This is actually harder than I initially realized. I'm careful not to offend, but it's hard to keep my hands from the bag of mixed nuts in my purse.
There are a number of Indian, Korean, Italian and one superb Thai restaurant throughout this city. Apparently Korean food is to Japanese like Mexican is to the Americans. Whether or not that's true, I've sampled all of the above and enjoyed most of it.
Oddly, Japanese food is a little harder to find in our price range. I imagine I'll splurge once or twice for the experience. For now, I'll continue to sample the food in the bakeries (so long as you are not looking for "typical" bread). Mhairi's comment to me was "bread here is atomic, it doesn't grow moldy, get stale, nothing."
Normally I avoid this massive corporate entity when local, small, organic, fair-trade, ANYTHING else is available. Many times in the past,
- non-smoking policy,
- a space to read for hours
- coffee that tastes like something more than water, and
- cheap and large sandwiches (in comparison with the local lunch fair…Starbucks food makes sense on a budget here).
2 comments:
or a soy tazo-chai? Glad you found a quite place to work....and I really enjoy the entries. Thanks
Mom
Linden, isn't that your Jacket from Vietnam? I see pink lining...I have been looking EVERYWHERE for it so I could send it to you! So I am really happy you have it!
Love M
Post a Comment