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Month: June 2016 (page 5 of 7)

Georges Rhumerie

This is the best food we have had in Cambodia so far! Lovely restaurant with indoor / outdoor seating, and a cabana bar.

The staff were welcoming and explained the menu very well if we had questions.

Dim sum starter

Starter: Dim sum

I’ve had dim sum a few times before in various places round the world, but this is the best dim sum I have ever eaten!

Main courses

For main course we had pork masale curry, and pork saucisse. Both were fabulous! Along with the dishes, we got 3 chutneys, and 3 chill is that you can add to your dish. The head chef came out of the kitchen to explain each one of the complimentary chutneys/chillis in detail, and the best way to eat them with your dinner. I had a sample of each with a spoon of my dinner, and every one of them was great.

Really nice restaurant, with a chef that cares about his food.

Bill and tip

Bill and $2 tip

One of the cheaper nights we have had here, but definitely the best. This restaurant is a must!

 

Cuisine: Creole Cambodian fusion

Staff: Very friendly

Price: $22 (starter + 2 mains + 2 drinks)

Location: $3 tuk tuk ride from town centre.

Customer 109

At 5pm in Scotland, I would have been customer 4000.

Burger King Receipt

Artisan D’Angkor

The Artisan D’Angkor is a place that makes and sells authentic Cambodian art. We were given a tour of all the workshops on arrival that took about 20 minutes, then taken to the shop.

There is a lot of stuff to look at in the shop. We had a good looks that everything on display before we settled on a lacquered painting.

Lovely place. The amount of work that goes in to each price is astonishing! Most things take weeks to create.

Artisan D'Angkor workshop

Wood painting and covering in lacquer

The workshop:

Everyone here is deaf and they all communicate using their own sign language.

Artisan D'Angkor workshop

Soap stone carving

Artisan D'Angkor workshop

Wood carving

Shop:

Artisan D'Angkor shop

I urge you to pop in to Artisan D’Angkor if you are in Siem reap.

It’s a pool day today

We are having a relaxing day after our excursion yesterday.

 

Hotel pool

IMAG4454_1

Breakfast this morning

My breakfast

Compliments to the person who “heated up” the sausages. I can only assume that the method used to achieve this was they sat on them.

Tim Tams

We found them in Siem Reap!

Tim Tams

Oh, How I’ve missed you, you delicious Australian God send!

We need another suitcase…

Cafe Indochine

5 minute walk from our hotel. Great food. Great service. We were in and out there within 50 minutes. Perfect dinner for a knackered day looking at temples in the blazing heat.

I little more expensive that the average restaurant, but the price is reflected in the food. No complaints from us for this meal.

Cafe Indochine menu

Beef Lok Lak

Chicken Amok

mai Tai

We went for the Beef Lol Lak, and Chicken Amok.

The beef was basically steak in a sauce, with chips, but really well executed. Lovely spin on the on the usual steak and chips you’d get in any steak restaurant. Light yet very filling… still had a Death By Chocolate for dessert, though. I earned it from all the walking I did today.

The Chicken Amok was great too. Can’t say a lot about it as I didn’t have it, but trust us, this restaurant is definitely worth the extra money.

For 2 mains, 2 desserts, 1 cocktail, and a large bottle of water it was only $30.50.

Arguably still cheap!

Not a tan

Dirty ankle

This is what walking around the temples will do to you.

Temple Raider

Total litres of water consumed: 8

Temples visited: 5

Hours in direct 37℃ sunlight: 6

We opted for a tour with a very nice tour guide by the name of Rath Sopheap. He was very informative and funny without being too dry and overloading you with information.

He took us round the temples in a good order because each one was more interesting to look at than the last (with the exception of Phnom Bakheng).  In order, we did:

  1. Angkor Wat
  2. Ta Prhom
  3. Bakheng
  4. Angkor Thom
  5. Phnom Bakheng

There was a nice Mancunian couple in the same tour group as us. They have been traveling around Asia for a long time and are heading to Australia to work after they have toured Asia.

It was great having another British couple to share our annoyance at the arrogant drunk man in our group who boasted about every aspect of his life. His children are great, he is great, travelled everywhere, retired at 42, likes beer (chuffin’ clearly). I just don’t know how he isn’t a God. Total prink.

Temple rules IMAG4264_1 IMAG4428_1 IMAG4211_1 IMAG4198_1

We visited the last temple at the top of a hill to watch the sunset. Only 300 people are allowed up there for safety reasons, so our guide dropped us off there earlier than the crowds so we could get a spot.

We were dropped off to go up the hill at 4pm. Sunset is not until 6pm here. I was well aware of the 2 hour gap, but wanted to see the view anyway. Once we’d got to the top, I checked out the view. I was nothing special. You couldn’t see any other temples and it was just greenery.

We all swarmed to the shade and sat on the roasting ground. But after 40 minutes of waiting, we called it day. The pictures of the sunset are not worth it on our opinion.

While sitting waiting for the sunset, this Asian guy next to us was too hot sitting on the stone ground. So he put his straw hat on the ground… he was visibly bracing himself by hovering his bum above it for a few seconds. He then lowered himself on to it and it very audibly crunched and he did not look in a good way according to his face. Once his arse reached the ground and the crunching stopped. People had turned heads and started laughing. ourselves included. Ruined a hat for that. He got up and left 3 minutes later anyway. What a waste of a hat!

The 4 of us (us and Charlotte and Scott the Mancunians) got tuk tuk back to town just before 5pm. Laura and I want straight to the pool after a shower and watched the sunset. We still had to wait 35 minutes for it and were glad we didn’t waste the time up the hill at the temples.

We had a great day. Extremely interesting, but the sunset thing is overrated.

Our tour group

p.s. the drunk man isn’t pictures here and wasn’t with us during any of the temple tours themselves. He just sat getting drunk, talked to dogs, and waited for the next stop. He reminded me of one of my uncles… I wonder if he thinks the earth is flat…

This Toblerone

This… this isn’t right…

Cambodian Toblerone

Cambodian chocolate leaves a lot to be desired…still had to eat 3 bits to make sure, though!

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