Some cities are more known for the food than the attractions. Budapest isn’t one of those cities. So we didn’t have high expectations for dining in Budapest. But we gained a new appreciation for Hungarian food after dining at some great places. Here are some our favorite restaurants in Budapest…
Many of Budapest’s most treasured attractions are located in Leopold Town and Inner City. In this compact and easily walkable area, history and modernism complement each other. Even the fast food restaurants look like something out of a history book.
A walk through Budapest’s Jewish District, or Erzsébetváros, is equally impressive and depressing. During World War II, the Nazis crammed over 220,000 Jews into Erzsébetváros with nearly half dying behind its wall before the war ended. The area hasn’t really recovered, which is a shame considering how rich it is in history and architecture.
Budapest is a beautiful, intimate city that is made for walking. But it can also be noisy and congested. So where’s a great place to escape and get some fresh air? Margaret Island.
No trip to Budapest is complete without a visit to Buda Castle and the Castle District.
Heroes’ Square is the kind of monument that makes me wish I had done more with my life. Who wouldn’t want to be immortalized as a statue in one of the world’s most extravagant squares?
Let’s be clear: Budapest isn’t the culinary capital of the world. But that doesn’t mean restaurants like Menza are any less impressive.
The Kempinski Hotel Corvinus is a luxurious hotel in central Budapest named after Matthais Corvinus, a former King of Hungary. So it should come as no surprise that the hotel was designed to placate the rich and powerful. We’re neither. We’re just posers who happened to get an unfathomably good deal.
Visiting a thermal bath in Budapest is a lot like riding a roller coaster: the wait to get on is stressful and nerve-wracking, but the payoff is worth it. And the Széchenyi Baths is the biggest roller coaster of them all.
Saturday, July 25, 2009
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