Actually, first I would like to tell you about our late dinner att the Bock Bisztro restaurant, which we read about in the Micheling Guide. What the guide said was all true, the bread was top notch, the advice was great (we passed on ox cheek and lamb brain, but, hey, we *could* have eaten it if we wanted). It was one of the seven restaurants we had mapped out beforehand, and it wasn't until rechecking the map that we realized it was actually in the same building as our hotel (the Corinthia)! You actually need to book a week ahead to get seats, but I took a chance and asked them and luckily for us they had a cancellation yesterday. The visit was really worth it.
First we started of with assorted meats from chef Lali's pantry.
And superb homemade bread with butter/seasoned pork fat (nicer than it sounds)
I had crispy pork chops with the bone left. If I was to reflect on something I have seen on my trips to Romania, South Africa and Hungary, it is that they really do full, traditional meat dishes much better than us. All the stuff that makes you stay non-vegan, they do full out instead of doing bland meat balls and small fat-free meat that sometimes feels just somehow "correct" in boring sense. This is the "Original" experience in full (stomach) colorama.
And my wife had the very nice Angus beef filet.
All this for 250 SEK/40$ per person, which really isnt much for a place worth mentioning by the Michelin guide. Go there!
Today then started again with full breakfast, one we couldn't quite enjoy fully due to still being stuffed from the meal last evening, but that wasnt the hotel's fault...
We then visited the Alexandria book cafe with its nice Art Deco front, and a fantastic cafe on the second floor. We werent in the mood for it, but if you want to have a coffe break in a room looking like a palace, that's the place to go.
image from: welovebudapest.com
After that we went to the Parliament building. The queues were a bit to long for us, but we were impressed with its size and style, built a little more than a 100 years ago. Really, in general, if you like looking at historical architechure, Budapest is just glorious. Really, roughly 90% of the central city is just a bonanza of house upon house, often covering whole city blocks, in different states of need of repair, but so fun to watch. Statues and ornaments everywhere, too.
If I am to make a general observation on female fashion markers in Budapest I noted two things that stood out as different from home:
1. Bling bling and studs. The hungarians really seem to like them, they where on every other item, be it clothing or bags.
2. (Fake) leather jackets, often some kind of glorified biker style look (yes, thats my description, live with it..)
Bags, bags everywhere, and not a shop to skip...
Here I would like to comment shortly onreally the only dissapointment on this trip, and that is the cinema, or rather the lack of non-dubbed cinema. Both our excellent guide book and the excellent hotel personnel seemed to be quite convinced that "most of the movies" was shown both dubbed and in original language with just hungarian subtitles. This was not true, if you dont count 4 movies out of 30, non of them any of the current popular ones. The thing is, I know about the culture of dubbing all and sunder in Italy, Germany and so on, but there they are open about it. The disappointment here was saying one thing and then finding something else. Time to learn english, fellow hungarians, and the only way to do that is to listen to (and read) english!
Well, lets not stay on that small matter. On our way from Westend, I scouted one of those murkey alley shops that I so much love (and my wife dont quite like as much), it being a heavy metal t-shirt shop. My metal girl changed her mind after finding herself a cool dragon t-shirt. ^_^
OK, you latin nerds. Decode that and then read the answer here.
Just off the basilica square is the chololate store Hungaricum Dessert we visited yesterday. I cannot press enough that you should visit this oasis if you have time and like cholocate. They had maybe a hundred different small chololate sorts, some just newly composed, and you could get chololate to drink or even chocolate soup. (*And* they have nice toilets. I kid you not, toilets are not that popular in Budapest it seems, so treasure the ones you find...)
Anyway, we tried all kinds of tastes. the cost for 14 small candy treasures was roughly 100 SEK (15$), which of course isn't cheap, but well worth this one time experience.
Yummy!
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