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SIN DO '10
UA 171 BOS SFO 0610 1000 319 2D Ch9^^
I rather dazedly found my way through security (which took all of five minutes, even with our crew cutting in front) and to the club, where I bestowed my annual Christmas tribute of Sweet Sloops upon the desk people. Then to the gate, where boarding had begun - about a dozen people in the red line, of whom some were rather curtly turned back during the process. The captain, whose name started with a T, was out on the freezing jetbridge greeting and shaking hands with all the pax. Set the scene for caring service throughout. I'm still not sure about doing transcons in the little 319 but coped with my misgivings by going straight to sleep, missing the omelet or fruit plate dance. Woke somewhere over the Great Plains, where the solicitous crew offered me the fruit plate, all that was left (turns out that every one of the other pax had requested the hot breakfast). I asked for a croissant and a Courvoisier; the former came speedily; they had to get some of the latter from the back. Back to sleep. Woke to find us docking at G ninety something in the international terminal, which was nice, as it gave me extra time to enjoy the SKL, whose vigilant gatekeeper welcomed me just as she turned away some lesser soul, banishing him to the RCC down the way. Catering was uninspired: peanuts, chips, granola, Special K, assorted Danish. I had a George Dickel #12 followed by a Remy VSOP - the booze selection is better than at the RCC, and the price is right. Shortly before I left, some savories came out: hummus and vegetables and a breakfast selection of scrambled eggs, home fries, and sausage. There were 5 guests in the club, outnumbering the staff by 2. I decided to catch the beginning of boarding so hoofed it back to gate 100; on the way, I met restlessinRNO, Fredd, and Mrs. Fredd. restless had row 16 upstairs, and the Fredds, irroped from the day before, had been demoted from row 15 to row 6. With the new alignments, there really isn't that much difference any more, truth to tell. UA 837 SFO NRT 1128 1530 744 15A Ch9:td: We got to the gate to find boarding delayed due to some kind of IFE issue, which prevented F from boarding; so we C people got to board first, and I saw the curious sight of an F pax being turned away a la gate lice. He took it surprisingly well. Eventually we all got aboard, but then it was announced that a valve in the #2 engine had to be replaced, so we all had to chill our jets, as it were. We took off an hour late. Good service of an Asian standard. Warm nuts (lots of pecans, no macadamias) with seconds. to begin smoked salmon and vegetable crudite With a sun-dried tomato dressing Good salmon, abundant, strewn with capers. The cruddities were as usual dry and pathetic. fresh seasonal greens Lite Ranch or Roasted Garlic Red Wine Vinaigrette OK, a little wilted. main course [b]mustard thyme scented chicken T[b] With warm horseradish potato salad grilled sirloin steak with three peppercorn sauce Au gratin potatoes and steamed broccoli with carrots The beef was extremely strange, a big knob of mystery meat: usually I can tell a cut of meat by its fat if nothing else. This was chuck (not sirloin by any stretch of the imagination - more like what UA serves under the name "short ribs"), identifiable only by its fat in an incredibly acrid pepper sauce. The sides were salty spinach and salty cheesy potatoes mit viel nutmeg. Bear in mind that since my recent health issues I have had trouble tasting salt (mixed nuts, for example, taste sweet to me); these things tasted, well, salty. I shudder to think. I should have had the Japanese meal, but I'd decided to take pity on the assorted 1Ps and things aboard. washoku zen selection Appetizers of barbecued eel in layered eggs, grilled scallop, lime-flavored beef tenderloin, shrimp with vegetable sushi rice, poached tuna with karashi miso, steamed leeks, buckwheat soba noodles with marinated Japanese vegetables. A main course of salmon teriyaki, braised tofu, simmered shiitake mushroom and daikon, green beans, fresh julienne ginger served with steamed rice and Japanese pickled vegetables. Served with green tea. Items in this meal may contain traces of MSG. dessert international cheese selection Sartori Bellavitano, Montchevre Sun-dried Tomato and Basil Chevre Eli's tiramisu I passed on dessert. midflight snack honey roasted turkey with baby Swiss cheese Sandwich may be served either hot or cold assorted sweet and savory treats are available throughout the flight hot noodles are available upon request The crew provided little cups of grapes, leftover formerly hot nuts, and a few other things, in addition to the foil- wrapped sandwiches (heated on request) and the noodle bowls. Also Ghirardelli 60% chocolate squares, Kit Kats, and raisins. Most welcome. prior to arrival stir-fried chicken and vegetables With egg noodles Quite good-tasting though dry soy-sauce chicken with nice baby bok choy and a big tangle of extremely salty noodles. I ate a few noodles, and my ankles swelled up immediately. Well, they swelled up worse immediately. One issue I am having is swelling in various public and not public limbs owing to the heart problem. fresh seasonal fruit plate With creamy yogurt The wines on offer were a tolerable fairly dry Masterpeace Shiraz 2007 (SE Australia), with some fruit and a bit of oak, and a most disappointing bright cherry-ful Trapiche Oak Cask Cabernet Sauvignon 2007 (Mendoza). There was also advertised a Medoc, which didn't appear on either flight. The guy next to me watched some amusing martial arts movies while I kept the map on. We periodically stole glances at each other's giant screen. How can you not like a film that invents a kung fu move called BBQ pork hock? and that contains the line "You said you cared for me. Now I know you're not." (According to the subtitles.) We landed half an hour late, but there was no line at transit security, so that sort of cancelled out. restless went hunting for Lori_Q off the Chicago flight at the ANA lounge, but I, in my dubious condition, chose to stick closer to home. There was no line at the shower, so I had one: the water pressure kept me going from scalding to low cool, but all in all running water after a long flight is a good thing. Then on to the Amazing Beer Machine, yay, and then to gate 46 - which as it turns out is right by the ANA lounge anyway, so whoops. |
Nice report.
Thanks. |
Welcome! Hope you the shiny new Luggage Tags stayed intact, see you at Concord/Newtons
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Having too much fun to write a report. More later.
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Tease!
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I may have more time to type, as I'm cooling my jets in the ER at
Mass General awaiting treatment for congestive heart failure. But right now it's difficult. |
Originally Posted by violist
(Post 13211305)
I may have more time to type, as I'm cooling my jets in the ER at Mass General awaiting treatment for congestive heart failure. But right now it's difficult.
|
Originally Posted by violist
(Post 13211305)
I may have more time to type, as I'm cooling my jets in the ER at
Mass General awaiting treatment for congestive heart failure. But right now it's difficult. Get well soon, my friend!! Dave |
preliminary report:
heart: CHF, degree of decline if any to be determined tomorrow lungs: touch o' fluid, no biggie; nodules! - probably encapsulated junk from ancient injuries, certainly benign pulmonary embolism: negative DVT: negative |
UA875 NRT SIN 1750 0020 777 9J Ch9:td:
It took me a while to get to the plane, as I was walking at about 1/3 rate. I could quite possibly have been the slowest person on the moving sidewalks. Easy red-carpet boarding. restlessinRNO, in the row ahead of mine, reported failure to detect any of the expected FTers in the ANA lounge; he remarked on my being winded after the walk from the RCC. Hello, ejection fraction under 30, what do you expect. Juice, water, or cheap bubbly were offered. We were enjoying our PDBs when Lori_Q and shortly after upup&away came puffing in: their flight had been delayed first by "positive bag matching" and then "another aircraft occupying their gate"; whatever, they made it, and our little party was ready to head to Singapore. The nice gent in 8H gave up his seat to Lori, so with upup&away in 9H we had a little FT bloc there in the cabin. A nice chat and a nice meal and then a nice nap. The Fredds were in the bigger C cabin, I think, and fellow FTer Ted unfortunately was in the wayback. A decent flight with decent food and pretty good service. to begin fresh seasonal greens French vinaigrette main course Trader Vic's sweet and sour braised short ribs Roasted garlic mashed potatoes and glazed carrots and peas Trader Vic's shredded chicken in Thai green curry sauce Jasmine rice and roasted mushroom and vegetable medley salmon topped with chestnut paste Hanagata rice with white sesame seeds, grilled eringi mushroom, green beans and carrot flower dessert Eli's cherry frangipane tart With creme anglaise and pistachio Today's menu features beef from Australia Trader Vic came through with a palatable chunk of chuck; the sweet-sour wasn't very sour but thankfully not very sweet either. The potatoes were substantially garlicky. I did try the tart, which was okay if a little dry. We landed a bit late and went our separate ways, I to check out the broadband (Wireless@SG was misbehaving for me so I had to find a wired connection) and then to the T3 transit hotel at 3. Nice room, though a bit spartan. In the morning, more Internet and then the airport outlet of the renowned Rong Chen Bak Kut Teh. I had poached pig liver and vermicelli in a rich, peppery pork bone stock - terrific. Then to T2 basement, whence the #36 bus gets you to Suntec for a buck and half. It takes perhaps 15 more minutes than a taxi. At the Conrad I was pleased to be given a business room overlooking the Fountain of Wealth. The view was good, the bed very comfy, and the bathroom extra nice. I recall the room I was given here when I was gold (I'm now lowly silver) was not so good as this one. Amenities: a rubber ducky, a teddy bear, a fruit bowl (good banana and kiwi, a couple mediocre-looking apples, an okay orange, and a pear that could just as well have been made of wax or wood), and a little box of extremely luxurious truffles - white chocolate mango, dark chocolate hazelnut, milk chocolate honey, and gilded milk chocolate pineapple, all of which I gobbled down in minutes. Met Lori_Q for drinks at the lobby but then was informed of the executive lounge party by restless. Old friends, an excellent time. I was really tired, and the wine was free, so the 10 pm Concorde meeting got knocked off the agenda. We shared taxis to Newton for the midnight event. I had a few skewers of satay and a beer and then it was time to cab it back for a nightcap and bed. I blame my dazedness on the heart failure rather than inebriation or the jetlag. |
Originally Posted by violist
(Post 13211305)
I may have more time to type, as I'm cooling my jets in the ER at
Mass General awaiting treatment for congestive heart failure. But right now it's difficult. |
Originally Posted by violist
(Post 13215481)
preliminary report:
heart: CHF, degree of decline if any to be determined tomorrow lungs: touch o' fluid, no biggie; nodules! - probably encapsulated junk from ancient injuries, certainly benign pulmonary embolism: negative DVT: negative Don't let the medics pry the computer from your hands. We need periodic updates! |
I love your trip reports, they are so well done ^. Before I had even been to SIN DO (first time was last year), I read one of your reports to get a flavour of what the DO might be like (thanks to bseller pointing me in the right direction). I remember being amazed at how much eating there was :D. Now I have lived it, twice :p.
As I posted on your get well thread, I am wishing you a very quick recovery and may you be flying at the pointy end and writing again in no time at all. Take care. |
Best wishes from one of your phans in PHX. Thanks for the updates (I wasn't thinking when I wrote "updates" and it came out "upgrades" :D).
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16th
Went to look for friends (particularly boxo, who had wanted
an early breakfast). Started off at the business class area on 4, but they hadn't seen her. They suggested I try Oscar's downstairs, which I did. There were other FTers there, but no boxo. I expressed interest that the likes of opushomes, a Diamond, had chosen to dine with the polloi, but he gleefully told me that it was an open secret that the coach meal was the best of the lot, having a better selection than the business one and both better selection and less crush than the first-class one. I found a table with chchkiwi and SEA777GUY (I think), and we had a substantial and fairly yummy meal, the notable features for me being a dragon fruit (nobody else wanted any, so I ate the whole thing myself) and VSOP Cognac ice cream (available with or without Belgian waffle). The rest of the spread was a good one, with Chinese (shumai, congee, fried rice) and American (smoked salmon, bacon, eggs, sausage, an omelette station) staples, a wide variety of fruit, and abundant and nice-looking breads and sweet pastries. Bade various folks good day (I had no interest in a walking tour, in the heat, given everything) and went off again to try to find boxo; it turns out that she had apparently overslept and had gone downstairs about the time I was returning up; after a certain amount of elevator tag, she was found in time to take the biz breakfast; I joined her but ate only a couple pieces of grapefruit. The kindly staff (who said that the Oscar's breakfast was the same, and if we wanted to prove this to ourselves, nothing was preventing us from taking meals both places) didn't close up until past 11, at which time we began our day's outing. She was hotel-hopping, so we cabbed to the IC and got her situated in her quite nice room (accompanied by a most obsequious concierge named Danny I think); then I proposed to go to Boat Quay for the beer part of the do. boxo was tired but game, saying that it didn't make sense to sleep all afternoon, with Singapore beckoning. We took a quick tour of the Raffles Hotel, then walked down to City Hall, where we bussed across the river. I hadn't counted on the stairs down to the quay, but she negotiated these heroically. There was nobody at the Thai place where we usually get our S18 pitchers, and we were sitting moping among the Botero sculptures and beginning to regret our wild goose chase, when alex0683de and bschaff1 came around the corner with the news that there was a place down the way with S15 Tiger pitchers. We tried to get the Thai place to match, but the hostess smilingly declined our offer, so off to the seafood place up the quay and its ... well. We ordered a Tiger pitcher, and what came was 3 mugs of something that wasn't very good. Alex thought that it was Anchor, which was on offer at S8 the pitcher. boxo's coffee and ice came as coffee with a side of water; sooner or later her order was rectified, but ours wasn't. Presently bseller came by, and we ordered another Tiger pitcher, which was at least different from our previous beer. The situation wasn't conducive to continued drinking, so we returned to the executive lounge at the Conrad (where our Diamonds and Golds had taken over a conference room as our private club, complete with secret handshake) until Jumbo time. We met at Jumbo Riverside (a jumboer Jumbo than last year's) at 8. Five tables had been reserved, of which one went unused by us, but the restaurant had no trouble turning it, which made us feel somewhat less guilty. The no-fish table was segregated from us by the empty one, which is as it should be. I was at the middle table, which enjoyed a shellfish-heavy menu, thanks in large part to my suggestions, which were pretty normal but a little on the extravagant side. Chili crab is less sweet and more tomatoey than at other places, so it's more to my taste than at either Jumbo East Coast or either of the No Signboards we've used; still I prefer the adult pungency of black pepper crab, whose blackish sauce contrasts rather than competes with the natural sweetness of the excellent Sri Lankan crabs. Two kinds of prawns, because some preferred shell and head on, and some off. Salt-pepper prawns I thought substantially yummy (we got these with); cereal prawns were different from usual, as we'd gotten them shelled, but still pretty good. Garlic roast chicken was as advertised, a little salty for me, but nicely garlicked and pretty tender. Sauteed kangkong with hot pepper and fish sauce was very savory as our obligatory veggie. I'd ordered broad noodles with seafood as filler for the end, but it came early in the meal. I saved mine for later: it was fine as filler goes, but the amount of shellfish was disappointing. With abundant beers, we spent about S50 each; I think we were the second most expensive table. Need I add that we returned yet again to our haven for an afters that lasted pretty late. Thank goodness for the excellent and long-forbearing staff, Deakin Estate Caberet, lili's getting the staff to offer up substantial amounts of it, and Baxter&Bessies'Mama's discovery of the mother lode of same. I don't recall staggering back to my lovely room, but I must have done so. |
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