Although our time staying in the East Bay was short, we were glad we could see some of the faces we have so missed since moving away! There were new babies to be held and kissed, delicious restaurants to be visited (both old and new!), and a lot of catching up to do with dear friends.
Lunch in San Leandro with the Kims! Our two girls + their two boys was a crazy mix! It was great seeing them and how much Jinwoo and Sunwoo have grown!
Can’t contain our excitement over Burma Superstar!
Mio and I while waiting for our table and for Uncle Ted & Auntie Jackie to meet us
We so missed their samosa salad! Just seeing this photo of it makes me salivate…
Garlic noodles and shrimp
After our dinner at Burma Superstar, we drove over to Castro Valley to have some ice cream with Aileen and David!
Mirei behind the wheel at Knudsen’s Creamery in Castro Valley
With Aileen at Knudsen’s Creamery. It was so great seeing her again, and we have to also thank her for bringing us to this delicious ice cream parlor!
We finally got to meet Aileen’s boyfriend, David! He’s the first other Yokoyama I’ve met (beyond my own family and relatives). Yokoyamas are all awesome, naturally.
This wasn’t exactly meeting up with a familiar face, but we have definitely missed our favorite taco truck! We had to make a stop in Oakland to get our fix of those amazing al pastor, chicken, and carne asada tacos (plus lengua for Dan).
Revisiting our favorite taco truck!
While we were shocked to see how much their prices have gone up in the past two years, the tacos definitely hit the spot!
Up there among our top most-anticipated moments of our visit was seeing a couple of our dearest friends, Tarrin and Jason, and their newborn son Theo! He was only two months old when we got to see him, and I was euphoric holding that teeny baby and sniffing his head. That newborn smell is so intoxicating! (Before you write me off as a complete nutcase, I urge you to try sniffing a newborn head sometime — I’m pretty sure you will agree with me.)
Meeting baby Theo for the first time. Tarrin and Jason make a pretty cute baby!
After eating dinner at Mintleaf, they took us to a new (to us, at least) dessert place in Alameda called Cookiebar!
Vietnamese coffee ice cream at Cookiebar. Amazing.
Mirei was loving the ice cream!
Going in for another bite!
We miss you guys so much! You can bet I had a hard time letting that baby go… I almost carried him off with me to our car.
Selfie with Mirei when she refused to go to bed that night.
On our last day, we spent the evening with Dan’s family after we came back from Fairyland in the afternoon. Mio had fun helping Grandma prepare dinner for everyone!
Mirei at the San Lorenzo house, after we came back from Fairyland on our last full day in NorCal.
Mirei thoroughly enjoying her yogurt.
Yogurt-mouthed little lady.
Helping Grandma making California rolls for dinner
Mio and Grandma in the kitchen
Family dinner on our last night. Dan’s mom prepared quite a feast!
Mio saying goodbye to Grandma. She misses her so much!
…as she does Grandpa, too.
Mio messing with Mirei. I think she wanted Grandpa all to herself!
Saying goodbye to the grandparents
Saying goodbye to Uncle Ted the morning we left for Los Angeles. Thank you Ted & Jackie for being such great hosts for us during our stay!
We grabbed an “It’s It” at a rest stop on our drive down. We couldn’t leave Northern California without eating one!
I’m finally wrapping up on posting on our trip to California from earlier this month! Besides getting to spend a lot of time exploring San Jose, Monterey, and the San Francisco Zoo with Dan’s parents and visiting our dear friends in El Cerrito, we got to also spend some time seeing some of our favorite familiar faces in the area and eating at our favorite spots! There were some delicious eats that I had seriously been missing and craving, so I’m so glad we could get a fix while catching up with some of our dearest friends!
Catching up with Uncle Ted in Alameda over lunch.
The samosa salad at Burma Superstar. Never disappoints!
Another favorite from Burma Superstar: garlic noodles with BBQ pork.
Checking out the toys at Tot Tank in Alameda.
Bay Area newcomer Junko trying pho for the first time!
I’m so glad we could see Junko in Sunnyvale! We hadn’t seen each other in almost five years, since our wedding back in 2008!
A trip to the Bay is not complete without a visit to our favorite taco truck in Oakland!
It was great visiting the Kims so we could catch up with Sung Kook and Kayo…
…and see their adorable sons JinWoo and SunWoo again!
Sung Kook loves Mio, and she can tell… she was stuck to him the whole time we were there!
I really missed their pomegranate chicken, among their other delectable bites…
And since we were on College Avenue in Berkeley, we had to stop by Ici for their amazing frozen desserts!
So happy to be reunited with Tarrin in one of our favorite spots in Berkeley… 🙂
Lovely foil stamped labels for my baked goodies, cherry blossom pen, and macaron-shaped trinket case, all wrapped in matryoshka doll wrapping paper to boot! Thank you Tarrin for somehow gathering all of my favorite things. â¤
We also got to try the awesome yÅshoku restaurant Usagi in San Mateo and see some of our favorite faces from Nakayoshi! Special thanks to Sam for organizing the dinner and making the reservation.
ボンゴレ(ã‚ã•ã‚Šã®ãƒ‘スタ)~ Some of the best vongole pasta I’ve ever had!
We missed this beautiful couple!
Mio with Uncle Graig. Probably one of her most favorite people in the entire world… 🙂 She’s always giggling and smiling ear to ear when she’s with him!
Loved seeing everyone again!
It always feels like our time with friends is too short (especially taking into consideration toddler bedtime), and we wish we could have stayed longer with each of our friends, but we were so happy that we could see them again even for a short time! We are truly sorry for all of those who we were unable to see because of our limited schedule, but rest assured that we will be back soon enough to visit again! :) Thank you also to all of our friends who showered Mio with such thoughtful and generous early birthday gifts… it was totally unexpected and so sweet of everyone. ♥ Our family is so blessed just to have the pleasure of knowing all of you!
We took Mio to see the Alameda Independence Day Parade yesterday for a Fourth of July celebration. Alameda’s parade is apparently the largest (with 160+ floats) and longest (3.2 miles) Independence Day parade in the country! It was a hot day, but we parked ourselves under some shade and watched the parade go by — Mio had fun watching her first parade!
Mio and I moved to get a closer look at the parade.
Watching the floats go by.
There were lots of cool classic cars in the parade!
Baby you’re a firework! Mio in her Fourth-of-July dress.
A Japanese-themed float representing the Buddhist Temple of Alameda
Paper cranes on the sides
Enjoying the parade in the shade with Daddy
Mio giggling with Auntie Tarrin! 🙂
After the parade, we walked back to our friends Tarrin and Jason’s house to enjoy a BBQ lunch — everything they cooked was amazing! Our tummies got to enjoy quite a feast!
Jason grilling some delicious burgers!
Mio following 4-year old Rishy around.
We also got to hang out on their hammock — it was so relaxing!
Bathed in sunlight
Mio’s first time on the hammock
Daddy and Mio on the hammock!
Dan borrowed my sunglasses… lol.
Mio had a fun time exploring the backyard!
“Peekaboo!”
All of us had a great time spending the day in Alameda! After eating all the delicious food and being out in the summer sun, we all took a long nap when we got home that evening. Hope everyone else had a memorable Fourth, too! 🙂
Last Saturday was sunny and hot, so we took Mio to Alameda Beach so that she could have a fun beach day! We invited our friends Tarrin and Jason along, since they live in Alameda, and they suggested the delicious idea of having brunch at Off the Grid which is now in Alameda on Saturdays. Off the Grid is a gathering of food trucks and tents selling all kinds of yummy street foods, and we’d actually never been to the weekly ones in San Francisco nor Berkeley, so this was our first time!
Excited to eat delicious street food!
Mio staying cool with her shades.
I decided to try the Hiyaaa! truck.
My bulgogi on a roll from Hiyaaa. There was kimchee inside, too!
Dan got the Peruvian burger and potatoes from Sanguchon
Digging in!
Tarrin and Jason also got some delicious andouille poutine from Fins on the Hoof for us to share, and we picked up a lemon lavender cupcake from a cupcake truck and a chocolate cream puff from Pacific Puffs for dessert, and headed over to the beach together.
We’ve taken Mio to the beach before when we went to Santa Cruz last Labor Day weekend, but she was young and not very mobile so she couldn’t really get the full experience, and it’d been cold so we didn’t put her int he water at the time. So this was Mio’s first true full experience of the beach, where she could walk around and play in the sand and water!
Trying to coax Mio into the water…
Mio is stunned by how vast the ocean is!
We changed her into her bathing suit and got her in the water!
Mio’s first time in ocean water! She was loving it, and kept trying to move into the deeper water.
“Jump! Jump!”
She kept lifting her legs up so they were flat against the water… lol.
As you can see from the video below, she’s quite the waterbug! She was really loving the water, and later the sand… definitely a beach babe! 😉
Mio finally had enough of the water, and started walking towards the shore…
First time playing in the sand… and eating, it too! ::sigh::
Walking about, exploring the sandy shore… she was really interested in the other kids.
A contemplative Mio, deep in thought as she looks out at the ocean. As Jason put it, “very Hemingway.”
There are no words to describe how much her expression here tickles me!
She soon fell asleep in Mama’s arms and took a little nap on the beach.
After all the fun in the sun, it was eventually time to go home…
Mio riding on Tarrin’s shoulders as we head back to the car.
Auntie Tarrin is so good with Mio… Mio really loves her!
Thanks Tarrin and Jason for making our beach outing so much more fun and memorable! We loved that we could spend the day with you. 🙂
Dan and I have been watching a lot of movies lately. We watched two in theaters this weekend: The Time Traveler’s Wife and District 9.
I had actually just finished reading The Time Traveler’s Wife, by Audrey Niffenegger, and found it to be one of the most powerful books I’ve read in a while. The author does an incredible job of developing each of the characters and making them come to life, even the marginal ones — each of them have so much dimension and depth to them. The story itself was one of the most original I’ve ever read, and the way it is written is very interesting as well. Clare’s life is a linear constant while Henry’s is unpredictable and jumps around all the time; Clare is his stabilizer, one of the few things that are constant in his life. A lengthy book, it took some time to get through, but it was a detailed character study, engaging science fiction concept, and timeless love story rolled into one. The story is magical and is one of those that haunt you and stay with you for weeks, and I can see myself revisiting it and rereading it for years to come.
So, I wasn’t sure what to expect when I went to see the recently filmed movie The Time Traveler’s Wife, based on the bestselling book. I knew that movies based on books, in general, usually pale in comparison to their novel counterparts. I knew that the movie got a whopping 36% on Rotten Tomatoes. But somehow, I still felt compelled to see it. Maybe it was the fact that I like both Rachel McAdams and Eric Bana. Maybe because I was curious to see how they would translate this complex story into film. Maybe it’s because the only way I can get Dan to show interest in a book is to make him see the movie first. (I know, bad approach to reading… but he is a movie junkie.) So Dan and I went to see a late showing the other night at the Shattuck Cinema, and let me say that that particular theater we saw it in (I believe it was Theater 10 within the Shattuck Cinema) was so comfy! They had two-seater leather sofas for seats, and it was perfect for couples. Dan thinks that they show romantic movies in that particular theater so that they can have a more comfortable and sweet viewing experience. Of course, it would be sort of awkward for the single viewers who come to see it by themselves… then again, it would even be nice if you were going to see it with a close friend. But I digress. The movie was alright. I think it did pretty well for how complicated the storyline is — the movie didn’t include several of the subplots and some of the secondary characters (there was absolutely no appearance by, nor reference of, Ingrid Carmichael). I kept getting frustrated while watching because I’d just read the book and knew exactly how certain scenes were supposed to play out, but had to witness the dialogue and scene play out in a very different way onscreen. I went on for a whole hour after we’d exited the theater about how this scene was supposed to go like that, and actually, that scene didn’t go that way in the book. Some parts of the movie were cheesy, and there was less emotional depth than could be felt from the book, but there is only so much you can expect from an onscreen adaptation. I went into the movie prepared to be utterly disappointed, and came out feeling like there were some redeeming elements despite much of what was hacked off of the novel’s timeless tale of love.
Last night, we went to see District 9 at the Alameda Theater with my sweet coworker Tarrin and her equally awesome boyfriend Jason (but not before having a heavenly meal at Burma Superstar… it was our first time trying Burmese food and it was so good). Dan has been dying to see this movie for about a month now, being the sci-fi/alien/horror flick lover that he is. I, on the other hand, was a little apprehensive — seeing those creepy, insect-like aliens in the previews seemed like enough of an alien dosage for me, but I obliged, since I had dragged Dan to see The Time Traveler’s Wife with me and since everyone seems to be raving about District 9 since it arrived in theaters last weekend. (It got a 89% on Rotten Tomatoes! I don’t necessarily follow the ratings on RT religiously, nor do I completely trust them, but it does serve as a quick reference to gauge how the general public is receiving the movie.) Although the movie had some stomach-turning moments and had a good share of bloody violence, I actually found it to be pretty entertaining. I didn’t expect to find myself taking sides with the ugly aliens and feeling sympathetic towards them, but in this case the humans are the bad guys. Dan definitely liked the movie a lot and was talking about it for a while afterwards. Not the prettiest of movies, but definitely a new, groundbreaking alien sci-fi movie. I liked the way it was filmed, with documentary-esque segments that flowed smoothly into the actual ‘live action’ scenes.
Ponyo (or the Japanese title Gake no Ue no Ponyo – translating to “Ponyo on the Cliff”) seems to be doing awesome in the States, too! We actually didn’t see this one in the theaters — we saw it last year, when Dan downloaded the Japanese original version, with English subtitles. I’m glad that the critics are liking it, because despite how great of an animated film it is, it does have its share of strange parts, like many other Studio Ghibli films by Hayao Miyazaki. The movie has elements of the Hans Christian Anderson story The Little Mermaid, although it by no means follows the folk tale strictly, and Ponyo is a fish instead of a mermaid. I’m a little concerned that Disney may have tweaked the story here and there, based on what I saw in the American trailer, but hopefully it is true to the original for the most part. I am still getting over the fact that they had Noah Cyrus and Frankie Jonas sing the theme song though — it sounds like a horribly digitized, (at some parts) inaccurately translated, sped-up version of the simple Japanese theme song. I liked this latest film from Miyazaki because it’s reminiscent of some of his cuter films from back in the day, like Totoro and Kiki’s Delivery Service. Many of his recent work, like Princess Mononoke and Spirited Away, have some really bizarre, even frightening moments. I think since I grew up watching all of his movies as a child, I really liked the more “child-like” ones. Totoro, Laputa: Castle in the Sky, and Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind are among my childhood favorites. I’m kind of bummed that I missed Miyazaki’s lecture when he visited UC Berkeley a month ago, since his movies have a special place in my heart and I really respect him as a filmmaker. I think Ponyo is a movie that almost anyone would love, although I recommend getting your hands on the Japanese version with English subtitles, if possible.
So I’m a little movie-ed out from this weekend, although with a film lover/cinema major for a hubby, the movie-watching just don’t stop….