Friday, February 10, 2006

The VA's travel advisory service

The Vol Abroad loves dispensing advice. Lack of relevant topical knowledge is no barrier.

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A colleague is headed to Nashville for the Fan Fair (or whatever they're calling it these days) this summer and asked me for my advice on where to stay. My time in Nashville is usually rigorously controlled and I rarely get out unsupervised by relatives who don't really do the tourist thing. For example: Parthenon? Never been. Not even when I lived in Nashville. Printer's Alley watering holes? A distant dream for me. A sneaky beer in a plastic SOLO cup on my cousin's deck is as close as I've been.

I'm dreading the "where should I eat?" question, since I always dine at the Kinfolk Kitchen. I highly recommend it. You can always get a table, there are convenient locations all over the greater Nashville area, food's good (amazing at some branches), company's great, but sometimes you have to load the dishwasher.

(Hey Nashville readers, who would like to give me tips on where to eat and what to see so I can look smart?)

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Out and about last night, I met a couple of recent graduates doing the European backpacking thing.

One of them was on his way to Amsterdam, so I dispensed my usual piece of advice to prospective travellers to the Netherlands:

Don't eat the fish soup.

(When I previously dispensed this advice to a friend of VolBro’s, he replied “So your only warning about visiting Amsterdam, a town of whores and drugs, is not to eat the fish soup?” OK, here’s more advice, don’t eat them either.)

Really - don't eat the fish soup. I know this first hand, well second hand, since it was the Vol-in-Law who ate it. And it resulted in a catastrophic case of food poisoning. The ViL and I had a quiet lunch in Amsterdam. I had a bunch of fried stuff and felt guilty when he ordered the healthy fish soup. He wasn’t feeling too good later on that afternoon when we went to the Van Gogh museum. But we were in a group, and I wanted to see the pretty pictures, and anyway the Vol-in-Law being a Brit is normally pallorous. Who knew it was serious?

On our flight out that night back to London he started feeling really bad. He got up to use the facilities and returned to our seat about a half hour later sweating and shaking. Turns out he passed out in the bathroom. (He asked me why I hadn’t been worried over his long absence, and I had to admit that I was so engrossed in my book on internal controls and corporate governance that I didn’t notice.) Not only did he pass out in the bathroom, but he passed out mid-upchuck with his trousers around his ankles. When he came to, he discovered there was vomit all over the inside of his pants. Nothing for it, but to hitch up the britches – you can’t exactly wander pants-less on an aircraft. We got home with no further incidents, but I did have to take him to the emergency room a few days later when he came out in a horrible rash and started blathering incoherently due to an amazingly high temperature. At that point, I was seriously worried.

So when I say, don’t eat the fish soup in Amsterdam...

1 comment:

St. Caffeine said...

Yes, I know I'm not technically a Nashville reader. Like you, though, I've never let that stop me from offering advice.

Eats: Evidently "hot chicken" is Nashville's signature dish. I'll admit that I sort of hung out in Nashville for years and never had the dish. In the past year or so, though, I read two magazine articles about it.

I can't personally recommend the best hot chicken joint, but I can plug South Street. It's over in the sort of Vandy area and the food is pretty good. The defining feature, however, is the treehouse bar. It's cool.

DRINK: If your friend appreciates fine beer (i.e., fancier than PBR), tell him/her to go to the Nashville "branch" of The Flying Saucer. They've got an amazing array of beers from around the world on tap. Plus, Monday night is pint night -- almost all beers are $2.50. Oh, location, ... Well I don't remember the street names. Wait, this is the one I was telling you and the ViL about -- sort of behind the Frist Art Center or whatever it's called.

By the way, the Parthenon is worth the $4 just to see the giant statue of Athena.