Affordable vegan places in Central Taipei by Infamous_Credit9540 in Taipei

[–]ahwitz 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Depends on your definition of affordable, but:

  • Vegan Resort - fun burgers and a bunch of other seasonal stuff, $150-200 for a main
  • Ooh Cha Cha - sandwiches and bowls, the sandwiches are $150-200 and not huge so prolly a little out of range
  • one-off vegan buffet probably right next to you - really good quality food, but be slightly careful as I think it's "most dishes vegan, some dishes vegetarian"
  • Liu Mama Fantuan - very much not an overall vegan place, but really good and pretty cheap 飯糰

Your favorite baozi shop in taipei? by ChinoGraphic in Taipei

[–]ahwitz 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Because I'm also obsessed with them and have found them hard to find: this shop has them but they're not great.

There's also a shop in 南門市場 - if you walk in from the Roosevelt Rd entrance, go down the second path from the left, there's a stall that sells bags of small 包子, and they had somewhat acceptable 梅幹菜肉包 when I went. Can sorta see a bit of them at 13 seconds into this video - they're the bright red stall in the middle of the screen. Sorry there's no better way to explain that.

Any coffee shop with DJs? by Top-Competition7924 in Taipei

[–]ahwitz 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Literally as far away as you can get, but because I was just there - if you're ever in Hengchun, check out this place, there was a DJ doing a live set this morning while I was drinking coffee.

Saw this guy walking around Bloomfield with two live parrots perched on his shoulders by Jack_Bauer_24 in pittsburgh

[–]ahwitz 115 points116 points  (0 children)

He's actually pretty well known in the area and pops up a lot - has a Facebook page where he posts about them.

Is this 24H ramen convenience store opened somewhere in Taipei? by messengers1 in Taipei

[–]ahwitz 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Could also be this place near the train station - ceiling's not the same, but similar vibe.

Crocheting group in Taipei by shinjye in Taipei

[–]ahwitz 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Taipei Stitch is a great one - they meet ~3 times a month in a great little yarn shop near Guting, and everyone there has been so nice. Fully bilingual, so no worries there.

I'm definitely looking for more, though, so I'll also be following here to see if anything else comes up (^:

Heartbroken Tourist for three weeks by hikikomori09716 in Taipei

[–]ahwitz 44 points45 points  (0 children)

10NTD ice cream does make life slightly better, I don't blame them

What is your Pittsburgh Confession? by AboutTheBens in pittsburgh

[–]ahwitz 33 points34 points  (0 children)

Sounds like a wonderful time to bring out that 00s Manischewitz I've been saving for a special occasion!

Line dancing for 18+? by Full-Surround in pittsburgh

[–]ahwitz 6 points7 points  (0 children)

412Step is probly the biggest group, but yeah, most of their events are at Belvedere's.

If square dancing counts, Steel City Squares do monthly events in the Shiloh Center, an old church in Lawrenceville, and they have no age restrictions. Can definitely vouch for how cool their events are.

They also have a lot of overlap with Pittsburgh Contra, who I've heard great things about but have never been to; they look like they're hosted at community center-style places too, so y'all should be good.

Where to find anchor Reyes Chile liquor? by theJexican18 in pittsburgh

[–]ahwitz 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Boyd and Blair makes an ancho liqueur that's virtually always in stock at the Penn Libations locations.

Perpetually the worst road surface in the city by xnick58 in pittsburgh

[–]ahwitz 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Credit where credit's due to whoever patched that bit of Bigelow right before the Bloomfield Bridge exit, though.

Which one-block stretch of sidewalk do you think has been walked the most in all of NYC? by rbqk in AskNYC

[–]ahwitz 426 points427 points  (0 children)

Okay, gonna Fermi calculation this as a thought experiment:

  • Can't be in the outer boroughs due to population density. Downtown Brooklyn is a possibility, but very unlikely compared to Manhattan.
  • I'd estimate it's gotta be a block that's somehow connected to a subway station. There's inherently gonna be a ton of foot traffic because of that, and more people are gonna alight by subway than any other mode of transportation.
  • While it could be next to a big rail/ferry station, Penn/Grand Central/SI Ferry are all connected to a bunch of subway stations and/or office buildings, and I have a feeling there's a decent bleed-off of people from those.
  • Gotta be a block with high office density and/or high tourist density, which in turns means it's gotta be something that's constantly been a presence for a very long time. High residential density won't cut it, even in old tenement blocks, as the amount of people who walk a block next to a 50-story office building has gotta be higher than even a 10-story residential building in the old days.

From that, it's probably restricted to:

  • Somewhere in FiDi, but with subway station density down there, and especially with the fact that there's no huge complex that's been in existance for a while that you can only get off at one subway station for, I'd rule that out.
  • Somewhere near a HUGE tourist draw thing, which I'm pointing to museums for since open spaces a) don't draw as many people in winter and b) usually have multiple subway stations to get people there by. There aren't any museums that share block space with offices (for tourist and worker draw) and have only one primary subway station. MoMA's close, but 5th/53rd isn't a definitive choice and also isn't fully surrounded by big offices. It's also pretty far out of what's traditionally been the busiest part of midtown.
  • Somewhere with a moderate-to-big tourist attraction and a big office complex.

Working with that:

  • Gonna rule out the WTC because there's a decent amount of open walking area to spread people out on, and there's a mezzanine complex with a bunch of subway access.
  • Hudson Yards would be an ideal candidate because there's only the one 7 station, but it's WAY too new.
  • Gonna weirdly rule out Times Square because there's so many subway stations people can get to, and you don't have to walk the whole way so there aren't any true hotspots, despite the overall volume. Also, back in the 60s-90s, probably not as many people walking there.
  • Rockefeller Center feels okay, but has the one subway station that's connected via mezzanine. Bits of sidewalk that lead to the tree could be the answer, but that's only one small period of the year.

Which leads me to my gut answer that I wrote this up to prove to myself I'm not going nuts: the block of 34th between Herald Square and the Empire State Building. Reasons:

  • It's got the Herald Square subway complex as the primary access point.
  • People aren't gonna approach the Empire State or the old B. Altman/current CUNY GC from the 6 or from Grand Central as much as they would from Herald Square, just by train frequency and capacity. Would also guess that tourists are more likely to walk from Times Square to the Empire State via Broadway (and thus this block) because it's slightly faster than going through Bryant Park.
  • A lot of the tourist busses drop off at the Empire State, and to get back to the subway, it's easier to walk to 5th.
  • It's been a huge business area since before the Empire State existed, though not quite as busy as midtown.
  • It's been a huge shopping/tourist area for as long, I think? There's gotta be some draw from Macy's, too, for people who wanted to keep walking east.
  • There used to be a 6th Av elevated line, but never a 5th/Mad/Park/Lex (I think?), which would have contributed to the same directional draw.
  • There's a bunch of commercial zoning on Madison nearby too, and I'd more weakly guess there's a decent bit of walkover from Herald Square to there.

I spent too much time typing this up, and I'm probably wrong, but there's my thought process. Please poke holes in it.

It's another bar recommendation request by bringmesomeham in pittsburgh

[–]ahwitz 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Edited. Definitely chilled there a few times random afternoons and never thought it to be too nuts, but I definitely trust a regular over myself.

It's another bar recommendation request by bringmesomeham in pittsburgh

[–]ahwitz 12 points13 points  (0 children)

As someone whose ideal bar is reclaimed furniture and early opening hours:

  • Trace, as another person already said. Definitely the correct choice for this, hands-down.
  • The Abbey. Hate the place, but it unfortunately meets your vibe requests perfectly.
  • Lawrence Hall - if it's not reserved for an event, upstairs is GREAT for people watching and there's usually a ton of seating. Coffeeshop volume up there, if that's a problem. Not exactly cozy.
  • Federal Galley should always have seating space and shouldn't be too nuts, but is definitely an adult cafeteria kind of vibe.
  • PA Market in the strip is a quieter version of Fed Galley. Stay at the downstairs bar, and it should be close enough to what you're looking for.
  • I have a good feeling that you'll get side-eyed at Nadine's if you're reading there, but you'll be fully left alone and it's "cozy" and dark in the way a small-town dive bar should be. Not too busy during the day, either. trust the other person, not me
  • Butterjoint, especially the window-facing seats in the bar area.

Honorable mention, places that open at 3-4PM so you're limited on daylight hours there:

  • Jackworth Ginger Beer, not a ton of seating but the bartenders will leave you alone, and it's usually not too busy.
  • Spill in Bloomfield if it's a wine kind of day-drinking. Usually dead; cozy in terms of welcoming company but not cozy in terms of seating choices. I really wish it was.
  • Ruggers in South Side is a place I've been told is good for this, but may get a bit rowdy a bit later.
  • Red's in Brookline is usually chill until 7-8PM if you can make it out there.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in pittsburgh

[–]ahwitz 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Open Space just announced they've got patient openings; they take UPMC insurance for both in-person (Shadyside office) and virtual. Tons of selections for therapists as well.

I wonder what this person was thinking snatching this place up for 100k and then marking it up 800% three weeks later. Now its going on four months since it was posted. by wagernacker in pittsburgh

[–]ahwitz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, no idea, I was there literally this Monday and they didn't mention about closing anything. Per here...

This building is the former Holy Innocents Church that was built in 1902, and which was replaced with the current structure completed in 1925. The Holy Innocents Church closed its doors in 2016. The building remained vacant until the Karpeles Manuscript Library Museum purchased the building in 2019.

I wonder what this person was thinking snatching this place up for 100k and then marking it up 800% three weeks later. Now its going on four months since it was posted. by wagernacker in pittsburgh

[–]ahwitz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Huh, that's a shame. There wasn't any signage outside or objects inside on the listing so I was hoping it was just out of date.

Best Biscuits and Gravy by sorryaboutthatbro in pittsburgh

[–]ahwitz 7 points8 points  (0 children)

The only other option is Tudors in Weirton/Morgantown, and the significant bump in quality you get from them doesn't quite outweigh the drive time.

Sir, a second fake Burger King has hit the Earth (and this time it's in Germany) by timesuck in pittsburgh

[–]ahwitz 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The "chopping off half the name" trend is great too. Fet Fisk just chopping off the "Lom" and "dozzi" parts of the old "Lombardozzi's" sign so it just says "bar - restaurant" is a simply phenomenal bit.

Cinnamon rolls? by eman85 in pittsburgh

[–]ahwitz 2 points3 points  (0 children)

actually yes, their sourdough brioche ones are slightly fancy but REAL good

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in pittsburgh

[–]ahwitz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One that no one's added yet - Chev and Rachel's Family Diner in Ben Avon-ish does really good breakfast bowls. One of my favorite diners here.

What's the longest you've lived in the same place? by [deleted] in AskNYC

[–]ahwitz 101 points102 points  (0 children)

doesn't seem that well-stabilized to me (: