Just a quick afternoon trip to a new place while passing through a part of downtown I hadn't been to before. While probably well-known to the trick skateboarders and rollerbladers, it's not someplace that makes a lot of tourist publications (though the local maps on the street do show it).
Author's note: if you have first-hand experience or knowledge about pre-existing psychological conditions, feel free to comment. You can use a fake name / handle in the comments if you like.
Has anybody been to the Illustrious House buffet in Kyungsung by any chance? I can't find a write up or a review for it anywhere.
Checking it out tomorrow night anyway but just curious as to whether or not it's bollocks. 25,000 won buffet dinner isn't too bad a price, and buffets tend to rock my socks off regardless of quality (within reason) so i'm sure it'll be fine.
Oh well, let me know if you know anything more about it. Cheers.
29 Sep 2009, I want to help other English Teachers by pointing out some problems that arise from some fundamental differences
between English and Korean. You will need to understand this if you want to help the kids rhyme in English! Otherwise,
they'll never learn that "right" (라잇) and "eat" (잇) don't rhyme in English.
Things have been a little quiet here of late, mainly because our Cambodian experience has been more street crime than street food (we were recently liberated of our camera.)
Back in Hanoi, however, I wrote a review of a burger place that the folks at hamburger mega-blog A Hamburger a Day have been good enough to include on the site.
If you've seen my taeguk ratings on my Destination posts, you probably recognize the simple five-star scale on several different characteristics. But what the heck's a taeguk?
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