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Curry up: get an appetite for Indian on Melbourne’s streets

Himanshi explains how to use Indian flavours on the Masala Trail.
Himanshi explains how to use Indian
flavours on the Masala Trail.


“And this … is dosa.” Himanshi Munshaw-Luhar holds up a wafer-thin
pancake the size of a small pony. “Of course, this is the family size,”
she adds, rather unnecessarily. The dosa is more than a metre long.

Himanshi is giving a crash course on eating Indian food
in Melbourne. The trick to successful eating out in any town is to know
what to order, so it’s with empty bellies and keen anticipation that a
small troupe of Indian-food aficionados has gathered this rainy night to
trail Himanshi around Melbourne’s city grid for an insider’s secrets on
great Indian food.

But first, a quick word about the origins of Indian cuisine.
“Chilli came from the Portuguese, in the 14th century,”
Himanshi says. “Before that, we flavoured with spices only.” She
continues. Potatoes, tomatoes and onions, “three things we can’t do
without”, also came from those far-travelling Portuguese. “The British
brought morning and afternoon tea; we don’t eat naan at home because we
don’t have tandoor ovens in our houses; and chai latte does not exist in
India.”

It seems Himanshi delights in smashing all my
preconceptions. I’m not quite sure what is left for Indians to call
their original cuisine, but the answer is to hand, in the form of a bowl
of bright yellow dahl (lentil soup); idli sambar, a steamed savoury
rice doughnut; and the paper dosa with coconut chutney.
This is the specialty of our first restaurant tonight,
Flora. At first view, you’d walk straight past the dowdy restaurant.
It’s a rather nondescript joint dominated by a welter of bain-maries
with the usual suspects – rogan josh, vindaloos and kormas – steaming up
the glass. But Flora is a haven for Melbourne’s southern Indian city
workers and inner-city families who want a taste of home.

We finish the entree with masala chai, black tea blended
with pepper, cardamom, cinnamon, ginger and mint. “Every home’s tea is
different, everyone’s hand is different,” Himanshi says. The chai warms
my heart, though the trio of blokes in the group are happy to test the
coldness of the Kingfisher beer.
The next stop is Melbourne’s oldest Indian spice shop, a
tiny box on Russell Street. Inside, it’s stuffed to the eyeballs with
spice mixes, rose water, microwave meals and boxes of fresh okra.
There’s an awful lot of Fair & Lovely ladies’ ayurvedic skin cream
and Fair and Handsome for the men, and a slushie machine stirs icy cold,
sweet mango lassi that has us queueing for more.

“We don’t eat a lot of stuff out of a can,” Himanshi
says, pointing to a tin of just-add-water dosa, “but everyone has this
sitting in the cupboard.” She’s waggling a spice mix at us. “It’s the $2
fix-all that will make your dish taste like it was supposed to taste.
Great, especially when the mother-in-law is coming over.” I buy two.

Himanshi ticks off the spice rules and remedies on her
fingers: cumin for white meat. Mustard seeds for red meat. Cloves to
stop getting car sickness. Turmeric for cuts or sore throats. Coconut
chutney, incidentally, is also very good for hangovers, she says.

She also answers a few questions I have from
half-translated Indian recipes. Mirch is basically chilli powder and
khoya is a sweetening agent, sort of like a sweet cheese.

The last stop for the night is the main course and
dessert at an upmarket Indian restaurant about 10 minutes’ walk away.
Only a few tables at Nirankar are occupied and the place feels a bit
empty, even after the 12 of us settle in.
The waiters pour more Kingfisher beer, which I choose over the Haywards 5000: it sounds too much like motorbike fuel for me.

Later, I Google the name. “It is the language of
friendship amongst men who are proud of their masculinity and look
forward to a great time with their friends and peers,” the beer’s
website tells me. Lucky I steered clear.

These food walks started as a get-to-know-you for the
small tour groups Himanshi takes to India, but became tours in their own
right. So Himanshi is geared up to prep you for a trip to India, with
some home truths: “You can’t refuse food in an Indian house. It’s just
rude.” Sounds like my kind of place. We talk about wedding food,
tiffins, traditions and, inevitably, Test cricket.

As we chat, the dishes start to come: chilli-heavy
vindaloos for the men, paneer makhani for the vegetarians, and my new
love, a delicious coriander-heavy kadai chicken curry.

Meanwhile, the restaurant starts to fill as large,
boisterous groups pour in. “They’re Indians on tour in Australia,”
Himanshi says, “and they’re all very particular about their food.” Even
India has food nerds, as I spot a few cameras ready to snap the dishes.

The courses are broken up with a Bollywood boogie
courtesy of local Indian dance group Rang De Basanti. With their
movie-star grins and syncopated dance moves, the kids are sugar-sweet,
which is a suitable lead into dessert, with hardcore kulfi, a handmade
ice-cream so sweet it makes my fillings ache.
“This is an Australian version. I thought it was quite
plain,” Himanshi says with a wicked grin, noting my sugar shock. “You
wouldn’t be able to eat the Mumbai version.” Note to self: surely the
Mumbai version equals instant facial tic.

Disfigurement or no, the walk
has sated my appetite for food, but whets it for a return to India.

The writer was a guest of Masala Trails and The Prince hotel.

TRIP NOTES
Staying there
A deluxe room in boutique St Kilda hotel The Prince costs from $175 a night. theprince.com.au.
Eating there
Nirankar, 174 Queen Street, (03) 9642 1995, nirankar.com.au.
Flora, 238 Flinders Street, (03) 9663 1212.
Curry Corner, 188 Russell Street, (03) 9663 4040.
Touring there
Masala Trails run once a month on Saturdays from Federation Square, 11.15am-2.30pm, $75 a person. 1800 667 791, foodietrails.com.au.
 
Source: Sun Herald newspaper

PLAY BRISBANE: Fun and sun rolled into one

Streets Beach
The sun is shining, bronzed
people are bouncing about in bikinis and boardies…then everyone packs up and
goes back to the office. Don’t you just love a beach in the middle of the city?
Streets Beach, in South Bank, has got it all: sand, palms, lifesavers
and warm, crystal-clear waters. Open all year round, take a dip then coffee in
the restaurant strip overlooking the lagoon. Perfect. And perfectly Queensland.
Brissy loves its indie
culture and two of its best-loved contemporary performing arts spaces, the Judith
Wright Centre of Contemporary Arts
and the Brisbane Powerhouse, oblige.  The cosy little Judy loves a spot of cabaret
and shines a spotlight on local work, while the Powerhouse hosts film festivals, theatre and is a
major site for the Brisbane Festival. Upcoming visitors include Henry Rollins, blues
guitarist Harry Manx, comedians Judith Lucy and Candy Bowers and classical
pianist Sally Whitwell (judithwrightcentre.com, brisbanepowerhouse.org)
Get a grip on Brisbane and its
surrounds, with views to Moreton Bay, by climbing Brisbane’s architectural
icon, the Story Bridge, 80 meters above the Brisbane River. If you think
bridge climbs are for pre-schoolers, go one up and abseil down the pylons (storybridgeadventureclimb.com.au)
If jumping off a high bridge isn’t your idea of a cool time, instead,
work your photography and climbing skills simultaneously when you climb the bridge
with a professional photographer who’ll help capture the panorama, using your
own camera equipment. Photography climbs
are held monthly (blue-dog.com.au)
For aimless ambling in the sunshine, South Bank Lifestyle Markets
are flush with craft, food, fashion and homewares. Open Friday evenings, all
day Saturday and Sunday on Stanley St, the stalls get a decided fashion bent on
the first Sunday of the month with the addition of the Young Designer Markets, where you can buy direct from the designer
(southbankmarket.com.au, youngdesignersmarket.com.au). Saturday nights in the West
End get a whole lot funkier when the West
End Twilight Markets
are in town, with artisan stalls, providores and free music
by indie performers (cnr Wilson & Boundary St, 2nd and 4th Saturday of the
month, westendtwilightmarkets.com)
 
For the crush of your classic band pub or the roar of the
latest club, you’ll be asking your taxi to take you to Fortitude Valley. The
Valley’s spit-and-sawdust days are fading as the latest openings combine sexy
bites with well-crafted drinks: take a look at the late-night supper club La Ruche (680 Ann St) and its neighbour
the Bowery Bar (676 Ann St). Veteran Cru Bar is still regarded as one of the best wine bars in
town.
Oh Hello! gathers all the pretty
twentysomethings in one place (621 Ann St) while at ManaBar, you can drink cocktails (for the adult in you) while
hammering video games (for the inner child) (420 Brunswick St).  
Archive Beer Boutique
Keep an
eye out for Alfred
& Constance
, two heritage houses revamped to
include a gastro pub, underground cellar and late-night dessert café by the
Limes Hotel crew, opening July (cnr Alfred & Constance St). Other hotspots across the city include
Woollongabba for Matt Moran’s tapas and rum cocktails at edgy Canvas, its new little sister, Public Bar & Kitchen in the CBD (400
George St) and the West
End’s The End (73
Vulture St).
CRAFT
BEER REVIVAL
Real beer drinkers, rejoice! Brisbane is enjoying a
revival of craft beers, the charge is led by the West End’s Archive Beer Boutique (100 Boundary St,
West End). Add to your list The Scratch
for Gold Coast operation Burleigh Brewing’s My
Wife’s Bitter
(8/1 Park Rd, Milton) and newcomer’s Super Whatnot’s grunged-out wine bar, which keeps Brissy brewers
Bacchus on tap (Burnett La, CBD).

Travel Deals, Asia special report

Junk on Hong Kong harbour, traveltheworld.com.au

$ LAOS
Three
World Heritage-listed buildings make up the teeny 3 Nagas hotel, which
comprises just 15 rooms, in the ancient Laotian capital Luang Prabang.  The hotel is a showcase of traditional
architecture set amongst serene gardens, in the city’s Old Quarter. Stay three
nights, pay two, with breakfast and afternoon tea also in the deal, until
September 18. Costs from $147 a night, 0011 800
3746 8357, designhotels.com/3_nagas
$$ CAMBODIA
If you’re a seat-of-the-pants kinda person, you need to
get to Cambodia now, to experience local life by staying with a Cambodian family,
pedalling through the countryside and, of course, visiting Angkor’s magical
temples.  Save 25 percent on the 12-day
Cambodia Discovery small group tour which departs from Ho Chi Minh City on June
30. Book by June 27, was $745 a person, now $550, 1300
018 871, intrepidtravel.com

$ VIETNAM Anantara
You won’t be dodging mopeds amidst the quiet sand dunes
of Mui Ne beaches. Set on serene coastline four hours from Ho Chi Minh city, Anantara
Mui Ne Resort & Spa has taken 25 percent off rooms, including breakfast,
until June 30. Of course, you’ll find infinity pools, seafront dining,
dedicated wine rooms and the scents of spa as only Vietnam can do. Who needs to
find the gym? Costs from $569.25 a room for six nights, +84 62 3741 888, anantara.com

$$$ THAILAND
Heaven is on sale as Asia’s best destination spa of the
year, Kamalaya, offers free nights on extended stays. Detoxing never was done
so beautifully as at the Koh Samui World Spa awards winner, which has a
dedicated following for its spa cuisine, yoga retreats and weight-loss programs.
Stay nine nights, pay for six between June 30 – September 30. Includes a
wellness consultation, holistic activities, use of the steam cavern and fitness
centre and a body bio-impedance analysis. Save $656, costs from $1313 a
person for nine nights, +66 77 429 800 kamalaya.com
$$$ JAPAN
Three hours from Tokyo and you’re in Happo, amidst the
Alps; the Japanese Alps, that is. Luckily, snow has no language, so snap up a
family package with Hakuba Springs Hotel. Two kids go free in the deal which
includes a junior suite, six-day lift pass, airport transfers from Narita and
breakfast, as well as a steamy onsen to soothe ski-strafed muscles. Book before
June 30, travel from December 1- April 1. Save $2000, costs $3190 for two
adults, (03) 9017 1142, ski-resorts-japan.com
$$$$$ MALDIVES
Why rush the Maldives? All the things you do on the
islands take time – diving, snorkelling, spotting dolphins, taking the
catamaran or dhow out for a spin, or hours of beautiful beachcombing. Stay 14
nights, pay for 10 at Cocoa Island, which gives you plenty of time to explore
on land and underwater, or just relish the beauty of its overwater bungalows.
Includes complementary meditation and daily yoga. Travel until October 31, costs
$8850 a room for 14 nights, +960 664 1818, cocoaisland.como.bz 
Source: Belinda Jackson, Sun Herald newspaper 13/5/2012

SHOP BRISBANE: Indie vibe is right on trend

Brisbane’s
burgeoning fashion scene has a home in inner-city Paddington, a veritable
boutique-crawl up Given Terrace, with plenty of stand-out cafes in between for
stamina. The vibe is indie rather than lables, with an emphasis on good
cutting, great textiles and individuality. 
It all heats up one corner of Given
Terrace, where a cluster of Brisbane designers share the love: take a look at Surafina, where its design duo Laura
and Rechelle are responsible for Brissy’s smart and sexy mums in saucy
above-knee skirts and structured riding jackets. Five minutes and these two
will have your number pegged. 
Nearby, the mood in Maiocchi is too cute, but with tunnel vision, you can get
your geisha on, with her oh-so-ladylike Sino-fab prints in the sweetest dresses
and skirts. While you’re in the hood, check out happening Brissy bag label
LouenHide at Olive Home.
 
Further
along, Given becomes LaTrobe Terrace where you’ll find stalwart fashion veteran
Chercher La Femme with its delicate
silk and linens in whites, neutrals and naturals, where classic tailoring and
functionality are key. Take a sticky down the back of the shop for the sweetest
babywear in town. Straight across the road, the renovated Queenslander that is
home to La La La Trobe buzzes to a
younger beat, evoking saucy boudoir with its two own funky labels, She’s Gone La La and La La Luxe. The look is a little boho
rock star, a little naughty girlishness, courtesy of a blend of ethnic knits,
leopard pant and a splash of gypsy whimsy. 
The other
major haunt for local label lovers is Fortitude Valley, where the big, brash
fashion names bunker down with up-and-coming boltholes of gorgeousness. 
There’s
a certain sleek glossiness to the James St precinct, amply demonstrated by Nat-Sui,
whose vertiginous, handmade heels have been seen
garnishing the legs of such celebs as Delta Goodrem and Deborah Hutton, while
the scent is supplied by Libertine Parfumerie. This Parisian-style
little boutique stocks rare fragrances, many custom designed for royalty and
screen stars. Current best-sellers include Grace Kelly’s ‘Gin Fizz’, first
designed in 1955. 
Admirers
of handmade beauty will resonate with Incub8r, where crafty
artists showcase one-off pieces, from handbags to picture frames, jewellery to
clothing. Speaking of clothing, while you’re on a roll in the area, check out Drobe’s
racks range from the intense to the minimal, featuring local designer Kate
Anderson and Jessica T for accessories and bags. Brisbane milliner Felicity Boevink’s vintage-inspired creations can be found in the Brisbane multi-brand staple, Jean Brown, in the Emporium precinct.   
Homewares
hunters will find their soul’s delight in the vintage treasure troves of
Woolloongabba’s Logan Rd strip and the old Queenslander houses that line
Paddington’s main drag, Latrobe Terrace. 
Start with French-farmhouse
inspiration at Blake & Taylor, whose weatherboard Queenslander is
filled to the eyeballs with toile prints, cute signs, cunning coat hooks and
overstuffed chairs before continuing up the hill to the far more severely
edited AP Design House, which brings single, beautiful items from the
world into one warm space. Find beautifully blended gold micron jewellery by
one-to-watch Brisbane label Angle Diamond Dot mixed with Belgian linen duvets
and rugs from Sardinia. 
Put a few hours aside to wander the antique and vintage
shops along the strip until you hit Paddington Antique Centre at the top
of the terrace, with 45 antique dealers trading in anything from life-sized
models of cows to green glasswear, vintage jewellery and taxidermy in one
hyper-ventilatingly crazy mish-mash. Minimalists need not bother entering. 
BREAKOUT: Winn Lane
The
newest, coolest little shopping strip in town is Winn Lane, a tiny nook off Ann
St in Fortitude Valley. Barely six months old, it supplies rich pickings in the
form of Brisbane fashion luminaries Easton Pearson’s younger EP label, Sunday
Social
for rare and vintage threads, cute local accessories by Ruby
& Prankster
, spanking new Atavist Books for secondhand treasures and Flamingo Café, which creates the
coffee that keeps it all ticking along nicely (winnlane.com)
Address book
Chercher La Femme, 2 LaTrobe Tce, Paddington, chercherlafemme.com
La La La Trobe, 21 LaTrobe Tce, Paddington,
lalalatrobe.com
Surafina, 204-208 Given Tce, Paddington surafina.com
Maiocchi, 216
Given Tce, Paddington maiocchi.com.au
Olive Home,
218 Given Tce, Paddington
olivehome.com.au
Nat-Sui, 19 James St,
Fortitude Valley, nat-sui.com.au
Easton Pearson, 60
James St, Fortitude Valley, eastonpearson.com
Incub8, 368
Brunswick St, Fortitude Valley, incube8r.com.au
Drobe, 669 Ann
St, Fortitude
Valley,
drobeonline.com
Jean Brown,
1000 Ann St, Fortitude Valley, jeanbrown.com.au
Libertine Parfumerie, 181 Robertson St, Fortitude Valley, libertineparfumerie.com.au
Subfusco, 61
Gray Rd, West End, subfusco.com
Tanya Mrnjaus, idcouture.com
Blake & Taylor, 11 LaTrobe Tce, Paddington, blakeandtaylor.com.au
AP Design House, 15
LaTrobe Tce, Paddington, apdesignhouse.com.au
Paddington Antique Centre, 167 Latrobe Tce, Paddington,
paddingtonantiquecentre.com
Hamptons Home Living, 180 Latrobe Tce, Paddington,
hamptonshomeliving.com.au
Source: Sun Herald 

TRAVEL DEALS: 13 May 2012

The Sunlander

$ SOUTH AUSTRALIA

The South Australian icon, Coopers Brewing, turns 150
this year, and that’s a good enough reason to visit Adelaide. Save on
accommodation so you have more to spend on beer when you check in at the
centrally located four-star self-catering Franklin Central Apartments. Normally
$320 a night, the newly refurbished apartments now cost $130 a night until end
August, 1300 662 288, franklinapartments.com.au

$$ VICTORIA

Got a penchant for little aqua boxes? The Rendezvous Grand
Hotel Melbourne is giving away $50 gift vouchers for Tiffany & Co when you
book a Romance package at the heritage-listed five-star hotel on Flinders St.
Also included is a three-course dinner for two at The Grill restaurant, valet
parking and a buffet brekky the next morning for stays until December 30. Costs
from $385 per deluxe room per night, 1800 088 888, rendezvoushotels.com/mothersday

$$ NSW
So
you’re not a grey nomad yet, but there’s nothing stopping you joining the
annual migration north. Stop before you hit the border at Byron Bay. Your
address, of course, is the the lush, five-star digs of The Byron at Byron, for
daily yoga, beach walks and rainforest ramblings. Stay three or more nights and
get 10 percent off spa, bar and restaurant purchases. Standard suites normally
cost $390 a night, this winter deal costs $285 a room a night, 1300 554 362, thebyronatbyron.com.au
$$$ NORTHERN TERRITORY
Do logs
have eyes? Play spot the croc in the Kakadu National Park, get down and jiggy
in Darwin, ogle Katherine Gorge and check out the Aboriginal rock art galleries
at Ubirr Rock on this four-day jaunt through the Top End. Save 25 percent, or
$276, on Intrepid Travel’s Total Top End tours departing 4, 11 and 13 June. Excludes
airfares to Darwin. Costs $829, 1300 018 871, intrepidtravel.com/trips/PISE#overview
$$$ QUEENSLAND
You don’t have to go to Europe to experience great train
travel. Kids travel, eat, and get a free cruise in the Whitsundays as part of
Queensland Rail Travel’s Whitsundays Family Getaway. The package includes flights
from Sydney to Brisbane, overnight on The
Sunlander
train to Proserpine and four nights on Daydream Island Resort
& Spa. Freebies include a round of golf for the family and a half-day
Whitsundays cruise. Kids get a free one-way flight to Brisbane, free train and
boat, accommodation and meals. Book until May 31, travel until Sept 30, Costs
from $959 per adult, twin share, 1800 872 467, queenslandrailtravel.com.au
$$$$ WESTERN AUSTRALIA
Bunker down in your luxury tent and listen to the shush
of the ocean and the quiet of Cape Range National Park, beside the World
Heritage-listed Ningaloo Reef, where the whale sharks are playing until the end
of July. Just nine tents make up the luxury property Sal Salis, and packages
include all meals and drinks and daily snorkelling or kayaking trips and gorge
walks. Stay three nights, pay for two, saving $685 a person. Costs $1307 a
person for two nights, twin share, 1300 790 561, wildbushluxury.com 
INTERNATIONAL
$ HAWAII
Need a jungle or fantasy island? The Hawai’ian island of
Kauai’s movie credits include Jurassic Park
and its Wailua waterfalls are stars of the small screen. Stay at Kauai Beach Resort
and get a free car to explore its beaches, rivers and golf courses. Includes a
free upgrade to an Ocean View room. Travel until June 15, costs $180 a night, +1
888 805 3843 (toll free), kauaibeachresorthawaii.com
$$ INDONESIA
Beautiful Bali has shrugged off its reputation as a DVD
pirate’s heaven and home to Kuta’s sticky sinbins. Beautiful Uluwatu shares the
‘hood with the eye-wateringly glamorous Alila Villas Uluwatu. Normally $662++ a
night, its Spring Break deal includes a one-bedroom pool villa, in-villa
breakfast and dinner, 90-minute spa treatment for two and airport transfers
from USD$628++ a night. Travel until June 30, (+62) 361 848 2166, alilahotels.com

$$$ ZIMBABWE &
NAMIBIA
Watch Namibia’s hippos play and fish eagles hunt their
prey on a Chobe River cruise. It’s part of a seven-day safari of Zimbabwe and
Namibia, with three nights each at the luxe Victoria Falls Safari Lodge and Namibia’s
Chobe Savannah Lodge, and a cruise of the Zambezi River. Save $1850 when you
travel until June 30. Costs $1395 a person, 1300 195 873,
benchinternational.com.au
$$$ VIETNAM
Hoa La was the capital of Vietnam in the 10th century,
and its monuments and temples survived to tell the city’s story. Visit Hoa La,
as well as Halong Bay, Ho Chi Minh city and the Mekong Delta on Helen Wong
Tours’ special 25th anniversary tour of Vietnam. Prices include return flights
from Sydney. Book before May 31 for an extra $250 discount. Costs $2700 a
person, twin share, (02) 9267 7833, helenwongstours.com
$$$$$ ARCTIC
Get off the cruise ship and set foot and sleeping bag on Spitsbergen,
the biggest island in the Svalbard archipelago. Setting off from Longyearbyen, the
Sea Spirit takes up to 112 passengers around the islands, spotting walruses and
polar bears. Peregrine’s earlybird discounts cut 20 percent off nine Arctic
itineraries for 2013 including the 13-day Spitsbergen in Depth tour. Book by
June 29, normally $7690, now costs $6152, phone bookings only, 1300 854 500, peregrineadventures.com



Spitsbergen, Svalbad

TOURWATCH

May 2013 marks the sixtieth anniversary of the first
ascent of Mt Everest by Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay. Don’t you wish
you’d done it first? Raise a glass to those pioneers when you dine beneath the
stars at the spiritual centre of Thyangboche, at 3800 meters. The soundtrack
will be the stories by top Australian and US mountaineers of their Everest
experiences. World Expeditions wil run five anniversary treks departing from
Kathmandu in May 2013, graded from introductory to challenging. Trek lengths
and routes vary from 12 to 23 days, to the base camp, around remote passes or
the Gokyo Lakes. Includes all meals, internal flights, jackets and sleeping
bags, supported by a local leader, sherpas, cooks and porters. Costs from $2750
a person, 1300 720 000, worldexpeditions.com

Source: Belinda Jackson, Sun Herald newspaper

Seoul … it’s out of this world, but also very familiar

EXPATS call it Planet Korea: and after a week in Seoul I know I’m not
in Kansas any more, Toto. Even my arrival at Incheon airport is
memorable. After battling Seoul airport’s personal-space-invading taxi
drivers, the luxurious airport bus does not take off until a tuneful
little ditty is played over the loudspeakers and our driver bows deeply
to us, his guests.

The city streets are awash with flyers of K-pop teen boys
with their glossy, pouting J-Bieber lips and names such as After School
and Super Junior. Meanwhile, naughty little girls in nine-inch
stilettos and hot pants catch the eye of stern, grey-suited businessmen
and my delighted male companions, who vote Seoul girls as having the
best legs in Asia.

Each sector of Seoul has its own personality: South Seoul
for fashionistas, Bukchon, pictured, in the north for gorgeous,
traditional tea houses, the city for mainstream shopping. And then
there’s Itaewon, the Kings Cross of Korea, for better or for worse, the
location of my hard-working hotel and also a club where my
American-gone-native friend is drumming tonight.

Itaewon is Seoul’s beating foreign heart, thanks to the
US Army base set in its midst. At midnight, young men with buzz cuts run
through the traffic in the rain laughing at their freedom. When they’re
not banging on my taxi’s bonnet or brawling at street corners, they’re
chatting up garishly painted hot-pants girls. The patient Military
Police are negotiating peace while touts grab my ear the minute the taxi
door opens to advertise shops selling “big-sizes” sportswear and
Trolex. (“That means true Rolex, madam.”)

With the army base there, it
makes perfect sense that Itaewon is also Seoul’s best-known foreigner
red-light district. Well, it’s Seoul’s “whatever-your-taste” district.
Itaewon’s social scene is dominated by two hills – Homo Hill, where
elongated Korean trannies languish on chaise longues in their downtime,
and Hooker Hill, a mix of dingy rock pubs and red doors and nail-filing,
pumped-up working girls.

It’s the first time I’ve seen overt cleavage in Seoul and
I now have renewed respect for the prostitutes of this city, seeing
them trip up and down this 45-degree-angle hill in killer heels.

The band pub is like any other old-school band pub across
the world; a nameless door, a dark corridor, sticky brown carpet and
cigarette smoke so thick you could lose a small Pacific nation in the
pub’s dingy recesses. My friend puts me in a corner beside the thrumming
aircon and the pool table, then heads off to the stage.

I realise that there’s not one Korean in the joint – the accents are a mix of American, Canadian and northern English.

While my friend’s mate, a Canadian security contractor,
tells me of meeting Aussie English teachers because his government pad
has a washing machine and a spa bath, a Mancunian pool player ambles
across and leans over me, hand on the wall behind my head.

“Haven’t seen you here before,” he says in a beery fug, ignoring the roll of my eyes.

“Are you new in town?”

It may be Planet Korea, but the more things change, the more they stay the same.


Source: Sun Herald newspaper www.smh.com.au

Reviewing the review: opinions the spice of life

Recently, a friend, another travel writer, rang me to ask about Orpheus Island, a tiny resort off the coast of Townsville. She asked if I really meant what I wrote in my newspaper review. 

Well yes, I said. It really was fantastic.

I guess I can understand her scepticism. Journalists, are, apparently down there with used-car salespeople in the popularity stakes (though everyone’s enrolling in media courses), and now that we all can blog, publish and call ourselves journalists, there’s double the reasons for her to double-check.

Just the other day, I was hunting for a local Indian restaurant. The two online reviews beneath one restaurant read:

“The food prepared at Chowdhary is so fragrant, tasty and more-ish. This
is due to the use of freshly-made spice preparations. My dining
companions and I all agree that its quality surpasses the Masala Indian
Restaurant in Albert Street, by a long stretch. We will be recommending
it to everyone we know and will definitely return regularly.”

I’m assuming the owner wrote that. In case you weren’t sure, it was followed closely by:

“What a food of your restaurant. I really like the food of this
restaurant. The taste of the food is very different from the other
restaurant. I think every one should go in this restaurant.”

A bullied dishpig, perhaps?

We didn’t go. Perhaps we should have. Instead, we ended up at an extremely ordinary Italian. 

TRAVEL DEALS: 6 MAY

Oaks Mons Komo
$ QLD
Clear the Brissy hustle and head to the beach at Oaks Mon
Komo, a brand new property overlooking Moreton Bay. Water babies note: it boasts
a glass-edge ocean-view pool, the popular Suttons Beach is just across the road
and there’s a restaurant, sports bar and gaming facilities on site. Opening
specials see apartments going for a quarter of their normal price. Costs $119
for a one-bedroom apartment (normally $393), $179 for a two-bedroom apartment
per night (normally $573), oakshotelsresorts.com
$ TAS
Who knew Launceston had a Paris End? Stay amongst the
majestic buildings of one of Australia’s oldest cities and pay nearly half
price at the 4.5-star Colonial Launceston. Book from May 21, rate includes breakfast,
free parking and movies. Cost from $118 a night, twinshare, 1300 130 485, travel.com.au
$$ NSW
The
English National Ballet comes to Sydney from 8-17 June, with 14 performances at
The Concourse in Chatswood. The program features Celebrations, a selection beloved classical pas de deux from Manon, Don Quixote, the Black Swan from Swan Lake and Trois Gnossiennes.Packages at the nearby Mantra Chatswood include
two premium tickets to the ballet, a bottle of wine and 1pm checkout. Costs
from $499, 131 517, mantra.com.au/ballet
$$ VIC
Napoleon is set to conquer Melbourne this winter as the
National Gallery of Victoria’s 2012 Winter Masterpiece Napoleon: Revolution to Empire, celebrates French life from the 1770s
to the 1820s. Stay at the four-star Crossley Hotel on Little Bourke St in the
city’s centre and get a free night on all three-night stays in a standard room.
Travel until September 22. Costs $354 a room for three nights, 138 833, sunloverholidays.com.au
$$$ NT
Tick the
Territory’s Big Three – Uluru, Kata Tjuta and Kings Canyon – off your
bucket list in one easy swoop, and take a mate for free.  Book an All three in the NT four-day short
break with AAT Kings and get the second airfare free. The tour includes an
Uluru sunset tour, walks in Kata Tjuta and Walpa Gorge and climbing in the
Kings Canyon, as well as three nights’ accommodation at Kings Canyon Resort and
the Outback Pioneer at Ayers Rock Resort, with guides and transfers. Travel
between April 17 – June 30, book by May 13. Airfares with Virgin Australia from
Sydney to Ayres Rock cost $466 for two seats. Tour costs from $799 a person,
see travel agents, 1300 228 546, aatkings.com.au
$$$$ SA
Linked to the mainland by a 30-minute flight, Kangaroo
Island’s best-known inhabitants are its namesake kangaroos, as well as seals
and sea lions. KI’s best-known address, the uber-luxurious Southern Ocean Lodge
has launched a cool-season package that saves up to $2800 a couple on
three-night stays. In addition, get upgraded to the next suite and receive a
$400 lodge credit to spend on an adventure, spa, wine room or boutique. Costs
$2499 for three nights, southernoceanlodge.com.au
INTERNATIONAL
$ FRANCE
Historical Le Marais, on
Paris’s Right Bank, is chockers with royal mansions, the Bastille, art
galleries
and Paris’s flourishing gay community. Of course, that’s where your apartment is, too.
This fully-furnished, petite one-bedroom sleeps two and comes with wifi and
breakfast basics. All you have to do is trot down to the boulangerie each
morning for yo
ur fresh
baguettes. Tres Parisie
n!  Save $38 a night when you book five nights,
until August 31. Costs $190 a night,
0410
716 930, petiteparis.com.au 
Waterhouse, South Bund, Shanghai
$$ CHINA
Forget the mega-hotels that dominate Shanghai’s skyline:
boutique is best. The tiny Waterhouse at South Bund has just 19 rooms.
Architecture aficionados will recognise the work by Neri & Hu Design on the
1930s building, which has been welcomed into the Design Hotels family. Stay
three nights in a Bund, Terrace or River suite, pay for two. Includes breakfast
and a food & beverage credit. Costs from $885 for three nights, 0011 800
3746 8357, designhotels.com/the_waterhouse
$$ EUROPE
Polish up your language skills in Europe’s roads – it may
not always be the most polite conversation, but self-drive holidays open up the
land of the locals, and polish your map-reading skills simultaneously. Winner!
Save $300 off car rentals when you book a family-sized Scenic Renault for 21
days or more. Book before May 16, collect by June 30. Includes unlimited
kilometres, insurance, GPS, with no excess and 24-hour roadside assistance.
Costs from $1599, 1300 551 160, renaulteurodrive.com.au
$$$ NEW ZEALAND
So you’ve got champagne tastes, but a beer budget?
Leaping from a helicopter to the pristine snow doesn’t have to break the bank. The
Queenstown Heli Shred package includes a full day’s heli-skiing, a week’s
accommodation, a day pass for Coronet Peak and The Remarkables, return flights and
lift pass for Treble Cone, drinks at Queenstown’s bars and some meals, saving
$250. Costs $1495 a person (dorm accommodation), $1895 a person (twin share), (03) 9017 1142, queenstownadventureholidays.com
$$$$$ KENYA &
TANZANIA
See two million wilderbeest pouring over the rivers that
mark the border between Tanzania and Kenya, across the plains of the Serengeti
into the lands of the Masai Mara on their annual migration. It’s a
heartstopping spectacle of life, death, dust and glory. Snap up a last-minute
deal, saving 10 percent, on a 16-day escorted tour through the two countries’
famed national parks. Book by May 18, travel August 18. Costs $9915 a person,
twin share, 1300 363 302, africanwildlifesafaris.com.au
TOURWATCH
Capture the scents and tastes of India’s spice trade with
spicemeister Ian (Herbie) Hemphill. Herbie and his wife Liz are taking their
11th small-group tour to India to discover the spice trade and all its history,
mixing tourism and food. Herbie’s favourite places include Jaipur and its
markets and fascinating Deogarh, where you’ll stay in a maharajah’s palace. “We
also go down to South Cochin, to the heart of the world’s spice trade, where
cardamom and pepper are native to the area,” he says.  There’s also cooking classes in local homes,
because Aussies love to see how others live, he adds. Travel January 13-19, 2013.
Includes return air fares, all meals, accommodation, tours, tips and departure
taxes. Costs $9500 a person, (02) 9555 6035, herbies.com.au

DON’T MISS: Brisbane May-Sept 2012

Absolutely top of your don’t-miss list this year is
Portrait of Spain: Masterpieces from the Prado
, showing at the Qld Art
Gallery, Gallery of Modern Art (QAGOMA). Spanning four centuries, the big names
include El Greco, Velázquez and Rubens. “Spain was the global power at the
time,” says the
gallery’s
International Art curator, David
Burnett. “This exhibition is a huge historical read: it’s a lens through which
we can look at the rest of Europe and the world at that time.” His favourites
in the exhibition include a series of etchings by Goya. A coup for Qld, this is
the first time works from the Museo Nacional del Prado have visited Australia
(QAGOMA, qagoma.qld.gov.au, July 21 – Nov 4).
 Next door, at the
newly revamped Qld Museum, the sure-fire blockbuster Mummy: Secrets of the Tomb brings treasures from the British
Museum’s Egyptian collection to Brisbane. Nesperennub was a temple priest and
his 3000-year-old mummified body is on display. The exhibition includes a
fantastic 3D film of his preservation, including the x-ray and CT scans that
helped create a haunting model of his face. The oldest objects date back to
2500BC, and highlights include a beautiful model of a funerary boat, with its
rich colouring still intact (Qld Museum, southbank.qm.qld.gov.au, April 19 -Aug 19)
A footy club’s locker room is the setting of The Truth About Kookaburras, a gritty
murder mystery that opens with 13 naked men on stage. The language is, well,
what you’d expect when a bunch of blokes are talking about last night’s boozy
buck’s night, complete with strippers and, ultimately, a dead man, but it’s the
poignant exploration of men’s changing role in society that will keep you
talking (La Boite Theatre Company, laboite.com.au, June 6-23) 
Opera Australia’s 2012
season
brings Mozart’s The Magic Flute and Britten’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream  to Brisbane (May 26 – Jun 8). With lush
costumers and scenery, The Magic Flute is a family-friendly, English-language
version that will have kids entranced by the colour and wild puppetry, while Dream is Baz Luhrmann and designer
Catherine Martin’s celebrated interpretation of the Shakespeare classic is set
in colonial India. 
September is festival madness as the Brisbane Festival takes over the city. Highlights include pianist
extraordinaire, Evgeny Kissin, celebrated Belgian dance company les ballets C
de la B and the debut of Symphonia
Eluvium
(Symphony of the Floods)
by Australian composer Elena Kats-Chernin, commissioned by the Festival. The
annual event ends with a bang and a fireworks extravaganza, Sunsuper Riverfire.
Hit South Bank early for a good possie (Sept 8-29, brisbanefestival.com.au)

Source: Sun Herald newspaper

Fare to remember: Brisbane on a plate

Street art, Burnett Lane

Big names, big tastes and serious coffee define Brisbane’s dining and cafe scenes.

With seafood leaping from ocean to plate, and
forests of tropical fruits, you’re not going to starve in Brisbane, people.  

Beautiful and breezy, River Quay, on Southbank, is the
city’s newest open-air restaurant strip. Fast
becoming a local’s fave, Brisbane restaurateur Andrew Baturo’s Popolo is just the ticket for family
Italian: big plates made to share – the veal cutlet is a winner – or small
tastes that let you snack and watch the beautiful people jog the riverbanks in
very tight shorts. Order the Kingaroy sucking pig, fast becoming Popolo’s
signature dish, just to spite them. 
The other big-news resident on South Bank is Melbourne’s Stokehouse, which now has a Queensland
cousin, and chef Tony Kelly has brought ‘The Bombe,’ a frozen white chocolate
parfait, to a new wave of adorers. Bar aficionados are making a beeline for the
Stoke Bar’s more laid-back tasting plates and signature cocktails. The views
here are pure Brisbane: river, cityscape, mangroves.
Harajuka Gyoza, Fortitude Valley

At the
other end of the budget, you’ll have to elbow the locals out of the way at
Japanese newcomer Harajuku Gyoza,
which has a devoted following for its Kirin on tap and grilled duck gyoza. It
doesn’t hurt that the Fortitude Valley winner is cheap for snacking – a plate
of five gyoza will set you back $8 – and it’s definitely cheerful, with walls
of Jap-pop kitch and plenty of shouting. 

Locals will tell you they’re torn
between Harajuka Gyoza and the hipper Brunswick
Social
, another new opener, also serving fried and steamed dumplings, also
$8 a plate, but with cocktails for grown-ups, rather than easy-going beer
steins. Open til late, late, late on weekend nights, it’s a pleasant
alternative to the 1am kebab.   

In times
past, southerners would gnash their teeth and swear there wasn’t a decent
coffee past the Qld border, but Brisbane’s caffeine scene is a-buzzing. In the
city, Brew burrows underground into Burnett
Lane, a service lane that’s suddenly gone hip, thanks to local efforts to
fashion a laneways culture. Brew’s studenty sofas belie series caffeine intent:
not content with its single origin coffees, it’s now serving cold drip and siphon
coffee to go, in what’s fast becoming the chic strip of the city. New
neighbours on the lane, which runs parallel to Queen St Mall, include The Survey Co Bistro for classic dining
in edgy surrounds.
Notable
are the the drive-through
cafés by Brissy roaster Merlo, which
churns out its daily-roasted private blend to loyal locals who zip through,
arms outstretched for a hit. Its hour-long Coffee Appreciation brekkys and brunches lets you peek
at roasters, sample a few beans and get some expert advice on the best in home
brewing.  Classes are held at its five
torrefaziones. Don’t know what a torrefazione is? Better turn up.
Wedged
amongst the vintage shops and seriously fabulous restaurants on Woolloongabba’s
tiny uber-block on Logan Rd, you kinda wish Pearl Café was your local. With smooth brews and a counter of fresh
cream cakes from the upstairs kitchen, Pearl’s also finessing its charcuterie
table and private dining room. The clientele is bronzed and beautiful, yet the
mood is Gallic, so order up with the French toast for a calorific start to the
day, and delude yourself that your gentle amble home will work it off.
 
River delight
Sweet,
salty and naughtily buttery, chef Ryan Squires’ grilled sweet corn parfait with
caramel popcorn and tarragon is worth the trip north. The Queensland lad, who’s
cut it in the world’s top kitchens, now has a riverside home at Esquire and his charcoal grill is
working miracles. Time-poor degustation devotees already know about the new lunchtime
pre-fixe three dishes for $35 in the pared-down Esq; a fine-dining bargain (145
Eagle St, CBD, esquire.net.au)
Aria, Eagle St Pier, CBD, ariarestaurant.com 
Brew, Burnett La, CBD, brewgroup.com.au
Brunswick Social 367 Brunswick
Street, Fortitude Valley
Canvas, 16 Logan Rd, Woolloongabba, canvasclub.com.au
Harajuka Gyoza, 394 Brunswick St, Fortitude Valley,
harajukagyoza.com
Merlo drive-through, 104 McLachlan St, Fortitude
Valley, 78 LaTrobe Tce, Paddington, merlo.com.au
Ortiga, 446 Brunswick St, Fortitude Valley,
ortiga.com.au
Pearl, 28 Logan Rd, Woolloongabba,
Popolo, River
Quay, South Bank, popolodining.com
Stokehouse,
Sidon St, South Bank, stokehousebrisbane.com.au

Source: Sun Herald newspaper

Global Salsa

Well, you’ve scrolled this far. What do you think? Drop me a line, I’d love to hear from you.

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