Category: travel
11/11/07 04:52 - 49ºF - ID#42080
Toronto
Friday night we stayed at the Doubletree Hotel where we were greeted with warm gooey cookies. What a welcome! We also took advantage of the indoor pool and shoved small children aside to ride the water slide which did not measure up to the expectations (e:drew) had fed me. But that's not why we visited Toronto.
First stop of the day, Chinatown:
More specifically, Bright Pearl Restaurant for Dim Sum. It was my first dim sum experience and in my haste I settled for steamed dumplings when I should have held out for more fried dough concoctions such as the fried dough stuffed with red bean paste pictured on the bottom. Drew had the fried squid on the right and we both had the sticky rice with pork wrapped in a leaf on the left.
We wandered around looking for lucky cats to add to the lucky cat collection, but no luck...
but we did enjoy the sights....
And I also found my favorite fruit from south asia...rambutan....
We visited the largest mall in the area. I'm not a shopper but it was an incredible view of consumerist culture....
We stopped by India Land to celebrate Diwali. India land was only two blocks long, not much to see, and the celebrations weren't hopping when we got there, so off to other things...
We wandered around some more. Drew had an improv workshop and by the end I was exhausted and ready to go home.
(e:Leetee) asked for impressions from a first time visitor. The public transportation system was incredible. The city was clean. People were really polite and really helpful. There was a whole range of accents outside of what I think of as the Canadian accent so I was a little intrigued. I didn't see a lot of historical sights, buildings, homes, streets, everything looked really modern, but maybe I didn't see those areas. Restaurants were everywhere. I swear I saw a sushi restaurant on every corner. I thought that was kind of funny. It seemed more expensive than Chicago, but less expensive than New York. So even though I really liked it, we probably won't be living in Toronto any time soon. But all in all, can't wait to visit again.
Permalink: Toronto.html
Words: 410
Location: Buffalo , NY
Category: life
11/09/07 09:34 - 40ºF - ID#42055
I wanna be a sorority girl....
I'm going to the meeting of an elite women's social group. It's actually not that elite, but it's fun to pretend it is. It's basically a sorority for women. I never did the social sorority thing in college, but this sorority is a business/social organization that supports women in education. My mommy was in it and she is sponsoring me. But sort of like sororities, I have to go to meetings at all the different chapters in the area and I have to be invited to join a chapter...and oh, the drama!
After only 2 meetings, I was invited to join chapter A. But, oh, this isn't the chapter that I want to join. I want to join chapter B. So I'm going to all the events and meetings of chapter B in hopes of securing an invitation from this chapter. But meanwhile, I don't want to decline chapter A's invitation quite yet because maybe it's the only invitation I'll get. So I have to dance around any questions from chapter A about why I haven't accepted their invitation while I'm dropping hints to Chapter B, that I want to join them.
So, therefore, I am sending my husband and friends off to the TMBG concert without me.
Permalink: I_wanna_be_a_sorority_girl_.html
Words: 252
Location: Buffalo , NY
Category: life
11/06/07 09:15 - 39ºF - ID#41998
I didn't read the fine print
This weekend after a long break from the Buffalo News, I picked it up again and remembered why I stopped buying it. There are a lot of things I like about Buffalo, the local paper is definitely not one of them. And I WANT to like the local paper, because I like to keep up on the local news. But I give up. I'll just catch up on local news via Buffalonews online.
So I wandered over to the NY Times and it seduced me all over again. In my lust for a good Sunday paper, I failed to fully comprehend the rates. It really looked like the price was $3.25/week for the Sunday paper and for the first 12 weeks you would get it at 50% of the rate...turns out $3.50 is the 50% off the rate price. After 12 weeks it jumps to $6.50. Stupid, stupid me. I can get it for $5.00 at the General Store on the corner. So now I have to be smart enough to remember to cancel it after 12 weeks else I'm going to be paying $1.50 for the privilege of having it delivered to my door instead of walking down the street less than a block to buy it for $5.00.
Permalink: I_didn_t_read_the_fine_print.html
Words: 208
Location: Buffalo , NY
Category: food
11/04/07 03:35 - 50ºF - ID#41978
A spiced up life
Going clockwise from the top left hand corner: Trinidadian spice mixture of coriander seeds, cumin seeds, fennel seeds, peppercorns and mustard seeeds; Roasted sichuan pepper and salt; Sesame Salt; and Sesame seed seasoning which is sesame seeds, salt peppercorns and a whole dried red chile.
I spent maybe an hour roasting the spices in a pan (see below) and then grinding them in our coffee grinder. The coffee grinder is the best thing I've ever sneaked out of my parent's house!
I also made clarified butter flavored with shallots, garlic, cardamom pods, cumin seeds and oregano. I use in small quantities on vegetables. I would have taken a picture of that but (e:Drew) left and took the camera with him. See (e:tinyplinyID)#41670 for a description of clarified butter in the coments section.
Permalink: A_spiced_up_life.html
Words: 234
Location: Buffalo , NY
Category: life
11/01/07 09:11 - 43ºF - ID#41925
Halloween
Halloween is even more fun when you get to share it with a person from Malaysia who has never seen or heard of Halloween before. We went all out and carved pumpkins, toasted seeds, and coached him in handing out candy to the little ones. It's fun to see Halloween through the eyes of someone who has never participated in it before.
Here's our pumpkins!
Permalink: Halloween.html
Words: 120
Location: Buffalo , NY
10/29/07 11:00 - 53ºF - ID#41877
Missing Philly
Kelly Dr. is beautiful year round and everyone jogs on the path along the river, and I did too. It's an upscale meat market.
I love the row houses in Philly. These row houses were the homes of famous individuals in the late 1700s, but by the 1950s urban blight almost caused them to be destroyed. Now they go for easily $1million.
Best art museum I've ever been to. Drew and I had membership passes and went there every Friday night to listen to Jazz when we were dating.
When I first moved to Philly, I'd never been to such a big city and I wandered around the Benjamin Franklin Parkway gawking at the buildings like a big ole dumb tourist. To this day, I am amazed I didn't get mugged.
I miss Chinatown... a lot. No Chinatown in Pittsburgh, no Chinatown in Buffalo. Where do I go for my fresh baked moon cakes and buns with red bean paste? And where do I buy my lucky cats now? No, really. I need to know. Toronto?
The best for the last...the mummers parade. The best description I've heard of the mummers parade is Broadway meets Mardi Gras. Its Broadway in terms of the performance and costumes. Its mardi gras thanks to the drunkenness of the participants. I think every year I've fended off a drunk mummer trying to hit on me! You get up early in the morning. Get to Broad St. with your chair and thermos of coffee (because it's January 1st) and you sit for for hours and watch the show and then you leave because it's freezing cold and you watch the rest of it on television. If you're hard core, you stay all eight hours and party with the mummers at the mummers houses after the parade. I'm not hardcore. Here's a link as I'm guessing few of you know much about the Mummers parade.
It also rained gumdrops and snowed skittles in Philly...I'm crossing my fingers that it snows skittles in Buffalo and that I'll love Buffalo as much as Philly.
Permalink: Missing_Philly.html
Words: 440
Location: Buffalo , NY
10/29/07 09:06 - 32ºF - ID#41855
Halloween
And is there really a thing called "Beggars Night" where kids trick or treat on the night before Halloween?
Permalink: Halloween.html
Words: 45
Location: Buffalo , NY
10/26/07 10:20 - 47ºF - ID#41814
The Res'
I was intriqued with the comments I heard when they got back. The words were heavily loaded to indicate negative opinion of the reservation and the people who live there. Here are just a few of the comments:
"I couldn't get off the res' fast enough"
"Well, you know, no one who lives there wants to work"
"Sure, we want to expand our services out to that area, but we don't want an actual agency site on the reservation"
"You don't want to leave your car parked on the reservation"
It was a little curious to me because social service workers are used to working with "undesirable" people in "undesirable" environments. I've seen lots of shit (literally and figuratively) working in this field.
But I'm also curious as to the nature of any prejudices some people might have in this area towards Indians or prejudices/negative attitudes going the other way? What are they rooted in? What are the tensions? (I know about the casinos obviously and the I90 conflict over the tolls).
Permalink: The_Res_.html
Words: 203
Location: Buffalo , NY
Category: news
10/18/07 01:07 - 59ºF - ID#41701
What incredible grace...
Permalink: What_incredible_grace_.html
Words: 58
Location: Buffalo , NY
Category: human rights
10/17/07 08:29 - 59ºF - ID#41682
Yahoo in China
What do you think? Does Yahoo have no responsibiity for the actions of the Chinese government? Were they simply following the laws of the land? Should US companies do business in China if they are subject to the Chinese government in a way that makes them complicit with a human rights violation?
Permalink: Yahoo_in_China.html
Words: 71
Location: Buffalo , NY
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I certainly don't think of historical achitecture when i think of Toronto... the city centre isn't historical the way it is here in Buffalo. Major growth in the city was modern. Quite a few neighbourhoods are historical, outside the core, which is mostly where you were and they tend to be residential.
Montreal tends to be more historical.. as does Quebec City, but don't go unless you like to be mistreated! OK, i am so biased, i hate hate hate Montreal... so totally don't take my word for it, i guess.
It is an expensive city to live in... and a lot of people commute... or have totally fab jobs and rent a closet to sleep in.
Your post makes me want to go... been too long since we have visited. I wonder what is happening at the ROM... and if the construction is done yet!?!