Showing posts with label Chinatown. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chinatown. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

urban curry



On Broadway, among the flashing neon, one can order up a plate some of the most exquisite curry I have had in San Francisco. You can actually taste the tomatoes in the chicken tikka masala sauce at Urban Curry, and the flat screens blasting flat-bellied Bollywood beauties dancing in colourful saris just adds to the deliciousness.



If you find yourself craving some Indian food and are in the North Beach/Chinatown area, do drop into Urban Curry— it's oh so yummy.

Urban Curry
523 Broadway, between Kearny and Columbus / SAN FRANCISCO

415 677 97 44

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

long-lost love



I was overwhelmed with all sorts of emotions during my two and a half days in San Francisco. I missed my grandad terribly, and every street I walked down held some lost memory that filled me with longing and nostalgia. I had loved living in San Francisco. It's a city full of action and adventure— I had my dear friends, my favourite haunts, and the food— oh the food! I was visiting an old love who I never quite lost feelings for, but I know deep down inside that we just can't be together.

Sunday, August 2, 2009

nob hill / china town

Grace Cathedral on Nob Hill.


When I first moved to San Francisco, I spent loads of time in Chinatown— not touristy Grant Street, but Stockton and its side streets. I bought my produce from the crowded little markets, had to defend my spot in line for coconut rolls at the AA Bakery on Stockton, and picked up drippy reddish ducks hanging in the window of restaurants. I forget the name of the place I used to get the ducks from, but the guy with the cleaver would always say a bunch of stuff to me in Cantonese, and I'd just smile with that "I don't understand" look and he'd laugh. I loved the madness of Chinatown— I learned how to glide through the crowds without colliding into people (which is a feat, let me tell you) and I knew which side of the street had the barrels of dried sea creatures whose smells I wanted to avoid. While most people only explore Grant, I recommend taking a little detour through Stockton if not only to see the extreme contrast between the two. Stockton is grittier and busier, and is worth trekking up to get a coconut roll at AA Bakery, which is between Jackson and Washington. Talking about these rolls is making me think I'll need to stop by tomorrow morning...