Truly Asia
The Jakarta Post | Tue, 07/29/2008 4:21 PM |
Sore that Asia never gets shown enough love in international rags’ ‘Best Restaurants’ lists? A new restaurant guide is set to right that wrong. Due to be released at the end of October this year, The Miele Guide will rank the region’s top 20 best restaurants annually, decided upon by a stringent selection process.
After gathering input from 84 respected restaurant critics
in an online poll (held from May 15 to the end of
July) will have voters casting their votes for a specific number of restaurants
from their own countries and a larger number of restaurants from outside their
own countries. In addition, a selected jury of respected foodies and food and
wine professionals across
Can’t wait to see if your favorite eatery makes the cut? The Miele Guide hits stores late October and will evaluate restaurants in 16 Asian countries — Brunei, Cambodia, China (Hong Kong and Macau inclusive), India, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Thailand and Vietnam.
DID YOU KNOW
The much-watched annual ‘World’s Best Restaurants’ list by
Restaurant magazine has consistently named only five or fewer Asian restaurants
among its 100 honorable mentions.
Mind your manners
We’re all prone to a little holiday misbehavin’ but
Expedia’s made a list and checked it twice. And they know who’s been naughty
and nice.
The travel portal’s global survey had more than 4,000
hoteliers from across the world dishing the dirt on travelers’ best and worst
travel traits, as well as ranking them in 10 specific categories including manners,
willingness to learn the language and try local cuisine, generosity, tidiness,
volume, fashion sense and propensity to complain.
While the survey named the Japanese as overall best tourists
with the Germans and British tied in second place and the Canadians and Swiss
next, American tourists came in 11 overall.
Other findings include:
•Americans were considered noisy tourists, the least tidy
and sporting the worst fashion sense, but they ranked top when it came to
putting effort into learning the local language and sampling local fare.
•The French, Chinese and Japanese were the least likely to
incorporate the local language, and the Chinese, Indians and Japanese had the
least interest in the culinary styles of the places they visit.
•Americans were also considered the most generous, followed
by the Canadians and Russians.
•Italians and French tourists were named best dressed.
•French tourists are seen as the most "fiscally
conservative," followed by the Dutch and the British.
•The Germans, just before the Japanese and British, were
considered the tidiest tourists -- never leaving a mess.
Sex and City
Still in a tizzy over the Sex and the City movie? Make like
Carrie and co by heading down to the ultra-fashionable SEVVA the next time
you’re in
The hip resto and bar, located in Penthouse of Prince’s
Building in Central, now features a new cocktail menu designed by renowned
mixologist Joseph Boroski, who blended all those colorful alcoholic creations
on the Sex and the City series.
Among Boroski’s SEVVA creations are Asian influenced cocktails such as “Bloody
Mary in
Can spa treatments get any more pimped out than they already
are? Apparently so. The acclaimed
Anantara Spa at the
The former capitalizes on the already popular spa trend
taking
Meanwhile, the ‘Royal Trisara’’s magic lies in the healing touch
of three therapists, who work magic on your aches and knots with a combination
of Thai and Swedish techniques -- hands, forearms and elbows timed in perfect
synchrony across the entire back of the body. The 90-minute treatment also
includes a Thai oil massage and warm coconut oil, scalp, head and shoulder massage,
and Thai oil foot massage.
+Chan Hse May







