Posts Tagged ‘Breakfast Food’
Eat Them All
On the menu lists, there found the words “Please note, in addition to the menu, vegetables and salad is NOT decoration, but they are part of the food too!” This is not intimidation, but the message of a restaurant that fed up with trash left by guests. Restaurants told its customers to eat everything on the plate each for love to the earth. If you do not spend it, the customer must pay the fine and should not be returned.
Yukako Ichikawa chef even 30 percent discount for guests who ate their food demolished in Wafu, Surry Hills, Sydney, who described the “guilt free Japanese cuisine.” “For a sustainable future, we are a bit demanding than most restaurants,” he said in the policy list in the restaurant which has been locked. If customers remain indifferent, they were forbidden to eat again.
Wafu strict policy was welcomed by some people, but also criticized as an act of arrogance. Ichikawa was not affected. “Wafu is not just a restaurant, but also an extension of personal ethics Yukako for food and food,” said a statement on its website Wafu. “We are not only committed to serving foods that maintain and respect their bodies, but also actively dedicated to the understanding of waste, Read the rest of this entry »
Vietnamese Food
Food tells a lot about people and culture that wrap it. From the food we will see the Vietnamese farming culture from the vegetables used, or the fishing and breeding culture from the fish, and how to enjoy the aroma of food through-spice seasoning.
Pho Bo
Being in Saigon, you can enjoy the Pho at the intersection of Pham Ngu Lau and Cong Quynh streets. The Pho is delicious. Pho in the Quynh Pho stall is perfect: the sauce is fragrant, tender flesh, and the slippery rice noodles are delicious. Moreover if accompanied by Vietnamese black coffee.
Bánh Mi
As a former French colony, baguette becomes very commonplace as a breakfast menu in the streets of Saigon, of course, because in Vietnam, even the baguette uses rice flour. Bánh Mi can be bought at sidewalk street Pham ngu Lau, and exactly like Vietnam in a loaf of bread because it includes all the typical things there: the Vietnam bacon, cilantro, coriander, lemongrass, fresh vegetables, and fish sauce.
Bánh Cuon
After tired of walking down the streets of Saigon, you can taste authentic Bánh Cuon at the Huang Lai restaurant. The skin is almost transparent and it is made with rice flour, and filled with vermicelli, shrimp stew, fragrant cilantro, and fresh lemongrass.
Rice seems to be an important part of the nation of Vietnam. Read the rest of this entry »
‘The Most Expensive’ Pancake & Omelet in The World
On the way visit a coral island off the coast of Normandie in northern France known as Le Mont Saint Michel, you can discover a restaurant that sells pancakes and omelets in the area of the Grand Rue. Pancakes and omelettes are the two types of ‘common’ food that can be found everywhere.
If you are jostling with other visitors to get to the Abbaye du Mont Saint-Michel that is located at the top of the coral island; take some time to enter some souvenir shops or just see a list of restaurant menus displayed on the outside wall. I casually look at the menu of a pancakes and omelettes shop named La Mere Poulard. What is surprising about this shop is the price.
A package of pancakes or omelets that is traditionally made in La Mere Poulard, the most famous restaurant in complex of Le Mont, sold for 25 Euros It seems that it is a symbol of Le Mont as so many food products sold in the area with ‘La Mere Poulard’ on it -ranging from pralines, biscuits, ice cream, a restaurant, store name even inn name. There is a saying that: When in Rome, eat as Romans do, meaning that you should try the local cuisine. You may want to spare 25 Euros for a pancake – a special one, of course.
Surprisingly, despite the exorbitant charge, La Mere Poulard restaurant is always crowded with visitors. In fact, many prospective buyers are willing to stand for long outside the restaurant, Read the rest of this entry »
Breakfast in Japan
Buffet breakfast is very popular nowadays and is presented by the majority of hotels in Japan. If by chance you are not staying at the hotel, or if you do not provide lodging facilities that includes breakfast in the price you pay, then you should go to the coffee shop at the nearest area that provides a menu “morning service” which usually can be purchased until 10 o’clock. “Morning service” package menu usually consists of a cup of hot coffee, a small plate of salad, boiled egg and a stack of bread sandwiches. The price ranged between 650 yen – 750. Its starting price is quite cheap compared to a cup of coffee that is mentioned above.
Alternatively, you can also stop at the various international network coffee-shops that are widely available in major cities in Japan, such as Doutour, Pronto, and the most popular one, Starbucks (which now has more than 700 outlets in Japan alone!).
You can also buy some food supplies to supply breakfast for several days at the nearest supermarket. You can buy a few sachets of coffee or tea bags, a pack of bread, a jar of jam, butter, cheese slices, or even a piece of bacon. You can request or purchase the hot water to make coffee or tea in the morning from your accommodation. Read the rest of this entry »