07/28/14 12:31 - ID#59243
Dim sum in Washington DC
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07/12/14 07:27 - ID#59196
NEON TREES
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07/12/14 12:30 - ID#59190
A few of my favorite (Buffalo) things
The pink/orange (pinkorange?) Lake Erie sunrise and sunset
The rooftop patio at Tappo was really nice. If I still lived in Buffalo, I'd spend all my time and money here. Love the view and surroundings.
My husband celebrated his birthday while we were in Buffalo, and our friends treated us to dinner in his honor. I've lived in lots of places, but my favorite people and best friends come from Buffalo. And check out this exquisite menu! Really decadent.
We have a friend in our new town, Baltimore, who visited Buffalo once. The only thing she really remembers about her visit is this place. I took this picture for her to show her the new and improved Bada Bing. Sad they demolished its former home in the Delaware Court Building.
I have always admired the detail in this building's facade, the lovely Market Arcade.
My first apartment in Buffalo, in 2001, was in this building. I had just relocated from NYC and couldn't believe I got to live in this building, with this kind of grand entrance, while I paid less than $500/month for rent. The apartment was pretty swanky, and was nicknamed Cosmopolitan. We also had a ghost, who we believe was the ghost of Charlotte Sidway Spaulding. Pretty cool to include that in the low cost.
M&T Plaza was designed by the same architect as NYC's World Trade Center's twin towers, Minoru Yamasaki. That makes me love this building even more today. It seems a little like an echo.
St. Paul's Episcopal Church was designed by Richard Upjohn, the same guy who did NYC's Trinity Church on Broadway and Wall Street.
The Prudential (Guaranty) Building is by Louis Sullivan, widely known as the "Father of Skyscrapers" and mentor to Frank Lloyd Wright. Awesome.
The Ellicott Square Building was the largest office building in the world when it opened in 1896. True story. It played a hotel in Robert Redford's film, The Natural.
And the lovely and grand interior of the Ellicott Square Building. Just wow.
Vroom...shhh! I've always loved this sculpture downtown, and the name of it as well.
Buffalo Savings Bank, aka The Gold Dome Bank, was built as a replica of the Hall of Music, a temporary building that was part of the 1901 Pan Am Exposition, which was held in Buffalo.
So was the Electric Tower built as a replica of a Pan Em Expo building.
The inside of the gold dome. Hello, gorgeous!
I love this view of Niagara Square from hallway near the elevator bank at the Dulski Embassy Suites. I would highly recommend this hotel. It's beautiful, though I have heard the new glass panels are falling off into the street...and that's not good.
The retro '70s vibe of the Buffalo Metro, reminiscent of a vintage Burger King.
One of the things I absolutely love about Buffalo. I got to live in this adorable and charming little house in Allentown in the '90s, when I was completely poor and drifting. I wonder how many cities offer such gracious housing to their poor youth. Probably not many.
Hope you enjoyed my tour of Buffalo memories!
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07/12/14 11:55 - ID#59189
Dulski Embassy Suites
My husband (then boyfriend) and I bought our house in the West Village, near the Federal Building because it was important to me to be able to walk to work. Within a year of living there, they closed the Federal Building and relocated my office across town. That made me sad, and it was the first in a series of events that got us thinking about fleeing Buffalo. You can see our old house in this photo, taken from the window of our hotel room. Another surreal experience.
These next two photos show what the view looked like from my office in 2001, and what it looked like from the same place (4 floors down) in my hotel in 2014. Trippy.
Another view from the Dulski Embassy Suites, circa 2001.
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I am pretty sure that Believe campaign is pretty much history. I got here in 2009, and I used to see some signs, but not so much anymore. To be honest, I'm not even sure what we were meant to believe in. One of my favorite things about Baltimore is the neighborhood called Hampden. It's where John Waters is from, and it's known to be quirky. People where bee-hives and cat-rimmed glasses and say, "Hon" a lot. (Most of them are aware of the kitsch, I think.) There is a church in the middle of the neighborhood with a sign out in front that reads, "God Bless You, Hon." Now that's kinda funny.
I have not been to any and obviously need to rectify this massive oversight considering this is where I am!
Out of this world brownies: Fat Witch, Chelsea Market.
{Actually, it might be just butter and sugar but who cares at this point.}
Best and most amazing pies: Pie Sisters!
Best Ethiopian: Zenebach Injera
Maryland snooty towns:
Pretty good Chinese & Japanese: Taipei Tokyo (Fallsgrove, Rockville)
Delicious Vietnamese Pho: Pho Nom Nom (Rockville)
Awesome Keralite Food: Kerala Cafe (Rockville)
NYC
Super awesome arepas: Arepa Lady, (Roosevelt brick and mortar store) Jackson Heights. (No veggies here, its a cheese butter heaven... and maybe meat but who cares when the cheese and butter induce a coma. Oh and their smoothies are DIVINE. She makes them with FRESH fruits!!)
Somewhat awesome arepas: Caracas (Manhattan) (I like their veggies concepts!)
I live in Federal Hill (Baltimore) right by the Inner Harbor, and I know the Helmand well. It was one of the first Baltimore restaurants I even went to. I had never had Afghan cuisine until then. Other Baltimore favorites: The Wine Market, Pazo, Petit Louis, Woodberry Kitchen, Wit and Wisdom, Hersh's...too many to mention, really. Hmm, if you like sushi, everybody talks about Ra, and it is very good, but Shoyou (on the other side of the harbor) is even better and it's just a tiny neighborhood place. I don't know the DC scene at all, except for Chinatown, but I would love some recommendations!
When in NYC, go to Ping's in Chinatown (Mott Street) for some of the best Dim Sum.
And I am happy to learn I can get some dim sum in Buffalo next time I am in town, probably around Thanksgiving or Christmas.
Are any of those dimsum vegetarian? And pray tell which is #2 in NYC?
If you are in Baltimore, you cannot miss The Helmand! Absolutely everything on their menu is recommended+++