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gilana ([personal profile] gilana) wrote2005-11-30 08:09 am
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I'm going to New York next Tuesday through Friday, just to bum around, eat good kosher food, and catch a show or two.

1) How should I get there? I usually take the bus, which is ok -- certainly cheap, but kind of a long time to sit on a crowded bus. Is flying a valid option? How do you get from La Guardia into the city? I need to get back by sundown Friday night, so the shorter travel time is certainly tempting, but not if there are going to be 5-hour delays.

2) Anyone else going to be there and want to get together?

3) Any suggestions for off-the-beaten-path stuff to do or see or hear or buy or eat? (Eating MEAT will mostly be MEAT at kosher MEAT restaurants, but I'm open to other suggestions.)

4) Any suggestions on good ways to get tickets or shows to see? I'm not sure I have the patience to stand in line for TKTS, but since there's only one of me, I'm hoping it might be easier to get a single ticket some other way. (Sweeney Todd is top of my list right now, but I'm not sure whether I want to buy a ticket online or see what else comes up once I get there.)

New York Girls - Steeleye Span

[identity profile] gnomi.livejournal.com 2005-11-30 02:47 pm (UTC)(link)
Here are my suggestions, based on our many trips to NYC (M's mom lives there, so we go a couple times a year at least):

1. We like LimoLiner a lot. They're priced equally with the train and the plane (actually, cheaper usually), and it's from the Hilton in Boston (near the Hynes Convention Center) to the Hilton in Manhattan (53rd and 6th).

3. There are a bunch of good kosher Indian restaurants in Little India -- Lexington Avenue at 27th/28th. A good list of kosher restaurants all over NY is at http://nachas.org/BethYehuda/kosher.html. As for off-the-beaten-path stuff to do, if you've got a couple of hours and like walking tours, check out Big Onion Walking Tours. Each tour is about 2 hours long, and they're absolutely wonderful. [personal profile] mabfan and I have done 8 of their tours so far.

4. We've done rush tickets for a couple of shows (though we weren't successful in either lottery) -- you show up at a given time and put your name and the number of tickets you want in their hopper. They then, at a specific time, pick names until they've filled the number of slots available. It doesn't in any way guarantee you get a ticket, but if you do get chosen, the tickets are cheaper than standard prices.

[identity profile] gnomi.livejournal.com 2005-11-30 05:34 pm (UTC)(link)
Hmm. All of the Indian places we've been to have been milchig/pareve. The list I linked to may have some fleishig options, though.

But there's lots and lots of good fleishig options in general in New York that we don't have here. They can get pricey is the only issue. But tasty*!

*(the food, not the restaurants themselves. I haven't actually tried eating the restaurants.)

[identity profile] mabfan.livejournal.com 2005-12-02 02:54 am (UTC)(link)
There used to be a great fleshig Indian place in Queens, but sadly, they closed many years ago.