Ryan and I were in this really strange state of mind, fading in and out of sleep on the flights home. We felt so groggy and out of it. I guess the week finally caught up with us. It was that weird kind of sleep when you close your eyes and fall asleep within 3o seconds but it seems like you immediately go into deep sleep. I would dream for another 30 seconds, then wake back up and then continue the process. We made our O'Hare connecting flight much easier this time (There was only about 40 minutes between the flights, and the first time we were running as fast as we could to catch it - Ryan was laughing because he said I was running like Pheobe in the park on Friends...for the record, I don't think I was...and we made it on the last call, without a minute to spare). It was storming when we arrived in Little Rock, and the plane descended, then went back up again and circled around another 30 minutes. I was freaking out, of course, in all of the turbulence. I wanted out of there, and when we finally landed, I was clapping louder than anyone. Does anyone else get tears in their eyes when people clap for the pilot? I always do.
Friday, July 31, 2009
Last Day in New York
Ryan and I were in this really strange state of mind, fading in and out of sleep on the flights home. We felt so groggy and out of it. I guess the week finally caught up with us. It was that weird kind of sleep when you close your eyes and fall asleep within 3o seconds but it seems like you immediately go into deep sleep. I would dream for another 30 seconds, then wake back up and then continue the process. We made our O'Hare connecting flight much easier this time (There was only about 40 minutes between the flights, and the first time we were running as fast as we could to catch it - Ryan was laughing because he said I was running like Pheobe in the park on Friends...for the record, I don't think I was...and we made it on the last call, without a minute to spare). It was storming when we arrived in Little Rock, and the plane descended, then went back up again and circled around another 30 minutes. I was freaking out, of course, in all of the turbulence. I wanted out of there, and when we finally landed, I was clapping louder than anyone. Does anyone else get tears in their eyes when people clap for the pilot? I always do.
Thursday, July 30, 2009
Third Full Day in NYC
It was pretty late, but we hated to get in too early since it was our last night. I remembered that vegan doughnuts were supposedly delivered on Tuesday nights to a place, Atlas Cafe and Bakery, in the East Village so we took a little side trip. (My complaint about the subway system is there are no subways in a big portion of the east side, which is too bad because that is where a large number of vegetarian places are. It always requires a lot of extra walking. Which is usually fine, but my feet were really hurting at this point.) Atlas isn't entirely vegetarian, but their dessert case was AMAZING. They get most (all probably) of their desserts from Vegan Treats, a place in Pennsylvania, whose website I've looked at, just for the fun of it, many times before. My purpose was to buy some doughnuts to take home for the kids. (I first called American Airlines from the Cafe to make sure I could carry them on. They said as long as they weren't jelly or cream filled - funny.) It was really hard, though, to pass up all of these BEAUTIFUL desserts...so we ordered a piece of peanut butter cheesecake to share. My camera battery was dead at this point, but it had chocolate frosting on top with these large balls of peanut butter and good grief, so much other stuff going on you wouldn't believe. We could barely finish it. I told you we did not behave very well, food-wise, today. Oh, well - it was our last restaurant visit on this trip. Sigh.
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
NYC Adventures Continue
Sunday, July 26, 2009
I Heart New York
After checking into our hotel at 10:30ish p.m., we headed down to Curly's Vegetarian Diner. If you get tired of me posting pictures of the meals I get excited about...STOP READING NOW. In fact, you might not want to read the rest of the week. Or just be really happy for me because I live in a state with NO vegetarian restaurants, and I'm commonly faced with having only iceberg lettuce salad to choose. We were really hungry and shared the tofu scrambler with spinach, salad, toast...
and curly fries with gravy - which, I think, is Ryan's new favorite food. He may frame this picture he loved them so much...
The first all vegan icecream shop I've ever seen - Lulu's Sweet Apothecary. It was really cute with a broad choice of icecream flavors (which we got to sample!) to choose from. Just like Baskin Robbins. Complete with tiny little icecream spoons. :) No, I didn't eat both of those cones, even though that would have been a fair assessment. Ryan got rum raisin, and I got (SOFT-SERVE!!) cake batter/chocolate nut twist. It was REALLY good. Twist cones were always my favorite (dairy) thing, growing up. I was so excited about being in Lulu's, I remember I said, "They even have flurries!" Ryan asked, "What's a flurry?" "...it's...(as I start laughing) I don't know! But they have them!"
I just realized I got these pictures out of order, with good reason. I naturally would have assumed we ate the icecream AFTER lunch...not right before supper, as it actually happened...oops. After lunch, we went to see God of Carnage, starring James Gandolfini, Marcia Gay Harden, Hope Davis, and Jeff Daniels (you know, from Dumb and Dumber) on Broadway. I LOVE going to shows, and this one was very entertaining. It was Ryan's first Broadway show, and he really enjoyed it, as well.
For dessert, Ryan ate the mixed berry crumble with chamomile "icecream." I had the chocolate peanut butter bliss. Clearly, I would pick whatever has chocolate and bliss in the title. When they brought it out, I thought it was the tiniest dessert I'd ever seen (but cute!). I think it was the BEST dessert I've ever put in my mouth.
Had another great day today (minus one new cardigan left in a taxi), which I'll write about tomorrow.