The High Line, Chelsea to the Meatpacking District
www.thehighline.org

Artists and galleries are also involved

The best thing about the Highline is that it's ever-changing just like nature, just like cities. Each visit is an experience anew.
Cafe Habana, 17 Prince Street, Nolita
www.cafehabana.com

Cafe Sabarsky, 1048 Fifth Avenue, Upper East Side
www.cafesabarsky.com
Nestled inside the Neue Galerie (featuring Austrian and German works), is the very charming Cafe Sabarsky. Feeling very old world, and very European with high ceilings, dark wood walls and marble tables, this Viennese cafe was one of our dining highlights. After ducking into the grand foyer of the gallery, and soaking wet after a surprise torrential rainstorm, we were hoping to seat ourselves and get comfy. Not possible at Cafe Sabarsky. This place is popular and


Vanessa's Dumpling House, 118A Eldridge Street,
Lower East Side
www.vanessasdumplinghouse.com
There is nothing glamourous about Vanessa's Dumpling House, and therein lies its charm. It is a no-nonsense, completely unpretentious place where you line up, order, try to find a place to sit in the very narrow seating area across from the long service counter, get your order and chow down. It is small and a little
run down, but it's fun. It's so cool to watch the middle-aged Chinese ladies behind the counter boiling and frying dumplings, scooping soup, and slapping together sandwiches in perfect choreography, managing never to bump into each other. And the food! Their deliciously greasy dumplings are top notch and sold at an incredulous price. Four tasty Cabbage & Pork Fried Dumplings or Chive & Pork Fried Dumplings set you back a dollar. A dollar! My guy and I indulged ourselves for just over six dollars and that included eight dumplings, a delicious Sour & Spicy Cucumber Salad, a Sesame Pancake, a hot Horlicks (so good) and a tea. I only wished we had discovered this place earlier in our trip. On our next voyage there, I will most certainly have their Sesame Pancake Sandwiches which come stuffed with a variety of fillings, including the one I await to try: Peking Duck. And I will certainly be back at Vanessa's at the very beginning of our trip, so we can return again and again and again.
Big Onion's Walking Tour's
Original Multi-Ethnic Eating Tour, Lower East Side
www.bigonion.com
The Lower East Side neighbourhood was, and still is, home to New York's many immigrant families. As this has been the starting point for many a newcomer, it's full of fascinating history. The inhabitants of each area has changed dramatically throughout the years, as families established themselves and moved further north or to the boroughs. And that's what made this tour super interesting, to hear of the many incarnations a single building or block had taken. Throughout the walk we learned about hardships endured,
stories of corrupt politicians, racist policies, turf clashes, gang mayhem and survival. Particularly notable stops were the infamous Five Points from Gangs of New York lore, the Bloody Angle in Chinatown, a blind corner where rival gangs would ambush each other, and the evolution of tenement housing. We walked, listened, learned, and yes, ate too. The tour was punctuated by stops at many of the local food shops and eateries. Along the way we ate Dominican fried plantain, Kosher pickles, Jewish halvah, Chinese rose petal candies, and Italian bocconcini, 
Big Onion offers walking tours aplenty throughout Manhattan and the Boroughs. The guides are specialists in the fields of architecture, urban development, cultural history, sociology, and labour issues. They have also won several awards for their work.
www.vanessasdumplinghouse.com
There is nothing glamourous about Vanessa's Dumpling House, and therein lies its charm. It is a no-nonsense, completely unpretentious place where you line up, order, try to find a place to sit in the very narrow seating area across from the long service counter, get your order and chow down. It is small and a little

Big Onion's Walking Tour's
Original Multi-Ethnic Eating Tour, Lower East Side
www.bigonion.com



salami, and cannoli. I'm so glad we took this tour. Not only was my stomach happy, I felt like I gotten to know this city that I love, a whole lot better. Yes NYC, I ♥ you even more.
Big Onion offers walking tours aplenty throughout Manhattan and the Boroughs. The guides are specialists in the fields of architecture, urban development, cultural history, sociology, and labour issues. They have also won several awards for their work.
2 comments:
your blog rules!!!...it's making me hungry and we've packed all our food.
Thanks Nick!! Hope the move went well, and that you've been well-fed since ;o)
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