Welcome to 2011, bloggies!
Sending you out tons of H&H: Health and happiness.
Ah, a new year. filled with renewed expectation, fuzzy unknowns, blind anticipation, and yet-to-be realized, um, resolutions, I believe they're called?
Truth time: I stopped making resolutions the year I discovered they amount to nothing more than an accessory to Weight Watchers commercials and the centre piece to countless fluffy "news" items sprawled across every newspaper and magazine cover. Change can come whenever you need want it to, so why does January 1st have to be the starting point? I hereby liberate you from the useless marketing tools referred to as so-called "resolutions". Enjoy life, and welcome self-improvement on your own terms!
So, how were your holidays? I had the pleasure of spending Christmas in Manhattan. Besides the once in a lifetime snowfall of over 25 inches (50-ish centimetres for the Canadians who are keeping count) and considering New Yorkers don't have the equipment to clean their sidewalk (well sounds like us Montrealers finally have one thing we can't complain about!) here's what the West Village looked like early on the 27th of December:
I've never seen New York city like this. But the notoriously tough Manhattanites didn't blink for a second. I had to smile when I saw a Salvatore Ferragamo salesclerk cleaning his storefront sidewalk armed with a microscopic shovel and italian-leather loafers.
I had to visit the Kardashian Dash NYC store just to see what all the hype was about.
Storefront of Dash NYC...*yawn*
My take?
Well, here it goes: if "hand"-selected Bebe apparel (slight cringe) and flouncy Alice and Olivia blouses are your coup-de-coeurs, then you'll loooove the over-the top, postage stamp sized boutique with attitude-ladden sales-girls at the Dash shop on Spring Street in NYC. Yes, the Kardashians are definitely nip/tucked marketing masters (or their publicists are wildly overpaid, either way) but as cute as some of their clothing items were, I didn't see anything that would make me fall flat on my fashionista face. NEXT.
Here's my foodie bit.
I tried Norma's, made famous by some Blair Waldorfian visits on Gossip Girl, to see whether the caviar omelettes and foie gras french toast really do add up to a whole new level of chic-brunching.
Be warned: the prices are completely absurd, (Challah french toast for $24 USD?) and noisy mid-day snackers have no shame about boisterous gabbing around their french press coffee.
But really, I loved it.
The infamous prices of $100 to $1,000 omelettes are a farce, but my reliable foodie sources told me the lobster used for these luxurious concoctions are so buttery and creamy you barely need to chew. All of Norma's bread is made in-house, as well as their homemade confiture made with day-fresh blueberries and strawberries.
Plus, every meal starts off with a complimentary shot of their fresh daily smoothie concoctions made to entice your palette and, perhaps, order one of your own. Smart.
It goes against every grain of my being, but I enjoyed my over-the-top, upper west side brunch.
And just for kicks and in the name of the shear ridiculousness of their prices, here's
My rating: ♡♡♡♡
I keep one ♡ to myself because what brunch-o-lista doesn't like a good mimosa with her cappuccino? Apparently Norma's skipped out on getting a liquor license, so no embarrassingly early-hour cocktail for us, friends. What a downer. How else am I supposed to wash down my $1,000 omelette?
Mtl.D solution: Norma's is actually at the Hotel Le Parker Meridien, so before you nosh, get your champagne flute or bloody mary fix at the hotel bar. The cathedral-high ceilings, Byzantine/gothic style and oaky wood panels transport you enough to enhance your experience. Just in time to forget the fact that an expensive brunch awaits. Below is a glimpse of the bar:
Norma's Restaurant At Le Parker Meridien
118 West 57th Street |
New York, NY 10019, United States
(212) 708-7460
That's all for now!
Happy New Year blog-o-lites!
Mtl.D xo