Wednesday, May 8, 2019

The Last of Chiang Mai - The Food!

We ate dinner at Italics, which was in the lower level of our hotel, a couple of times while in Chiang Mai.  One night Christopher had the tuna tartare:


And I had khao soi.

Another evening we ordered the pizza (you can pick four kinds, and they'll do a quarter of the pizza in each of your choices), and the lasagna to share, with bruschetta as a starter.

 

Everything was excellent!

A different day we shared the mango sticky rice for dessert:


Mango sticky rice is a very popular dessert in Chiang Mai, and it's super addictive. You can find it on the menu at most restaurants, and we made sure to get our fill.


We did a lot of walking on this trip, and stumbled upon many ice cream shops.


Durian ice cream!  (It's not great).


On Cloud Nine:


Janie Scoop:


Frozen yogurt from the mall:


This was one of the better walking cities we've been in, if not the best.  No matter where we were in the city, there was always somewhere to stop in for a coffee or a treat to rest our feet, and there was always something beautiful to see.


The streets are really narrow, there are no sidewalks in most areas, and the traffic is crazy, so you have to watch where you are going, but we got used to it quickly.

When we weren't on foot, we mostly used Grab.  I've never used Uber, but I am thinking Grab is similar.  We just got the app. and then entered where we wanted to go, and in under a minute the car would pull up to get us.  They dropped us off at our destination, and none of our rides were more than $4 CAD, even if we drove for 20 minutes.  Nearly everywhere we went had free WiFi, so we were always able to use that to book our next ride.

We also took one tuktuk, and a few rides in the songthaews, although Grab was a cheaper, safer, and more convenient option.  I'm super thankful that one of the hotel employees told us about this app. as it was so useful!

Songthaews (these ride share trucks are everywhere)
We spent an afternoon wandering one of the malls, and ate lunch there.


One evening we went to a Korean restaurant for dinner.


We had a fabulous late-night green curry at Warm Up Cafe, while checking out the band.


We saw a couple of live bands on this vacation; there seems to be a big music scene in Chiang Mai.

Daddy's Antique Cafe was a lovely, charming little place, and it also had excellent chicken wings and house-made pasta (the pasta picture died with my phone).


We snacked on stuffed jalapenos at Rustic and Blue:


Cheesy fries with beet mayo at some over-priced pub:


And all sorts of new and exciting flavours of snacks from good old 7-Eleven.  They have so many 7-Elevens in Chiang Mai; it feels like they are on every corner.


The larb seaweed was really tasty:


But these lemon chips were horrible!  They tasted like Vicks lemon cough drops.  Good in cough drop form, horrendous in chip form.


We were pretty sad to leave Chiang Mai, but we will definitely go back.

Fortunately there was delicious ramen in the Taipei airport, so that helped to make our very, very, long journey home not so rough.


Do you have any spring/summer travel plans?  
Camping?  Road trip?  Somewhere far?

1 comment:

Lisa from Lisa's Yarns said...

Yum! The food you had sounded amazing - except those lemon chips! Yuck! You definitely make me want to go to Thailand some day, and specifically to Chiang Mai! It sounds amazing.

We don't have any summer travel plans. We tend to not travel during the summer since it's the nicest time of year here. I am planning to go to my parents lake place for one long weekend a month. Traffic in/out of the city on Fri/Sun is awful so my plan is to go up Thur-Sat to avoid the traffic and make it a more enjoyable experience. My first trip is June 13-15. I'm hoping Phil will be able to join me, too. I get more vacation time than him, though, so I can see Paul and me going up to the lake without him.