06.11.2008, 10:08 AM | #61 | |
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06.11.2008, 10:12 AM | #62 |
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I'd conceed that supermarkets have definitely improved in the UK the past few years, but value in terms of eating out I still think is a big problem - although saying even that, it's increasingly no worse than in most of the rest of Europe. I was comparing it with the US which is FAR better value. I've eatern like a king in NY and Ohio on $10, and in parts of Florida I was given a virtual banquet of amazingness for even less. I might be full after spending £5 in London, but that's about it. On the whole I found that food was taken far more seriously in the US than it is in the UK, where it seems to be viewed on the most part simply as fuel.
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06.11.2008, 10:15 AM | #63 |
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everywhere in the US is cheaper than europe, particularly france and the UK.
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06.11.2008, 10:18 AM | #64 |
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Well, the euro has definitely made the whole of Europe much more expensive than it was before. They doubled the prices of a lot of things or increased them.
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06.11.2008, 10:20 AM | #65 |
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fucking hell they have.
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06.11.2008, 10:23 AM | #66 |
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I found restaurants in Paris, despite their reputation, to be incredibly underwhelming. Out of interest, what's the standard of your average restaurant in somewhere like Rome now?
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06.11.2008, 10:24 AM | #67 |
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idk but theres this one restaurant i forgot the name of on the champs elysee that i love love love. they have this chicken that comes with french fries and they put it in some kind of mushroom sauce and it's sooooo goooooood
damn i have been going on about food a lot lately
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06.11.2008, 10:27 AM | #68 | |
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If you'd pay 20 euros for two courses before, you are very likely to pay almost double that price now, especially in places like Milan, which has always been expensive anyway. |
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06.11.2008, 10:29 AM | #69 | |
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I'm not saying we have the best restaurant, the best city, blablabla... but when I go to a restaurant in Paris, I'm never disappointed. |
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06.11.2008, 10:29 AM | #70 |
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One place I was quite surprised had really superb restaurants was Berlin. I'm not talking about the imbis thing but proper sit down affairs that were great value and excellent quality. I don't think Berlin has a big rep on the food map, but I'll say this much: that it was far better than Paris the last time i was there.
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06.11.2008, 10:33 AM | #71 | |
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I wouldn't be able to remember names of specific restaurants, but they certainly weren't the kind that cater solely for tourists (where I'd expect the standards to be low). I wouldn't say the food was bad, but it just seemed far more average than I'd remembered it from past visits. |
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06.11.2008, 10:41 AM | #72 |
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Don't mind me saying this, but I think that you romanticise the States a little too much. I mean, I'm not slagging the place off or anything, still if you talk from a few personal experiences with food over there and then want to believe that the whole place holds the same standards, I am sure that you will be up for some seriously disappointing scenarios.
I don't even know the place well enough to talk about it, but surely it must be somewhere with its ups and downs just like anywhere else. I am certain of that. Americans boardies please confirm. |
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06.11.2008, 10:41 AM | #73 |
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do you remember in which part of Paris you went ?
Well, I've noticed there're too much asian restaurants in Paris nowadays, about 50%. Not that I don't like asian food, but the other kind of restaurants are too few. That sucks. But there still are good restaurants here and there. |
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06.11.2008, 10:44 AM | #74 |
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I was staying in Pigalle but ate out mostly around the Latin Quarter, so admittedly a lot of the restaurants were North African, but by no means all of them.
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06.11.2008, 10:52 AM | #75 |
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Ok, well, there're a lot of kebab/greek food/... in this area, it's difficult to find the good choice.
Well, it's difficult to say there is a standard in every city/state..., it really depends on your tastes, your budget, the area, and your luck... |
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06.11.2008, 10:54 AM | #76 | |
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No problem. I'd not say that all American restaurants are good, just like I'd never say that all British ones are bad. Just that if I made a general comparison I'd say that, on the whole, I found the ones I visited in the US to be of a better standard. I saw a lot of restaurants in America that looked absolutely awful, but i also found that there really seemed little need to go to these, simply because there was always somewhere close enough by that looked far more appealing. I don't know how true that is of all of America, though - and I definitely wouldn't say that eating out in a place like Ohio is better than in London. Better value maybe, but not in actual quality. Also, a lot of this is based on diner/cafe type food. I rarely went to a top grade restaurant in the US, so wouldn't even begin to want to make a comparison based on those. But of course you're ultimately right in that you can't judge a whole country on a handful of experiences. |
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06.11.2008, 11:33 AM | #77 |
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I think it says a lot about San Francisco that nobody is talking about it in this thread anymore.
All I know is that all the food I had was way overrated except for the Chinese and Mexican which was excellent. The homeless problem is out of control. If you ignore a homeless person there they'll fucking harass you and follow you down the street and expect you to just take it. I've had to go there for business about half a dozen times in the past 5 years and you can have it.
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06.11.2008, 11:42 AM | #78 |
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I've seen the musical! Everyone was so......up for it!
PS: Mr. Junky. I love yr sig. best No Reservations ever. |
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06.11.2008, 12:32 PM | #79 | |
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ha ha ha haa haaa haa ok. i still wanna see it though. |
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06.11.2008, 12:38 PM | #80 | |
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