Showing posts with label do in chicago. Show all posts
Showing posts with label do in chicago. Show all posts

Friday, July 17, 2009

Indie Cafe

i'm so happy to have found this place in our neighborhood. until today we didn't really have a favorite noodle/thai place around us, probably because we have Noodles Etc at work and we used to eat there at least once a week, which took care of our thai craving (well, mainly MY thai craving. ben doesn't mind eating pbj for dinner every day).

anyway, we discovered this place today, just a few blocks from us. the atmosphere is very nice, lively, the place was pretty full but we didn't have to wait.
we ordered Crab Rangoon, drunken noodles and green curry.
unfortunately, Ella had other plans for us, so we had our dinner packed to go and took it back home with us.
it was delicious! the crab rangoon was amazing. (Nicole, FYI!!)
ben loved the curry, he said that it was finally spicy enough (even when he asks for "extra spicy' at Noodles - it's not enough for him). i really liked the drunken noodles, but i would have preferred thin noodles and not wide noodles.

yum!

Indie Cafe Thai & Sushi [yelp]

Saturday, December 1, 2007

Chicago Blackhawks


This post is a couple weeks overdue. It also happened while Kevin was in town. We all took a trip out to the United Center where the Chicago Blackhawks play hockey. My buddy Ken joined us as well, and served as the navigator. Tickets were $15 apiece and parking was $11. Not too bad, especially compared to the Detroit Red Wings. Our view was still pretty good (see the two pictures to the right).

I don't know much about soccer, but I'm told the rules of ice hockey are much like those of football (i.e. soccer if you're American): you try to score goals and not go offsides. It's soccer for people that live in snowy weather. Canada usually produces the most and best hockey players, but there also many Russians, Scandanavians, Czechs, Slovakians, Americans and some other nationalities that play in this league, the National Hockey League (NHL), which most would agree is where the best players play.

Keren took a bunch of pictures and put them in Picasa, here, if want to see them. The United Center holds about 20,000 people. About 1/2 were Chicago fans, and 1/2 Detroit fans, including Kevin and me, so there were a lot of insults traded between fans which I won't reprint here.

Hockey is a violent sport; people run into each other fast and get penalized for it by sitting in the penalty box for 2 minutes, or as Keren says, "they go to jail". In fact, people often say "I went to a fight and a hockey game broke out". The hockey game broke out alright, but we got lucky and saw a nice fight: a 30 second bout between Parick Sharp (red - Chicago) and Tomas Kopecky (white - Detroit):

From left to right, you can see the 1) fight start, fists flying 2) the players fall to the ice, and are broken up by the referees, and 3) blood from Patrick Sharp's forehead staining the United Center Ice. Play was stopped briefly, as both players were sent off to "jail" and the blood was cleaned from the ice. If you want some in depth analysis of the fight, who people thought won, and a nice YouTube video of the whole fight, I encourage you to go here, a whole webpage for the fight, maintained by Hockey Fights. "Hockey Fights" is indeed one of the truly great products of the internet age. Now I remember what I was thankful for at Thanksgiving.

Although the Red Wings player (Kopecky) won the fight, Chicago won the hockey game, 3-2. All in all, this is a pretty good bit of entertainment. $40 for two people for major sporting events in the U.S. is definitely cheap, still a little more than a movie, but not outrageous.

Some people may be suprised to know that the United Center, where the hockey game was played tonight, is also home to the Chicago Bulls basketball team, Michael Jordan's old team - that's right, they play basketball on the ice. Unfortunately, I couldn't find a good link or pictures of the process, but after each hockey game, they place giant wood partitions over the ice, remove the wall around the ice, and play basketball! This had to be perfected. In the 80's and early 90's when they first tried this, the basketball floor would get too cold and water would condense on the floor, forcing cancellation of the game due to players slipping and being injured.

Just in case you don't belive me, look at Keren's photo album (you can see the statute a lot better), or see my blurry picture with Keren in from of giant Michael Jordan statue just outside the United Center:

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

weather being nice

Don't you just love it when the weather is considerate?!? we noticed that the weather time scale is about one day, meaning - if you don't like the weather today, just wait a day and it will change. The weekend was just perfect. We spent Saturday afternoon->night with Cris, Sara, Herania, Doug and other friends from work, celebrating Chris's birthday. Starting outside at Sheffild's patio (they don't serve food, but they have a stinky binder with all the takeout joints in the neighborhood), moved from there to the Duke of Perth (their Belhaven Wee Heavy beer was very good, and so was the fish in the fish&chips). Ben enjoyed the Double Chocolate Stout. Oleg suggested to move on to Blues, a blues bar. We stayed there for a couple of hours, while some guy called Chico Banks was bluesing.

Sunday, noonish, we crossed the 100m seperating us from the park, and went rollerblading/jogging along with the rest of Chicago. What a perfect day. There's a sweet spot just on Montrose harbor, where you can see the entire skyline spread in front of you.
Next week i will be in TA - will probably miss this kind of perfect spring days. I already miss them - a day has passed, the weather changed, and reverted back to rain and fog. I heard it can't make up it's mind in TA either :)

Saturday, January 27, 2007

Walk on the beach


1) a huge experiment in physics
as the waves hit the concrete wall, they bounce back and interfere with other incoming waves. this creates a huge pattern of wavefronts (that you can barely see in this picture...), with the constructive interference causing a spike in the ridge in the junctions where two wavefronts meet.



2) written in stone
The stone wall is scarred with all sort of love statements, names, faces, drawings, cartoons, and what not. This is my favorite...