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tip

Pain Quotidien

Posted by babybat 31 May 2006

This bakery/cafe just off Grand Place has friendly staff and great continental breakfasts and salads. Good value, and tasty!

35, place Rihour;
tel: 03 20 42 88 70
www.painquotidien.com

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Les 3 Brasseurs

Posted by babybat 31 May 2006

Microbrewery opposite Lille Flanders station. The food here's OK (pub grub - go for the Flammekuche pizza) but the real draw is the beer, brewed on site. Try the tasting menu: four house beers in little sampling glasses. Also sells beer to take home - a three-pack of 75cl bottles is about 10 euro.

22 place de la gare, 59000 Lille;
tel: 03 20 06 4625;
www.les3brasseurs.com

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Hygiene in restaurants

Posted by JohnSamuel 31 May 2006

Here’s a tip for those travelling in groups: abandon mutual chopstick dipping into various dishes served traditionally on revolving tables. We did this after eight of our 14 succumbed to stomach ailments. Unfortunately, it was in Shanghai that we were served the most commercial and unappetising meal of our seven-city visit.

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Koenigsstrasse

Posted by AnnekaSchranz 31 May 2006

This is the main shopping street in Stuttgart, and a great place to get your bearings. Buskers and locals jostle for space along the pedestrianised stretch, and it's easily accessible from many U-Bahn and S-Bahn stations. When the crowds get too much try exploring any of the little side streets.

Koenigsstrasse runs from the main train station to Marienstrasse.

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The Jazz Cafe

Posted by PeteinSQ 30 May 2006

This is a great cafe in central Bath. I go there whenever I'm in Bath (which used to be often) and it is my favourite place to eat there. They serve an excellent English breakfast all day, but not only that, they do toasted sandwiches, salads, baked potatoes and other more filling options. Jazz music is (as you might expect) played at all times. Take the kids here - they'll like it, as will you.

Kingsmead Square, Bath;
tel: 01225 329002

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Bazar Turkish restaurant

Posted by PhilSen 30 May 2006

Amsterdam is hardly short of Turkish restaurants, but you could do a lot worse than this one. Housed in an old synagogue, the high ceiling and fairy lights give the gaff an unusual ambience. Food is great value, starting at about 6 Euros, though the best stuff is served after 5pm and is made for sharing.

Albert Cuypstraat 182;
tel: 20-6750544;
www.bazaramsterdam.nl;
Trams 16 or 24

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Zakudia Bar and Food

Posted by Mosephine 27 May 2006

This loungy bar has one of the best views of the Thames.

The cocktails and drinks are fabulous, and very reasonable for London!

2a Southwark Bridge Road, London SE1 (between Southwark Bridge and Millennium Bridge);
tel: 0207 021 0085;
www.zakudia.com

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Clairefontaine Square

Posted by chris2005 27 May 2006

It is nothing spectacular, but still worth a visit for its atmosphere and for the nice restaurants that are located around it.

The square is located near the Cathedral.

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Place d'Armes

Posted by chris2005 27 May 2006

This is the unofficial heart of the pedestrian zone, surrounded by lots of restaurants and street cafés. It is the place where everybody meets, especially in summer. The bandstand has concerts every summer evening by visiting bands. Every second and fourth Saturday, a brocante (antiques/flea) market fills the square.

Place d'Armes is in the centre of Luxembourg City, between Neuve Rue Phillipe & Rue de Cure;
www.luxembourg.co.uk/pless.html

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Suedstadt (South Quarter)

Posted by CMSFU 26 May 2006

If you want to visit an authentic part of Cologne and don't want to go to all the touristy places where everybody else goes, visit the Suedstadt - a laid back quarter with pretty art nouveau buildings and friendly residents, most of them students and young families. Once you've passed the nasty construction site of the new underground line they're building at the Chlodwigplatz, you will find multi-cultural cuisine, nice cafes and pubs, and cute little shops.

A very special place is the Fiffi Bar, where the 1960's furnishing is decorated with kitschy dog accessories. If you fancy a nice park and beer garden, go to the Volksgarten 9 (Volksgartenstrasse). And if you're up for some football on the big screen during the World Cup, visit the Hammond Bar, a charmingly worn-out place where you can always have a glass of Kölsch together with incredibly nice, football-crazy people.

U-Bahn: Chlodwigplatz (Lines 6, 15, 16, 17);
Fiffi Bar: Rolandstrasse 99; tel: 0221 340 6211;
Hammond Bar: Metzer Strasse 25; tel: 0221 932 9229; www.hammondbar.de

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Naschmarkt

Posted by elmerfudd 26 May 2006

The great thing about the Naschmarkt, at least on Saturdays, is the way it progresses from tidy little Austrian huts at one end to a thoroughly oriental flea market at the other end. It’s like walking from one world to another: the best illustration of Metternich's comment that the Balkans begin at Kärtnerstrasse. Mind your handbag, but have fun! If you are staying in a place where you can do your own cooking, this is the place to stock up. And if your feet get tired, you could have a coffee in the sumptuously mirrored and gay-friendly Savoy Cafe.

Naschmarkt, between the 'Wiener Zielen'. Closest underground: Kettenbruckengasse U4

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Pod Mostem

Posted by PragueBloke 26 May 2006

Beautiful setting, under one of the arches of the Karluv Most. Most romantic restaurant in Prague.

Limited menu, but good wine and excellent hosts.

Cross the Charles Bridge from the Old Town, walk down the steps to your left down to Kampa Island, go under the bridge and it's round to your left.

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There's no better place to sit for a late lunch, enjoying a bottle of chilled Rueda, than Bar Kiki, just off the Mirador de San Nicolas. Their food is good, the ambiance is great, and you can sample some typical Morisco specialties of the area.

For real foodies, check out the new Mediterranean Cooking School, which offers food market tours and multi-day cooking vacations. The School also has apartment rentals.

Bar Kiki: Mirador de San Nicolas, Albaicin, next to Inglesia San Nicolas

Mediterranean Cooking School - tel: 958 201 557 ;
email: info@alhambratravel.com;
www.alhambratravel.com

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Snails in Seixal

Posted by gaivota 25 May 2006

If you want an authentic economic and tourist-free experience, take the catamaran from Cais do Sodre to Seixal on the south bank of the Tejo estuary. It's cheap and fast.

When you get there, walk for about ten minutes past the shipyard and into old Seixal. There are numerous places to eat the little snails (Caracois) or slices of cuttlefish (Chocos) washed down with a couple of glasses of beer. The cheapest and best however, is the headquarters of the local communist party, which is friendly and open to all!

Take in the traditional boats that used to work the river and maybe the old cork factory just up the road. If you are desperate for internet contact there is free broadband and wireless access in the local library.

Ferries: www.transtejo.pt;
Local council: www.cm-seixal.pt

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Krammerbooks and Afterwards

Posted by LoneRover 25 May 2006

A wonderful cafe and restaurant serving a whole variety of different foods. The guacamole and fajitas are particularly good. There is also a small book store.

1517 Conneticut Avenue, NW
Washington DC;
Metro: Dupont Circle (take the Q Street exit);
www.kramers.com

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Cafe Westend

Posted by elmerfudd 25 May 2006

My favourite cafe in Vienna. For all who appreciate comfortable, well-used, elegantly scruffy interiors, in which a lot of the fittings are probably from the 50s or 60s.

The service is perfect Viennese tradition: efficient and quick (when the waiter isn’t on a cigarette break), skilled (the coffee is fine - rough and strong; the little trays fly around on improbable trajectories, but without spilling a drop) and with just that hint that you’re really bloody lucky to be getting served at all.

Have a grosser brauner: it'll set you up for the day (or night). The large mound of newspapers also meets the requirement of tradition, as does the classic Viennese breakfast of a couple of semmel and perhaps a boiled egg. Perfect for arriving in Vienna from a night train.

It’s opposite Westbahnhof train station, on the corner of Mariahilfer Straße and the Gürtel. When you come out of the main entrance of the station, head straight across the big road, crossing all the tramlines, going past the U-bahn hall, and then its just 10 yards to the right after you get across the last bit of pedestrian crossing. If you’re coming from the underground, there’s an exit right next to the door of the cafe; if memory serves, it’s labelled "innere mariahilferstr".

Mariahilfer Straße 128;
tel: 01 5233183

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Antiga Confeitaria de Belém

Posted by kirstyl 24 May 2006

Not do they sell absolutely heavenly pastries, but buying them is a real experience - crowds of people clamouring for them as they come straight out of the oven. I had to push and shove to the front and then watch three batches be devoured before I got mine. The phrase "selling like hot cakes" must have come from this place.

Rua de Belém 84-92;
tel 21 363 74 23;
www.pasteisdebelem.pt;
Tram 15, trains from Cais do Sodré, many buses

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In the lobby of the Marriott Hotel is an 'all you can eat' dessert bar, which costs roughly £4 per head. The selection is fantastic (they had 3 different kinds of strudel the day we went). However, coffee, tea etc is extra.

· Apaczai Csere Janos u. 4, on the riverbank of the Pest side, just north of the Elizabeth bridge;
· tel: 36 1 266 7000, (or toll free 008 001 1998);
· marriott.com/property/propertypage/BUDHU

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Soul Cafe Restaurant

Posted by travelbug2006 24 May 2006

The Soul Cafe is a restaurant on Raday Utca, serving superb food in pleasant surroundings. They have everything from soups and sandwiches to mains etc. We had lots of lovely meals in Budapest but this was the best. If this restaurant doesn't tempt you, there are dozens of others on this street, which is near Kalvin Ter metro station.

Raday Utca 11-13;
tel: 217 6986;
www.soulcafe.hu

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Os Tibetanos

Posted by mattleys 24 May 2006

Vegetarians are not well catered for in Lisbon, but the restaurant in the Buddhist centre on Rua do Salitre makes up for it. It's friendly, the food is good, and the building itself is pretty, with a nice garden at the back. Closed at weekends. Booking advised.

Rua do Salitre, 117;
tel: 21 314 20 38;
Metro: Avenide;
www.tibetanos.com

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