No more Yum Cha…

at Harbor Village. They’re closing. Something about rent going up and not being able to get a new lease.
There seems to be a lot of that going around.
Harbor Village was in Embarcadero Four for close to 20 years and was one of the few downtown yum cha places that was worth the money cuz of the food and the view.
And even though many tong-yahn dismissed Harbor Village as being too “gwai” because of the location, every time I’ve been there, it was 90% Chinese inside. More so than other places here link Ton Kiang or Yank Sing(which is horribly expensive).
Guess I gotta find another yum cha house. Or at least until Harbor Village’s chef opens up a new place.

More Airline Ranting

You know the asinine movies that they show on long haul flights?
The ones that usually suck rocks or are just yeeech? Like, erm, Like Mike, Hitch, The Ya-Ya Spinsterhood, Cheaper by the Dozen, Beautyshop (but they never showed Barbershop, wonder why?), ad nauseum. Movies you normally wouldn’t accept money to watch because they’re bland, simplistic, inoffensive and politically correct (which is bad bad bad).
Well, guess what? That’s EXACTLY why they show them!
Maybe it’s to lull you into a coma so you don’t notice that the sausage that came with your “breakfast” tastes suspiciously like soy…and the service you’re experiencing is crap! =P
Of course, the best cure for this if you’re on a US flag airline is to bring your own snacks (Costco trail mix and Shin Cup come to mind), The Scorpion King on DVD and something to play it on.

US Airlines, bleagh!

Once upon a time, many years ago, traveling was considered a whole experience. It wasn’t just the experience of actually being somewhere else; getting there was part of the experience too. Nowadays, the journey to wherever you’re going to is considered a hindrance (or a necessary evil), hopefully disposed of as quickly as possible.
I was asked recently about my travel addiction and the discussion turned to airlines.

Continue reading “US Airlines, bleagh!”

Yeeeeeeah!

So my favourite daan taat place, the Tai Cheong Bakery, has a new home! And the irony is: It’s across the street from their old location!
From the unlinkable South China Morning Post:
While the $60,000-plus rent is much higher than the $38,000 the bakery had paid, it is considerably lower than the $80,000 the former landlord demanded.
“We’ve decided not to raise the price of our egg tarts despite the rising cost, and people can still get them for just $3.50 each,” Mr Au Yeung said. “As an additional way to help cover the extra rent, we will also sell tea and coffee to take away. It’s trendy and is what people want.
“We treasure our loyal customers and they can expect to find the same Tai Cheong – down to the shop’s old decoration – up and running again next month.”

That’s still a pretty steep rent increase (US$2831 vs. the US$5400 a month that they wanted in the old place), but they will be back in business.
They’re going to have to sell a LOT of coffee/tea. But I’m glad that they are.

oh-oh

I read about the merger of JetStar Asia and Valuair over the weekend.
Corporate types are excited about it. But when that happens, passengers usually lose. Less flights and more expensive tickets.
Look at UAL for example. Each time their union bosses announce a “good thing” (such as being able to purchase “good food” on flights or having “special service” between SFO-JFK), it raises prices on travellers. The end result of this is that now if you fly on a connecting flight from SFO to the East Coast, you don’t get food unless you buy it. I’ll accept that if the fares come down to compensate, but they’ve gone up, especially to JFK. This is because the SFO-JFK run are now served by PS flights. Great for bigshot flyers who don’t have to pay for their own travel, bad for everyone else.
But back to the topic at hand. Does that mean that the brief sunshine of cheap travel in SE Asia is at an end? I rather liked my experience on JetStar Asia on my recent trip to BKK…

Brrrrr…

I was in Los Angeles last weekend.
Went for a fren’s wedding.
Met up with a bunch of old frens from my LA days who are all married also.
I know that once a person gets married, there’s change in the air. And based on my recent experience, the guys change more than the girls.
It’s almost like the guys are forced to close the book on the “single” part of their life and discard everything from that so they can begin the “married” part of their lives. It’s more of a bummer when they were once your “homies”.
The worst part is that I’m now one of two “Last Men Standing”. Disturbing…
Of course if the right girl comes along, maybe I’ll be transmogrified too…

Las Vegas Still Life

There are hawkers all over the sidewalks handing out business cards advertising “services” (heh heh heh, nudge nudge, wink wink).

They used to loiter in front of the hotels until the hotels went legit and wanted them gone.
But they are entitled to hawk their wares on the sidewalk, as long as they don’t block it.
Walking down the strip at night, you collect a lot of these.
One creative way to dispose of them…

Continuing the ice cream theme

So I went with my flatmates to dinner and then to Ghiradelli (say Gear-a -delli) Square for dessert. Well, actually we went to the Ghiradelli Chocolate shop. The flagship shop!

This is called a S’more sundae. It has caramel sauce, hot fudge, marshmallow creme and oh yah, a caramel chocolate square and a maraschino cherry. And there was vanilla ice cream too.
It was soooo loaded that it began to melt just from everyone looking at it.
But I was the one that ate it. Geez, I’m sooooo bad!

Mmmm Coffee!

This makes sense for some reason…

You Are Coffee Ice Cream
Energetic and lively, you are always on the go.
You’re doing a million things at once and doing them well.
You tend to motivate others and raise spirits.
You are most compatible with chocolate ice cream.