 27 89
mabel.com.tr
4. The fourth place will be BNG Tunel. BNG Tunel is a store for distinctive women clothing both stylish and affordable
Address: BNG Tunel
Tunel Meydani 14
Beyoglu Istanbul 34420, Turkey
Ph: +90 212 251 97 26
bng-design.com
5. Last but not least we have the Spice Bazaar. I recommend everyone to go to the Spice Bazaar rather than the Grand Bazaar. I got a little overwhelmed with the Grand Bazaar between all the junk they sell and the jewelry stores that sell all the small pieces. At the spice bazaar, the merchants let you try various kinds of candy that are called "Turkish Delight". These make a great gift for that special loved one. Also if there is a "chef" in your family the spice set will make a perfect gift. He or she will be thrilled. As far as interior design goes, the glass vases are pretty and would look great in someone's contemporary home, but with the airlines and their weight restrictions I think and recommend it would be better to ship the items home. It would be cheaper in the long run!
1 & 2 . The first place is the Sofa Hotel and its restaurant, Longtable. It is located right across the street from the Fashion Design Institute of Istanbul.
Address: Tesvikiye Caddesi No. 123
The Hotel Sofa, Lobby Kati
34367 Nisantasi, Istanbul, Turkey
Ph: +90 212 224 81 81
3. Mabel Cikoclata is a chocolate store that has been around since 1947. They have such distinctive and delicious chocolates.
Address: Vali Konagi Caddesi 32/1
Nisatasi, Istanbul, Turkey
Ph: +90 212 225 27 89
mabel.com.tr
4. The fourth place will be BNG Tunel. BNG Tunel is a store for distinctive women clothing both stylish and affordable
Address: BNG Tunel
Tunel Meydani 14
Beyoglu Istanbul 34420, Turkey
Ph: +90 212 251 97 26
bng-design.com
5. Last but not least we have the Spice Bazaar. I recommend everyone to go to the Spice Bazaar rather than the Grand Bazaar. I got a little overwhelmed with the Grand Bazaar between all the junk they sell and the jewelry stores that sell all the small pieces. At the spice bazaar, the merchants let you try various kinds of candy that are called "Turkish Delight". These make a great gift for that special loved one. Also if there is a "chef" in your family the spice set will make a perfect gift. He or she will be thrilled. As far as interior design goes, the glass vases are pretty and would look great in someone's contemporary home, but with the airlines and their weight restrictions I think and recommend it would be better to ship the items home. It would be cheaper in the long run!
2009-07-02
Soul Food - You Will Miss
While designer boutiques and cafes spring up in Seoul, I will share to you my travel experience with some sections of Seoul. This capital of South Korea offers silk worm snack foods and street jazz.
The place. It was a clear spring evening, outside Tongdaenum stadium, west of Seoul. Hundreds of teenagers mill around waiting for the clock to strike 8 p.m. I wonder if it is not a soccer match or a pop concert they have come to see. Their excitable chatter would lead me to believe otherwise.
Oh I see! The big attraction lies across the road at the Migliore department store. A 14th floors of thrifty glamor fashions and the latest arcade dance machines. Or maybe a guest pop group appearance awaits the crowd. Migliore's night-owl business hours (8 p.m. to 5 a.m. daily) have made it a beacon for Seoul's restless and hip-to-the-groove youth. And at 8:06 p.m. the first transactions are rung though. Less than eight hours after Migliore closes its doors, another hive of shopping opportunity will abuzz on the other side of the city.
We inched our way up the base of the imposing Mount Namsan, Myong-dong district, a new face of Seoul. Here we saw sleek office complexes rise over bustling local markets, Eastern and Western fashions. Coffee is the beverage of choice.
The food. Commerce is certainly the force driving the capital these days. But I find it's worth noting about our travel to Seoul is when dinner time approaches. All our wheeling and dealing, haggling and bartering, suddenly stops. We and the citizens of Seoul get down to the very serious business of eating and drinking.
I believe that there is a growing demand for traditional home-cooked food that has created an enormous range of dining possibilities for travelers and visitors to Seoul. I find it the most challenging part of dining out in Seoul is where to pull up a seat at hundreds of food stalls, restaurants and even street kitchens.
We sit down at one of these stalls and found out our fellow diners could be a mechanic chewing thoughtfully on a pig's trotter. I saw a group of immaculately-dressed office ladies tucking into a fish head stew. I find the aromas of their dishes excite, and at the same time, completely confuse my senses. I'm still curious, odors fill the night air along the north side of Jongno Street back towards the Seoul's city center. Oh! It's peondaegi, or boiled silkworm larvae, wafting from dozens of street carts.
Outside Danseonsa Theater, I spied elderly women spooning steaming critters into paper cups and selling them to passers-by for US$0.95 (1,000 won). I speared them with the toothpick provided and I swallow it as quickly as possible. It is at the back of T'apkol Park that I finally found an antidote for the powerful silkworm aftertaste. There are a handful of stores specializing in traditional medicine, called hanyak.
Clusters in the alleys to the north, are easily recognizable by the bell jars of snake wine in their windows. Together with dried reptiles, exotic-smelling herbs and animal parts, snake meat soup called paem t'ang (don't know if I spelled it correctly), and snake wine, called paem sul. At Cheung Jin Ok restaurant, opened in 1937, located in Jongno district my problem was solved. There is only one dish to choose from, hae jang or the coagulated cow's blood broth served with extra spicy kimch'i.
Did you know? Kimchi is an absolute necessity in every Korean meal and can be made from one or more kinds of vegetables including Chinese cabbage, radish by seasoning and salting them with garlic, scallion ginger, chili and fish sauce.
The place. It was a clear spring evening, outside Tongdaenum stadium, west of Seoul. Hundreds of teenagers mill around waiting for the clock to strike 8 p.m. I wonder if it is not a soccer match or a pop concert they have come to see. Their excitable chatter would lead me to believe otherwise.
Oh I see! The big attraction lies across the road at the Migliore department store. A 14th floors of thrifty glamor fashions and the latest arcade dance machines. Or maybe a guest pop group appearance awaits the crowd. Migliore's night-owl business hours (8 p.m. to 5 a.m. daily) have made it a beacon for Seoul's restless and hip-to-the-groove youth. And at 8:06 p.m. the first transactions are rung though. Less than eight hours after Migliore closes its doors, another hive of shopping opportunity will abuzz on the other side of the city.
We inched our way up the base of the imposing Mount Namsan, Myong-dong district, a new face of Seoul. Here we saw sleek office complexes rise over bustling local markets, Eastern and Western fashions. Coffee is the beverage of choice.
The food. Commerce is certainly the force driving the capital these days. But I find it's worth noting about our travel to Seoul is when dinner time approaches. All our wheeling and dealing, haggling and bartering, suddenly stops. We and the citizens of Seoul get down to the very serious business of eating and drinking.
I believe that there is a growing demand for traditional home-cooked food that has created an enormous range of dining possibilities for travelers and visitors to Seoul. I find it the most challenging part of dining out in Seoul is where to pull up a seat at hundreds of food stalls, restaurants and even street kitchens.
We sit down at one of these stalls and found out our fellow diners could be a mechanic chewing thoughtfully on a pig's trotter. I saw a group of immaculately-dressed office ladies tucking into a fish head stew. I find the aromas of their dishes excite, and at the same time, completely confuse my senses. I'm still curious, odors fill the night air along the north side of Jongno Street back towards the Seoul's city center. Oh! It's peondaegi, or boiled silkworm larvae, wafting from dozens of street carts.
Outside Danseonsa Theater, I spied elderly women spooning steaming critters into paper cups and selling them to passers-by for US$0.95 (1,000 won). I speared them with the toothpick provided and I swallow it as quickly as possible. It is at the back of T'apkol Park that I finally found an antidote for the powerful silkworm aftertaste. There are a handful of stores specializing in traditional medicine, called hanyak.
Clusters in the alleys to the north, are easily recognizable by the bell jars of snake wine in their windows. Together with dried reptiles, exotic-smelling herbs and animal parts, snake meat soup called paem t'ang (don't know if I spelled it correctly), and snake wine, called paem sul. At Cheung Jin Ok restaurant, opened in 1937, located in Jongno district my problem was solved. There is only one dish to choose from, hae jang or the coagulated cow's blood broth served with extra spicy kimch'i.
Did you know? Kimchi is an absolute necessity in every Korean meal and can be made from one or more kinds of vegetables including Chinese cabbage, radish by seasoning and salting them with garlic, scallion ginger, chili and fish sauce.
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