Bangkok Blitz! The Eats!

We had lots of good food in Bangkok, but two places stand out:

We went to Harmonique after our first night at the night market.  But before I describe the place and food I must make a slight detour about out detour.

Before heading to the market, I had carefully studied the skytrain and subway maps to determine the best way to get there.  Which was two stops on the skytain to subway for two more stops.  This had the advantage of allowing us to ride the subway, which had these really magnetized button-type things that worked as tokens.  Way cool.  However, the downfall of this plan was, as we discovered later, it took longer than if we had just walked.  What can I say: it was a forest/trees moment.  Of course, we learned this painful lesson when I led us out the wrong side of the market, and, thinking we heading for a different skytrain station, headed in the opposite direction of where we wanted to go.  And when we finally got to the station (after consulting pedestrians and a police offer and after a long walk down a dark road), it was the station not 3 blocks from our hotel.  Which meant that, to go to dinner, we had to get back and the skytrain and take two trains to get to dinner.  More negative points for me.

So Harmonique.  It was located just down from one of the express boat piers.  You enter through a little store front with antiques and pass into a lovely courtyard with ambiance coming out the yin-yang.  The food was delicious too.  Our favorite dish was the appetizers for two, which had an especially delicious chicken on a stick.  The stick was actually lemongrass and gave the chicken a lovely, moist lemony flavor.  There was also a delicious crab cake and friend crab meat stuck back in the top of its shell.  Oddly, this was the second time we had seen the latter, which was served on out Halong Bay boat.  

Our other favorite restaurant – and easily the best meal on our trip – was Baan Khanita.  It was after our second market night, but this time the walk was a little better, i.e., in the right direction.  We had delicious food.  First, they bring make your own spring rolls that you wrap in leaves.  Then we had a minced pork dip served with sticky rice crackers.  Totally yummy.  We then shared red duck curry, which was totally wonderful.  A tops last meal for Maura before she headed back to the States. 

Day 7: Halong Bay reaffirms my faith in Vietnam and we don’t freeze our patookases off

February 4

We got picked up by our Buffalo Tour mini van at our old hotel (Church Hotel gets thumbs up, but you gotta pester them to make sure your room is available so they don’t send you to their lesser sister hotel) and we met our travel companions. Lindsay and Mark are English/Zimbabwean and Irish/South African, respectively, based in New Jersey, but living in Beijing. Yeah, it took us the better part of the three hours drive to figure all that out.

We stoped en route at an artisan shop selling wares of handicapped children. It sounds like forced buying, but the stuff was beautiful. If others hadn’t have been waiting on me, I probably would have bought every embroidered piece of fabric, bag, handkerchief in the place. I showed great restrain and only spent $45, and I now regret . . . not having spent more. Is it possible to suffer from non-buyers remorse? I especially regret not buying fabric for a shirt or dress that I will almost certainly have made in Hoi An. The buying begins . . . [Ah, the sad irony. See future posts.]

dsc_0278.jpg Our next stop was the Halong City wharf, where literally hundreds of junks were parked waiting for their next round of tourist. Junks are old-school Asian-looking boats that have been made over into floating hotels and restaurants in varying degrees of luxury. Ours was quite nice. I wonder (again) whether this is an aesthetic the Vietnamese actually like, of if it is a play for tourists. Either way, I ate it up.

dsc_0273.jpg Aside from our car mates, the other boat guests were a middle-aged Quebecois couple and a really cute older German couple with a son who was only seen at mealtimes. O-D-D. The rooms are quite nice and we had our first showers since Friday morning [and this was Monday afternoon -- G-R-O-S-S].

dsc_0302.jpgWe sailed out of Halong Bay while feasting on a panoply of fish — shrimp, crab, squid (which I tried and still didn’t like), banana fish (or something similar), and clams. Our desert was dragon fruit, which on the outside is a cross between a pomegranate and an artichoke, on the inside looks like poppy seed bread, and tastes like kiwi. They had peeled the tough outer skin off, leaving the hot pink rind and the white fruit flecked with black seeds. Mark and I worked on a plan to grow dragon fruit in the U.S. I think that plan will go far.

Oh, yes, it seems we are to be Mark and Lindsay’s dining partners for the trip. It’s like being at the captain’s table on the Love Boat. (We were definitely the “A” Table.) I guess that would make the all but incomprehensible guide Long our Julie. The Canadian man and I bonded over our Nikons. We compared lenses. His was bigger.

dsc_0274.jpgAfter lunch, we sailed through the bay. I don’t think my descriptions will do it justice, so I will have to rely on my pictures [if I am ever able to upload them. Blerg!]. Unfortunately, I don’t think those will do it real justice because, even though it is warmer (though still jacket weather), it is cloudy. Anywhose, here is my best effort at a description: the bay is full of hundreds of mountainous islands (karsts) cause when the limestone eroded away, leaving fascinating shapes standing. There are only three places where karsts like this and they are all in Asia (Guilin in China and Krabi in Thailand near where we are going to the beach.). Which kind of makes you wonder why they get their own word.

We stopped at an island and got off. I thought we were going for our bamboo boat trip, but was instead duped into climbing up 1000 steps to see a view that was . . . approximately what I had seen from 1000 steps down, just higher. I thought I had done my vigorous mountain climbing for a few days, but evidently not. Okay, the view was amazing, especially from the halfway point. There we were again duped by another Canadian (“Where are you from, eh?” “New York. And you?” “Canada.” Nooo, really?), who said the view at the top was TWICE as good as the halfway view. Whatevs, we got to the top and our Quebecois dude took a rather nice picture of us. It helped that we had just showered.

We then motored to a harbor where (it appears) we are spending the night. We took the promised bamboo boat, piloted by one of our crew, through a tunnel created by erosion into a lagoon that was surrounded totally by mountains. (I am sure that has a specific name, but you will just have to live with my description.) Aside from some chatty Spaniards (who had harassed me at the first stop) [and who we saw again in the Hoi An airport the next day] and some rowdy Vietnamese kayakers, it was extraordinarily peaceful. Just amazing.

We are now back on the boat waiting for dinner. It is starting to get a little chilly. Boo.

Update: We had yet another sea of fish for dinner. More shrimp, more crab, more squid (which I tried again and still didn’t like), a whole mystery fish, etc. And, what a surprise, we were lights off sometime before 8:30.

Day 5: Bean Soup, Dead People Rice, and Hot Pot!

February 2

The day began, or did last night end?, with the overnight train from Hanoi to Sapa. We were doing the “luxury” tour of Sapa, and thank God, because otherwise we never would have been able to figure out which train to get on. Anywhose, there was some mix up about when we were getting picked up, so we arrived at our old hotel and, eep, we had 30 minutes to make our train. So rush rush rush to the station, and then to the train, with Maura and me jointly carrying my bag while running to keep up with our guide. It certainly was not Grand Central with orderly doors leading to orderly trains. Instead we were running up and down tracks, crossing over railroad ties, and dashing down the length of our train to get to our car. Once there, things settled down considerable. We were thrilled to discover that our berth wasn’t freezing and that we had big blankets to cover up with. We had splurged an extra $15 each to have our own berth, which we promptly locked. I still managed to spend most of my mostly sleepless night convinced that highwaymen were trying to break in and steal Maura, or, worse, my camera.Of course, none of the getting to/on the train would have been possible without our excellent guide for the trip. His name was something like Co Gau, but he declared it was too hard to say and told us to call him by his nickname, U.K. Easy enough.We were heading, as I said before, to Sapa, a mountain town in North Western Vietnam, originally established by the French as a vacation spot for their soldiers. It was supposed to mirror the temperature of Europe [yes, perhaps Hamburg in February]. It is the center of tourism for “visiting” (really more like viewing or harassing) the nomadic hill tribes that have wandered between Thailand, Laos, China and Vietnam for centuries. We were actually dreading the weather even before we go there because it is much higher in elevation than Hanoi (about a mile above sea level).We arrived in Lao Cai — the town with the train station that is about an hour from Sapa and 4 km from China (China!) — at 6 am. When we got off the train, we were again glad to have a guide, because we were immediately accosted by touts offering “Sapa tour.” After a few minutes (okay, seconds), we reconnected with U,K, who led us through the morass of touts. When we walked out of the station, there was literally a wall of drivers, each hoping to find a fare to Sapa. U.K. spotted out guy and away we went. As we drove to Sapa, it was clear that the weather would be dreaded “bean soup,” with all the beautiful views obscured by a dense, gray fog. Bean soup. Bean soup. dsc_0195.jpgWe heard so much about bean soup that we started craving the stuff. I wanted some Black Bean Soup with a dollop of sour cream, while Maura opted for the pasta fagioli. But we only got the abstract variety, which kept us for seeing any spectacular views, or really much of anything.We also stayed in the cooooldest hotel outside of those hotels made of ice in Norway. We had two beds, but stripped one of all the sheets and blankets and huddled together in one bed. There was perhaps some little cuddling involved. Mind you, we had splurged on the “luxury” tour, and paid a pretty penny to stay in a hotel room so cold we couldn’t even shower. Especially since there was no hot water. I took a quick bird bath before retreating back to the bed and it was really more of a punishment than a cleaning. [Compare someone else's pic of what it should look like with my picture.]

dsc_0103.jpgOur first activity was to hike down to Cat Cat village, a Black H’Mong village. The different tribes are distinguished by there ethnic group and/or what they wear — Black H’Mong, Flower H’Mong, Red Dao. Unfortunately, [as you will see at some later date when I can upload some pics, grr], most of my good pics are of the Flower H’Mong because I was able to snap them mostly unaware in the Sunday market.

Then, because it was cloudy and bleak, U.K offered to take us up to the top of the mountain above Sapa. Even though I had barely made it down to Cat Cat (and we had our mini van bring us back up), we agreed. We were joined by Erin, an American traveling solo for 6 months throughout Asia. What a rock star, no? She had done India and Nepal for two months without problems, but was finding Vietnam harder to navigate. After so many frustrations in the South, she decided to do tours of the North. Unfortunately for her, her tour of Sapa mysteriously fell apart when she arrived and she was stuck for 4 days with nothing to do. Hmm, maybe that’s why we paid for the luxury tour. So she ended up joining us for the aforementioned hike, as well as our trip to the Sunday market and will be sharing our train berth with us back to Hanoi. You just got to help a sister out.

dsc_0110.jpgSo the mountain was a lovely botanical garden type thing, with a walkway that winded to the top. It would have been really amazing had we been able to see something, but I digress. It was here that U.K. told us about dead people rice. Here is his story:

My father was in the Vietnamese army and was stationed in Laos for 22 years. Sometimes he would get stranded in the jungle and have to eat the bark of this tree, which is like sugar cane. He was a missile expert [Query why a missile expert was trolling around the Laotian jungle].

My father was stationed for several months in a small village in Northern Laos. When I was a little boy I would come visit him. The villagers liked him very much and liked me too. One time I went and it was a very unfortunate time. A man had died and, when that happens, they tie the dead person to on a tree and everyone comes to see the person. All of the family members put rice in his mouth. At the end of three days, they take the rice out of his mouth, mix it with other rice and cook and eat it. My father said they would hate me because I refused to eat it, so he said I should sleep on the bank of the stream for a night and I would be accepted again.

[Wait . . . it gets worse.]

They also put a pot under the man in the tree to collect the juices that came out of his body. After several days, they burnt some bamboo and mixed it with the juices, and cooked meat in it. Then they eat the whole thing.

And I thought pig’s feet were gross.

After the walk, we went to a restaurant that U.K. either part owns or gets a kick back from for bringing tourists. Such things are frowned on in the West, but seem de rigeur for the East. All day, he had been talking about how we had to try hot pot (and dog, turtle, and cobra heart, but that clearly wasn’t happening). Hot pot is a traditional Vietnamese dish that is perfect for the cold weather. We had heard almost as much about the &%@ hot pot as we had the ^*%& bean soup. It soon became apparent that we hadto go to Red Dzao and have black chicken hot pot. Now, I thought “black chicken”" meant blackenedchicken. No, turns out the chicken in fact has black skin. Well, greyish really. And bumpy. (You understand where the phrase goose pimples comes from.) And it comes to the table raw.

dsc_0111.jpgHot pot is a bowl of seasoned broth with baby bamboo, parsnips (not potatoes as promised), carrots (which for some reason we were never offered. I think U.K. didn’t like them.) heated by a steno oven. Then you throw in the raw chicken and let it simmer. There was some concern on our part that the chicken wasn’t going to get fully cooked. I even asked my personal public health expert (aka Maura) how she felt about the chicken cooking issue. She chose to remain silent. Turns out the chicken cooked about 45 minutes before we ate it. In the meantime, U.K. kept feeding greens into the hot soup. They would cook for a few minutes and then we would serve them to us with the baby bamboo. It was really quite good — the broth had a strong taste of ginger. And it was wonderfully warm. The black chicken was . . . good. It tasted like . . . well, chicken. But after my 15th piece, my enthusiasm for the chicken started to wane . Did I mention the skin was grey? Plus, it was really, really bony. So each piece of chicken was approx. 70% bone. And 15% grey skin.

The idea of the hot pot (and the flavor) is a great one for a cold soggy night. Your bowl is constantly being refilled with really hot vegetables, meat and soup. U.K. did most of the cooking for us, and kept plying us with “baaby baamboo”and “blaaack chicken.” Then, out of nowhere, he offered us each some pork. Surprised, I asked where the pork came from; was it already in the soup? “From the powder.” Reconstituted pork? I gotta guess not and that this was another lost in translation moment. At the very end, U.K. threw in some delicious shrimp-flavored ramen noodles. No kidding, delicious. Top it off with some rice wine (think pink tequila) and you have a great cold weather treat.

During dinner, we talked with U.K. and the hotel owner about (what else) the American primaries [a conversation we have had numerous times since]. They loooved Bill Clinton (he lifted the trade embargo against Vietnam), hate Bush (ahem), and have a strange fascination with McCain. It doesn’t seem like they fear, hate, or like him, they just have a curiosity about him. In fact, several Vietnamese people have reminded us that he spent five years in the Hoa Lo Prison (Hanoi Hilton — which we didn’t go see). (U.K.’s favorite joke, aside from bean soup, was “There are two Hiltons in Hanoi. One is prison. The other is 5 star hotel.”

Then we walked from the cold restaurant, through the cold, wet streets, to our frigid hotel room. There was some more lite-cuddling, followed by the best sleep I have had in a week. I even got somewhat warm from the neck down after about three hours.

Day 3: Where we finally run into tourists, remember why we hate tourists and try to stay dry.

January 31

We knew before we left the States that Hanoi was going through a cold snap. It is usually about 65 degrees F during January, but weather.com had been showing us 55 and cloudy. That’s fine, still warmer than NYC. The first day buoyed our confidence: it was like Dublin in July, cloudy misty, but overall refreshing. Unfortunately, today is more like Boston in March, with a constant soaking cold rain. Ugh. [I read today a letter from Ho Chi Minh from 1952 where he says that Hanoi has 10 days of winter. So glad we were there for 7 of them.]

dsc_0050.jpgWe started off the day in relative dry conditions at the Army Museum, which was built in 1956 to celebrate the victory over the French. It was expanded over the decades to include other (ahem) Western imperialist aggressors (their words). It was very interesting to see how the other side describe the war. Of course, I know/knew precious little about the war because every history teacherdsc_0051.jpg I ever had lingered lovingly over WWII and, when we got to the end of the semester, said, “And then there was Korea and Vietnam.” The choice of language in the museum alone would have made for an excellent high school history essay. Dien Bien Phu (about which I am now and expert) was a “glorious victory” not a “blood bath” or a “blunder of French military arrogance.” The “whole world” protested the American involvement in the war, though the whole world mostly consisted of some Eastern Bloc countries and hippies. After the Americans left, South Vietnam was “liberated” from the “imperialist puppet” government. [Though I did later hear a Vietnamese guide from the north talk about it as a civil war.] (Query whether those fleeing the Northern armies, or those sent to reeducation camp felt “liberated.” See, I am becoming quite an expert. A little knowledge is a scary thing.) But, all in all, much was learnt, perspectives were gained, horizons broadened. An interesting museum.

dsc_0062.jpgThen we walked over to the Temple of Literature, a collection of pagodas and courtyards dating back to the 11th century that was the site of Hanoi’s university. I don’t know whether it was the increasingly steady rain, the hoards of tourists, or the fact that it was hard to tell was was centuries old and what was built last week to commemorate some glorious imagined past, but we were underwhelmed. After seeing only a smattering of tourists in the Old Quarter yesterday, it was obvious that this is where the tour buses dropped their cargo. Least favorite part: a Vietnamese man bowed at the foot of a bronze statue and touched his head, and a woman near me poked her husband and said, “Look, Bob, look!”

An exhibit in a gallery designed to house Buddhist effigiesWe then escaped the tourists and the rain by ducking into the nearby Museum of Fine Arts. It wasn’t part of our plan, but it ended up being one of the best places we saw in Hanoi [and really all of Vietnam]. It was very well organized and took you all the way through Vietnamese art from pre-history to the current glorious communist present. Turns out I am a big fan of late 19th century Vietnamese lacquer statuary of the Tay Son period [See picture to the left, which is not mine or even one of my favorites.] I also got to relive my art history glory days by saying stuff that I knew nothing about (what’s an A&S degree for?) like, “Interesting how the early 20th century art reflects Western styles, while post 1946 art (after the war with the French got going) the artists relied on traditional lacquerware.” Oh la la.

We then went to the most delicious restaurant [best meal we had in Hanoi. If I had know Maura's pho was the best there was in the world I would have taken more.] Next time you are in Hanoi, go to Seasons near the West Lake. Yum. We had lots of plans to do an afternoon of Ho Chi Minh sites — a whole day of communist propaganda! — but the rain dissuaded us. Since we couldn’t get a cab (which was amazing because we had been harassed on every street corner with offers for rides), we walked home through the rain. Given the distance and the rain, we likely would have “trudged”, but that traffic certainly keeps you on your toes.

Bedtime: approximately 7:45.

A Long Weekend of Cheese and Other Fun

I am currently on Day 4 of Unemployment 2008.  And, so far, it’s working out pretty well for me. 

I had my last day of work at Evil Corporate Law Firm (love you, Uncle S) on Thursday.  It did really feel fantastic until after I entered my billable hours for (here’s hoping) the last time ever.  Then there was some minor dancing in the hallways.  You know what people on the 9th floor who still have to go to work every day for the foreseeable future hate?  People who are quiting dancing in the hallways.  Mark one point against me for tacky gloating. 

After work, I had my Departure Party, care of Uncle S, at a bar near work.  A 2nd year associate and I decided to have our parties at the same place.  Good thing to because I got two booths smack in the middle of the bar area, crowded with long-black-coat-wearing analysts, and she got the VIP room.  What up with that?  So I brought the 6 people who had come to see me off to her room and partied in style.

The real highlight of the night was dinner at Artisanal with 10 friends from work.  Much fondue eating and hilarity ensued.  We actually shut the restaurant down.  You know it’s bad when they refuse to give you more alcohol because the bar is closed, even after you ask nicely, twice.

Then Friday I drove up to Vermont with friends for the 2nd Annual (at least for me) weekend in Stratton.  And that can only mean one thing – - a trip to Stew Leonard’s.  Where else can you get (two) samples of mini pastrami sandwiches and have a cow mascot wave at you?  I think we ended up with about ten different kinds of cheese and, obviously, pastrami.  That Stew is a sneaky marketer.  But, according to Wikipedia (a shady source at best, I know), he is not a defrauder of his customers, as we were told in Vermont.  He just “forgot” to pay $6.8 million in taxes.  But he passed the savings on to us!!

vermont2.jpgThe trip to Stratton was supposed to mean two days of uninterrupted skiing.  I mean, I brought all my gear, including my helmet, and I rode in the car, both ways, with Kevin’s snowboard as a headrest.  But laziness, my desire to embroider, and Maura S’s cozy fire all kept me safely lazy.  vermont1.jpg[And Vermonteers, for the record, Hestia and Vesta are both Goddesses of the Hearth.  The former is just older and more Greek than the latter.]   I mean, god forbid I fall and twist my ankle before the Big Trip.  So instead, I Helped Save The American Economy by buying things I didn’t need at the outlets in Manchester, Vermont.  Hey, I’ll need warm sweaters when I am back in the States for two weeks in March.  An unemployed girl’s gotta stay warm somehow. 

Unfortch, I forgot to bring my beloved camera with me on the trip.  Thanks to Ben, Michele and the good, non-defrauding people in charge of Stew’s website for keeping iamsd in pictures.