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Top Ten Global Cities for Foodies
Barcelona
Centered on a Mediterranean diet of olive oil and fresh seafood,
the distinctive traditional Catalan cuisine is what truly sets
this Spanish city apart, with hearty dishes showcasing an interesting
mélange of locally produced, seasonal ingredients. There
are two ways to eat in Barcelona: you can go to a restaurant
( restaurante in Castilian) or cafetería and have a full
meal, or you can have a succession of tapas (small snacks; sometimes
tapes in Catalan) or raciones (larger ones; racions in Catalan)
at one or more bars. This last option can be a lot more interesting,
allowing you to do the rounds and sample local specialities.
Brussels
Thanks to its excellent food and diversity of cuisine, Brussels
has moved into the European culinary limelight. While not the
cheapest of cities to eat out in, its thousands of restaurants
offer consistently high quality fare and spectacular value for
money. Apart from the excellence of the native Belgian fare, the
city is among Europe's best for sampling a wide range of different
cuisines - from the ubiquitous Italian places, through to Spanish,
Vietnamese, Japanese and Russian restaurants.
Restaurants aside, it's worth remembering many bars and cafés
serve food. Though this is often limited to pastas, soups and
croques monsieurs , many have wider-ranging menus usually consisting
of traditional Brussels fare. There are also plenty of frites
stands and pitta places around the Grand-Place, notably on rue
du Marché aux Fromages, known locally as "Greek Street",
and on rue des Bouchers.
Hanoi
For sheer value for money and atmosphere it's hard to beat the
rock-bottom, stove-and-stools food stalls or the slightly more
upmarket street kitchens; try streets such as Ma Hac De, Hang
Dieu and Duong Thanh. At conventional restaurants you'll need
to get there early : local places stop serving around 8pm, while
Western-style restaurants and top hotels tend to allow an extra
hour or two. We've given phone numbers for places where it's advisable
to make reservations. Look out for two Hanoi specialities : the
ubiquitous pho noodle soup and bun cha, small barbecued pork burgers
served with a bowl of rice noodles.
Las Vegas
C asinos compete to attract culinary superstars from all over
the country to open Vegas outlets. The first such venture was
Wolfgang Puck's Spago in Caesars Palace , back in 1992; these
days, as each new casino opens, it's taken for granted that it
will have as many as ten world-class restaurants. Asked what had
persuaded him to relocate to Las Vegas, one leading chef replied
"three million dollars." Many tourists now visit the
city specifically to eat at several of the best restaurants in
the United States, without having to reserve a table months in
advance or pay sky-high prices. Which is not to say that fine
dining comes cheap in Las Vegas, just that most of the big-name
restaurants are less expensive, and less snooty, than they are
in their home cities
Lyon
You'll find restaurants offering dishes from every region of France
and overseas in Lyon. Vieux-Lyon is the area with the greatest
concentration of eateries, though you'll find cheaper and less
busy ones between place des Jacobins and place Sathonay at the
top of the Presqu'île. The possibilities are endless, but
on weekends booking ahead is always a good idea. The most affordable
type of Lyonnais eating establishment, the bouchon (cork), derived
its name from the vast quantities of Lyonnais wine consumed there.
Tradition has it that wine bottles were lined up as the evening
progressed, and at the end of the night the bill was determined
by measuring from the first cork to the last. There are several
bouchons located in the streets between Cordeliers and Terreaux,
particularly in rue Mercière.
New
York
New York is a rich port city that can get the best foodstuffs
from anywhere in the world, and, as a major immigration gateway,
it attracts chefs who know how to cook the world's cuisines properly,
even exceptionally. As you stroll through the streets of New York,
heavenly odors seem to emanate from every corner; it's not hard
to work up an appetite.Outside of American and continental cuisines
(more or less including New American, be prepared to confront
a startling variety of ethnic food . In New York, none has had
so dominant an effect as Jewish food , to the extent that many
Jewish specialties - bagels, pastrami, lox and cream cheese -
are now considered archetypal New York. Others retain more specific
identities. Chinese food includes the familiar Cantonese, as well
as spicier Szechuan and Hunan dishes - most restaurants specialize
in one or the other. Japanese food is widely available and very
good; other Asian cuisines include Indian and a broad sprinkling
of Thai, Korean, Vietnamese and Indonesian restaurants.
San
Francisco
With well over three thousand restaurants crammed onto the small
peninsula, and scores of bars and cafés open all day, eating
in San Francisco is never difficult. Eating is the culture in
this town, with excellent food often at modest prices. Be warned,
though - San Francisco closes early, and you'll be struggling
to get served much after 10pm. Mexican food is big in the Mission,
Italian places abound in North Beach, and, of course, Chinatown
naturally has plenty of Chinese , while Japan Center - the heart
of Japantown, located at Post between Geary, Laguna and Fillmore,
a mile west of Union Square - boasts a few fine Japanese places.
In health-conscious San Francisco you'll find vegetarian entrees
on every menu and quite a few entirely vegetarian restaurants.
With the vineyards of Napa and Sonoma Valley on the city's doorstep,
quality wines have a high profile in most San Francisco restaurants.
Rome
Romans, as a group, are still very much in touch with the land
- many even have small farms of their own in the countryside nearby,
or they return to their home villages regularly. So the city's
denizens know a good deal about freshness and authenticity, and
can be very demanding when it comes to the quality of the dishes
they are served. Consequently, eating out is a major, often hours-long,
activity in Rome, and the meals you'll enjoy generally range from
good to truly remarkable. You'll find that most city-centre restaurants
offer standard Italian dishes, although a few more adventurous
restaurants have been popping up of late. At the geographical
centre of the country, Italy's capital city also has numerous
establishments dedicated to a variety of regional cuisines , and
a reasonable number of excellent ethnic restaurants , though many
of these are in outlying areas. Rome is also blessed with an abundance
of good, honest pizzerias , churning out thin, crispy-baked pizza
from wood-fired ovens.
Tokyo
Deciding what to eat in Tokyo can be a bewildering experience,
and not just because you might be at a loss working out what's
on the menu, or even on your plate. The problem is that, with
at least 80,000 restaurants in central Tokyo (compared to New
York's 15,000 and London's mere 6000), you're swamped with choice.
Food crazes come and go with astonishing rapidity. For the moment
Chinese and Korean cuisines are in and there are cafés
dishing out bagels all over the place. Ever reliable are the noodle
bars, shokudo and chain restaurants , where the Japanese go when
they need to fill up without fear of the cost. Tokyo has a plethora
of such places, with many clustering around and inside the train
stations. Bento shops , serving set boxes of food, are also good
and plentiful, especially at lunchtime in shopping areas.
Vancouver
Vancouver's restaurants are some of Canada's finest, and span
the price spectrum from budget to blowout. If you want to eat
well, you'll be spoilt for choice - and you won't have to spend
a fortune to do so. As you'd expect, the city also offers a wide
range of ethnic cuisines. Chinese and Japanese cuisines have the
highest profile (though the latter tend to be expensive), followed
by Italian, Greek and other European imports. Vietnamese, Cambodian,
Thai and Korean are more recent arrivals and can often provide
the best starting points - cafés and the ubiquitous fast-food
chains aside - if you're on a tight budget. Specialist seafood
restaurants are surprisingly thin on the ground, but those that
exist are of high quality and often remarkably cheap. In any case,
seafood does crop up on most menus and salmon is heavily featured.
Vegetarians are well served by a number of specialist places.
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