Showing posts with label Venice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Venice. Show all posts

Sunday, September 28, 2014

SoCal Girl Visits the Venice Canals


This weekend, I finally ventured into Venice to go check out the Venice Canals. One of my Facebook friends had posted a bunch of gorgeous pictures he had taken of the canals, and every since, I've been dying to go see them. 


Abbott Kinney first created this canals in 1905 as part of his overall plan for "Venice in America". Despite their early popularity, the canals were soon seen as "outdated" and were left in varying states of disrepair due to lack of funding. Much of the canals were filled in to create roads and the other parts remained in poor condition. Finally, in 1992, the canals were renovated and made to look like their current state, and since then, the surrounding residential areas have exponentially increased in value. 




The canals were stunningly gorgeous, and we walked through them, snapping pictures and enjoying the lovely scenery. All the canals had a number of bridges, and so we sat around for a while, enjoying the wonderful weather and watching all the little kids out in the water on paddleboards and mini-boats. 



Definitely take the time and visit LA's Venice Canals if you're ever in the area. Although it may not hold up to Italy's standards, it's definitely a sight to be seen in its own right.

Restaurant Review: Gjelina

On Saturday, a few friends and I decided to try out the very popular restaurant Gjelina on Abbott Kinney Blvd in Venice. I had heard rave reviews about the amazing food and great atmosphere so I was dying to try it, and decided to drag along the other two. Unfortunately, Gjelina only takes reservations for parties of six of more, and since we were only three, we got there and ended up waiting around 35 minutes to be seated. 


We decided to walk around Abbott Kinney instead of waiting outside the restaurant and stopped at Lemonade to grab some yummy drinks. We all ordered different lemonades, I went with the Blackberry Thyme, and the other two got the Arnold Palmer and the Watermelon Rosemary. My blackberry thyme was absolutely delicious, but the watermelon rosemary had an overwhelming rosemary flavor to it. We sat inside the crowded restaurant, chit-chatting and enjoying our lemonade, and twenty minutes later, began heading back to Gjelina. 

After another 5 minute waiting period once we got there, we were finally seated inside and handed menus (Gjelina has a rotating seasonal menu that changes frequently, so they print menus fresh every day). The restaurant has a wonderful, modern-looking interior with lots of wood pieces and low-lighting. As one could imagine based on the wait, every table was full, and people were laughing and drinking and talking everywhere as harried-looking waiters and waitresses maneuvered around the constant influx of people pouring in. 

Gjelina - Venice, Los Angeles. Loved it!




After a thorough perusal of the menu and much indecision, A and I decided to split two dishes so we could try two different things and the other A decided to go with a vegetarian sandwich (Gjelina has a very vegetarian friendly menu, with a variety of interesting choices to choose from). A and I chose two different pizzas: The Gruyere and The Blanco. 

Veggie Sandwich: Avocado, Sprouts, Red Onion, Peppers, Aioli, and Fennel


The Blanco: mozzarella, parmesan, fromage blanc & castelvatrano olive
The Gruyere: caramelized onion, fromage blanc & arugula

Two very happy diners
All three of us thoroughly enjoyed our meal at Gjelina, and only wish we had enough space to try the infamous Butterscotch Pot De Creme with salted caramel and creme fraiche. We were very happy with the service, everything was delivered in a timely fashion and multiple waiters kept walking by, making sure we had everything we needed. All in all, it was a lovely experience, and I definitely hope to come back and try more of their scrumptious menu.

Sunday, September 21, 2014

Book Review: Inferno

Dan Brown's "Inferno" took me a lot longer to read then I expected, considering how excited I was to get through it. It's been a while since I've read a Dan Brown book, so I forgot how much interesting information he manages to pack in amidst all the action and twists and turns. Being a huge art history buff, I have thoroughly enjoyed all of Robert Langdon's crazy adventures throughout Europe, and "Inferno" was no different. 'Inferno' shares many stylistic similarities with both 'Angels and Demons' and 'The Da Vinci Code' including ancient symbology, European art, secret and powerful societies, conspiracies, and futuristic technology. The novel is enticing and exciting, changing pace with every turn of the page, and will keep you thoroughly entertained throughout the duration.

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"The truth can be glimpsed only through the eyes of death."

The novel starts out with our favorite symbologist lying unconscious on a hospital bed in Florence, Italy with a gunshot wound to the head. When he awakens, Robert Langdon has no recollection of how he ended up in Italy or what happened the last two days and the two doctors treating him can offer very little information about his whereabouts before he came to the hospital besides the phrase he kept uttering as they brought him in and the small cylindrical package he was carrying in his coat. Within minutes of his regaining consciousness, Langdon is attacked again, and only manages to escape with the help of Doctor Sienna Brooks. They barely manage to escape and upon attempting to make contact with the U.S. Consulate, they are attacked again, leading them to conclude that they can trust no one. Robert and Sienna quickly figure out what the small package contains, and it leads them on a treasure hunt revolving around Dante and his infamous Inferno, throughout Florence and Venice, with the various authorities constantly on their tail. In typical Dan Brown fashion, there are many twists and turns to the tale, and you never know who you can trust and who you can't. Characters switch sides, trusts are broken, and clues misinterpreted, all while the future well-being of the world is at stake.

"The darkest places in hell are reserved for those who maintain their neutrality in times of moral crisis"

In "Inferno", Dan Brown's main overlying theme is the overpopulation epidemic our world is set to face in the very near future. The realism of what he talks about is what makes this novel so interesting: the rapid growth of our population is indeed a major concern today and clearly our current attempts at trying to control it are not working. I was absolutely fascinated by the factual and mathematical foundation for the argument's basis, and the many theoretical solutions that were presented throughout the novel for this problem. Obviously many of the solutions are completely hypothetical and not at all possible in the real world, but the moral dilemmas that revolve around them is what makes the reader really think: what would you do if you were facing this problem and had to make a decision. Dan Brown really makes you completely re-evaluate your moral compass in this novel by presenting a very real problem and a variety of bitter solutions to it, all of which will put you between a rock and a hard place.

I would highly recommend Dan Brown's "Inferno" to anyone looking for a thought-provoking novel full of interesting information about ancient art, Dante, modern medicine, and the problem of human overpopulation. Brown has once again proved to be a skilled story-teller, completely transporting us to a different world and regaling us with another exciting, adrenaline-pumping Robert Langdon adventure.

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