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FOOD KOREA

Korean Life | Eating My First (and Last) Silk Worm Pupae (번데기)

This might sound strange, but one of the top foods I wanted to try since moving to Korea was beondegi (번데기) or silk worm pupae.  It’s a common snack sold by traditional Korean food stall vendors that we see every time we attend a street fair or festival. The worms are cooked in a large metal vat and served by the heaping spoonful into a quart-sized paper bowl, the distinct earthy smell noticeable from all the way down the street. I wanted to try the worms not for any Fear Factor sort of reasons, but simply out of curiosity, because maybe there was a reason that these food stalls could be found everywhere in Korea. Maybe it was really tasty? Maybe I was missing out on something? Maybe they would turn out to be the most delicious thing I have ever eaten? The problem was that I only wanted to taste ONE silk worm, but could never bring myself to buy — and eat — an entire gloopy bucket of it.

While my sister was in town, we ate at a restaurant where one of the sides (banchan) was a shallow bowl of silk worms.  It’s not a normal side dish to serve in Korean restaurants so my eyes immediately zoomed in on the bowl of worms sitting on another table just before we sat down for dinner.  I wasn’t really in the mood for worms and told Sly to tell the waiter that we would not be eating worms tonight. I got up to use the restroom and when I returned there was a bowl of worms on the table. I suppose this was what is known as “fate.”

It was now or never.

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PHILIPPINES TRAVEL

Travel Notes | Philippines Mini Video

I decided to try making a little movie on our recent, longer, trip to the Philippines after re-experimenting with a video making app while in Seoul earlier this year. Our trip was a last-minute one, conjured up at the end of a hectic work week. Sly warily turned to me one morning and said, “After this week is over, I just want to go somewhere and lie on the beach.” Consider it done. We purchased and planned our trip to Cebu and Bohol in less than five days time. It turned out to be the perfect getaway and definitely one of our favorite places we have visited in Asia so far.

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BOOKS

Books of the Month | March

Somehow I managed to read 18 books this month? 18.5 if you count the book I half-way finished. The crazy thing was I hardly read at all the last two weeks of March because I got stuck on a couple of somewhat boring books, got busy, and then traveled to the Philippines for some much needed R&R after a hectic work month for Sly, as well as to celebrate Sly’s birthday.  I’m so used to spending my free moments reading or listening to an audio book, that it was kind of strange to take a break from reading for a couple weeks. I missed it! I’m definitely looking forward to getting back into my reading routine and tackling my never-ending stack of library books.

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KOREA SNOWBOARDING

Snowboarding in Korea | High 1 Resort

snowboarding in korea | high1 resortsnowboarding in korea | high1 resort

The problem with snowboarding, at least in Korea, is that as much as we’d love to go every weekend, there’s hardly ever enough snow in December (plus it’s always so busy over the holidays), it’s usually unbearably cold in January, and by March it’s getting to be too warm once again. That leaves a very small window for snowboarding – essentially the month of February – which is when everyone else also wants to hit the slopes. Which is why we chose to snowboard at High 1 Resort on a Monday, even if it meant a seven hour round trip drive and even if it meant that not all of the lifts were open. Plus, snowboarding on a Monday had one huge advantage: there was hardly anyone else there.

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FOOD SEOUL

Seoul Eats | Cruffins at Mr. Holmes Bakehouse Korea

seoul // mr. holmes bakehouse cruffin

One of the final destinations on my culinary food tour of Seoul was the much coveted and overly-instagrammed bakery, Mr. Holmes Bakehouse. We just missed the cruffin craze when it hit SF a couple of years after we left and we never had the time (or patience) to wait in line to try one whenever we returned to visit, so when the first international Mr. Holmes Bakehouse opened in Seoul, I raised my eyebrows. Perhaps there would be cruffins in our future after all.

The last time we were in Seoul we made our first attempt to obtain, and eat, the elusive cruffin. We had heard first-hand from several Seou-ites that the lines weren’t very long, and/or that there were oftentimes no lines at all, so we spent a good portion of our evening, traveling across town on a cruffin run. By the time we arrived, there were not only no cruffins to be found, but there were no consolation baked goods of any kind left to purchase. Before leaving, Sly asked if I wanted to at least take a photo in front of their stupid neon sign, but of course I didn’t. That would have been cheating. 

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SEOUL

Seoul | IKEA in Korea (+ Lunch at Coco Curry)

seoul | ikea in koreaseoul | ikea in koreaseoul | ikea in korea

It only took us two tries, but we finally made it to Korea’s one and only IKEA!

Actually, we visited late last year, and a version of this post has been sitting in my draft folder since then. As time passed, I wondered if a visit to IKEA, which in most ways resembled every other IKEA we’ve ever been to, warranted it’s own, full-fledged post. 

Yet, for some odd reason, I find myself curious about how ubiquitous chain stores are translated and adapted to local tastes. I cannot recall the last time I ate at McDonald’s in the States, but I’m always so compelled to visit one overseas just to see how the menu differs. In this case, our visit to IKEA, part two, was fueled by a desperate need for a computer desk and coffee table, but also to a lesser extent, by an interest to see how Korea’s version of IKEA differed from America’s version.

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FOOD SEOUL

Seoul Eats | Myeongdong Street Food & Night Market

seoul // myeongdang street food and night market

Nearly two years to the date, we walked around one of Seoul’s most touristy spots, Myeongdong, in the frigid cold with the intention of eating as much street food as possible. My memories of that trip (that I have still yet to blog about) are somewhat hazy, and maybe even a little disappointing. I don’t remember there being a huge variety of food and can only recall eating two notable things: spiral potato on a stick (tornado potato) and a sweet and savory egg-stuffed soft bread roll.

On our last trip to Seoul, we ate in Myeongdong as often as possible. We took the free shuttle from our hotel (a 10-15 min ride) and indulged in all the trendy, new, constantly changing, Korean street food items. The tornado potato and egg bun were still going strong, but one of the most popular items we saw was fresh seafood topped with cheese, baked until bubbling on a hot grill.
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SEOUL

Seoul | Seoul Museum of Art (SeMA)

seoul // seoul museum of art SeMA

As proof that I didn’t just eat during our last visit to Seoul (though that would be a fairly accurate description of my time there), here are some photos of an afternoon spent getting lost, going to the wrong museum, thinking I could still get to the museum I wanted to go to, roaming around clueless for another hour, then backtracking to the first museum and deciding it would have to do.

In other words, I wanted to go to the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art (MMCA) but ended up at the Seoul Museum of Art (SeMA). It seeeds like an easy enough place to find except for the fact that Google sucks in Korea. When I looked up the MMCA, it pulled up the correct photos, description, etc, BUT THE WRONG ADDRESS.  The address listed was for the SeMA. I should have just gone along with what was listed on the MMCA website, but since there were three MMCA branches as well as a bunch of other National museums of some sort in the same area as the SeMA, I got confused.

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FOOD SEOUL

Seoul Eats | Texas BBQ at Manimal Smoke House

seoul // manimal texas style barbecue bbq

A Texas BBQ restaurant in Korea? I have to be honest, given the failure of basic “international” foods like pizza and nachos in Korea, we were not convinced a restaurant like Manimal could produce authentic tasting barbecue. We weren’t convinced any place in all of Korea could make good Texas-style barbecue in general. It’s hard enough finding Texas BBQ outside of Texas, let alone in Seoul.  Let’s not forget that not only are we food snobs, but we are food snobs from Texas. We like our barbecue a certain way – dry rubbed, smoked, and served with a bottle of peppery, tomato-based (not sugary molasses N.Carolina), sauce.

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