Showing posts with label adventure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label adventure. Show all posts

Sunday, February 15, 2015

Bean & Mummy's Yo! Sushi Date



Ever since we started making veggie sushi at home, I've wanted to be brave enough to go out for proper sushi. 



Bean is a bit of a food lover and I've had plans building in my head for a while of places we can go where we can try new foods together. So when Mr Strawberry and I went on a rare date and the boys became jealous, it didn't take me long to arrange 'dates' with both boys. Ed and I went to the movies (his choice) and I took Bean for sushi. It wasn't our only option but I'm so pleased we went, it was fabulous. 

On the way there, we discussed eating fish, raw fish and crab. We talked about how neither of us had ever eaten raw fish but maybe we should try it. It's fine to not like something but it's not fine to not try anything new. 
So, we got there and Bean chose us a little booth. He loved the bright colours, the cute characters and the tv on the wall that seemed to go through a loop of sushi dishes and lucky cats, all within cool Japanese imagery. The staff were all super helpful and friendly, made sure we had everything we needed and ensured they were close by if we had any questions. Every table has water taps so we never went thirsty and the conveyor belt of plates went past the table so we could grab whatever we fancied. 
It took us a bit of time to read through the menu (there are so many options) and find what was passing us but we didn't feel rushed. The dishes we really fancied but couldn't see, we simply ordered. Bean loved that he could press the button which alerted our waitress (thankfully he didn't get too hooked on it and was very sensible for someone who is only five). 
Our first plate.
From the top; inari & chive futomaki, duck gyoza, tamago nigiri, inari pocket,
pumpkin korroke, duck & mango roll.
So, I take him out for sushi and he orders himself sausages!
At least he attempted to eat them with chopsticks!
We tried lots of new foods, and even got brave enough to try both raw fish and raw beef but we didn't like it. We tried the salmon without the salmon and poor bean ended up with just the wasabi flavoured rice. "Too spicy!" he said. But the pumpkin korroke, duck gyoza, beef tsukune, tamago nigiri and inari pocket were delicious! 
seared beef nigiri and salmon maki.
And the puddings! It's obvious from my waistline I'm a pudding girl. I went for sushi so I wasn't expecting great puddings too. My sister had told me about a cheesecake sushi thing so I knew they did a few, but the puddings ensured we went past our 15 plate limit. 
We went on a Sunday, so we partook in the Sunday munch deal, which is 10 plates for £20 and 5 plates for £10 for a child, but because we were trying everything which caught our eye, we soon maxed out. Then when Bean spotted more puddings passing us and ordered himself a fruit platter, it pushed us so far past it was cheaper to charge us for two adults. I didn't mind, the last time we had a date was August! And the unlimited water was free. We didn't finish everything on our plates so we brought home our left overs. 
We first tried the custard dorayaki which was so yum Bean nabbed a chocolate one too. The chocolate mochi was peculiar but tasty, as was the strawberry cheesecake mochi. I'm still deciding on the anko mochi, there's some in the leftovers box. 
Testing the mochi.
strawberry cheesecake mochi, custard dorayaki, chocolate dorayaki, chocolate
mochi and anko mochi.
"I will succeed..."
Looking back at the menu now (to get the names spelt right!) there are so many dishes we didn't try. We'll have to go back very soon. 
So impressed with the conveyor belt.
Yo! Sushi is the most child friendly place I've been to in ages, with sparkly clean toilets (which I always appreciate) and absolutely no tutting from anyone because I dared to take a child to a restaurant, especially one who can be a bit fidgety and knocked a glass of water over our table when he was being a bit impatient waiting for his fruit platter. 
We finished our meal utterly full, with a belly full of yummy-ness and after such genuinely lovely staff, I literally couldn't help leaving a massive tip. We struggled through town and Bean almost fell asleep on the way home. We probably shouldn't have eaten quite so much but if it's only twice a year who cares haha!
We're so full....

Friday, September 19, 2014

Mummy & Ed's Weekend in London Town

I should've posted this ages ago. Ed and I went to London the weekend after I went with Bean.
Putting his transformer together.
We took the train where Ed got his new toy car and kre-o transformer, just as Bean did. Nanny came with us because she had a meeting to go to in Westminster and she bought him a chocolate milkshake too.
Impressed by the train stoppers.




A little grumpy after a long train journey.















Our first stop was Westminster to drop off Nanny and see Big Ben.



Obligatory Big Ben selfie.

I wanted to take him round the square to see Abe Lincoln (just like his lego figerine) but we never made it. He only wanted to climb.






Playing with different viscosities.







Off we went to the Science Museum in South Kensington. We had a little sit down outside before we went in to gather ourselves (Ed needs lots of little breaks to keep him sane) and eat some lunch. 
Inside there are lots of steam powered engines which made Ed very happy.


There's so much to see and do in there. 
Spinning different viscosities.
Bubbles!
We spent ages at the bean sorter, where there are so many various methods of moving the beans (and beans all over the floor!). Ed loved it and insisted on having a go on all the different parts. I have a vague memory of playing with this as a child myself but it cant be the same one...thirty years later...can it?



Ed loved the electronics section too. He is so in need of a set at home, and since it turns out I suck at it, it wouldn't be a bad idea to get one for Christmas haha.

This massive dish is the most beautiful thing! Every few minutes a little conveyor belt dumps a few crystals of dry ice in there and they whizz around making the most stunning patterns until they're spent. We stayed for a little while just watching the magic happen.

 We then moved on to a massive hanger full of aircraft. Ed was blown away by the differnt kinds of planes and engine parts.
Towards the end we made it downstairs to finally get a closer look at that steam engine. Sadly, the engineers must have gone on a tea break because it had just been turned off. Ed was super dissappointed and went on a hunt for something that did work.

He found this but it only turned every few minutes and he kept panicking, thinking it was broken.


 After a trip round the museum shop to spend his money and buy his brother something, we headed out. He hadn't let me get a coffee from anywhere all day. It had been too long and a day of running round after Ed, him refusing to hold my hand or at least stop running off had taken it's toll. By the time we got outside I was in tears and on the phone to Mr Strawberry. We spent an hour sitting on a little green, him sulking, me crying. Then we just sat there listening to the buskers (there was a lady singing at her piano, it was so calming and lovely) and watching the plastic bottle robot guy.
After a while we made friends again, had a few snacks and then he instigated this photo.
There are no words.
Ed & Nanny at the top of a double decker.
 After a while, Nanny finished in her meeting so we met up with her agian and got a big red double decker bus, where he chose not the front seat but the very back.


Super happy Ed in a cable car.
Two bus rides, a tube and a DLR train later, we finally made it to the Emirates Airline Cable car. Ed loved it even more than he thought he would!

The O2 from the cable car. 
On the way back to the tube station, Ed, lover of all water falls and fountains, spotted this and simply had to go investigate.
Though I know this a great photo of him doing a delightfully silly pose, I also know the extreme meltdown which happened straight after. The constant meltdowns meant that this was the last photo as we soon made our way back to Euston to catch the last train home a day early than planned. My nerves were fried and my temper blown. I know in hindsight there's a lot I could've done better, but don't we all feel that way? Especially with kids who need that little extra attention.
He was happier once he was home, but at least I can say I tried. Although he loved seeing the sights and stuff, London isn't safe enough for a boy who constantly runs off and has drop to your knees meltdowns at the flick of a switch.

Monday, August 25, 2014

Mummy & Bean's Weekend in London Town

Bean and I never get to spend time alone, so I decided to take him away to London for the weekend, just him and me, to go on adventures and see stuff.
Building his kre-o transformer.
He packed some toys in a little backpack and adding the new things I had brought; a Kre-o transformer blind pack (fantastic value at just £2 for an interchangeable figurine - a firm favourite with my boys), a new matchbox car, a little notebook, a pack of coloured dot stickers and a teenage mutant ninja turtles colouring-in book. I'd also packed a load of felt pens. He managed to entertain himself for the whole two hour train journey, though the stickers only ended up on me and he was slightly foxed because he didn't have a seat belt.
My leg :/


Watching the world whizz by.
Waiting for our very first tube train.
We got a tube to old street and a big black taxi cab (in which he happily found a seat belt, bless him) to Wellington Row because our first stop had to be the Felt Corner Shop near Bethnal Green, where I shook Miss Lucy Sparrow's hand and told her she was a genius.


She has painstakingly created all the items one would find in a corner shop, just using felt and a fair amount of wadding. It's lots of fun and I had to see it for myself, having come across it online a few weeks ago and actually squealed in delight.


Corner Shop selfie.
We then tried to get a tube into Town but the central line was closed so we had to find a bus.
My incredibly logical husband made himself useful even when we where so far apart. I rang him while Bean had a rest on a park bench to moan about how I couldn't find the right bus stop and he simply suggested going on Google maps as it would show me the bus route and everything. Love him!
While we were there I also took a moment to give Bean his pedometer (I'd forgotten, Daddy had given us a challenge to find out how much walking he did over the weekend) which led to this hilarious video;
Love his dancing!
He was trying to make as many steps as he could. Funny boy!
The pedometer didn't go to plan though. He kept taking it off his trousers to check it so it didn't count even half his steps. It also went mental on the train, so we've no idea how much walking he did. Next time, I might set my iPhone up to track us. It would use up loads of battery power but now I've got this pocket re-charger thingy, I'm not so worried.

Let me just take a moment to tell you about this awesome gadget I bought recently
The incessant map checking, photo taking and the like of a day trip wipes out my iPhone really quickly but this thing means I can recharge it on the go without too much hassle and it seems to be able to do that several times when it's fully charged.   It takes eight hours to fully load and has little lights which go out as the charge is used up, so you always know how much it has left.    I bought it on here eBay after a weekend away when I really struggled to keep my phone alive and I reckon it was really great value. Just so you all know, I'm not paid for anything (like, ever). I've borrowed this image from the eBay seller I bought it from. I'm only sharing this because I personally have tried and tested it and think it's super.


On the way to the bus stop we passed the Museum of Childhood. I've walked past a few times (usually on the way to Spa London) but never gone in. It wasn't on our itinerary because I never thought a five year old would enjoy looking at toys through glass any where near as much as he did. I loved looking at the old school transformers and star wars toys, and was enthralled by the massive train set. 
Twenty pence in the slot activated the trains and he loved watching them go through the tunnels and around the track. 

We were there so long I gave up trying to get to the aquarium, but we still got a big red double-decker bus to St Paul's as previously planned.



Top deck baby! (distracted by unwrapping a sweetie).

We had taken a bus to Bethnal Green tube station from the Corner Shop, but much to Bean's disappointment we couldn't go upstairs because we were only going a few stops to save him walking it. He was super pleased to find the front seats free and the windows are huge on these new buses! It was like a green house up there, but the view was fantastic. 
Water thingy (no idea lol)

Mary Poppins book bench.
 On the way to London, I had told him about the book bench trail I had planned. This one wasn't on our trail but Bean liked it. He especially liked sliding off it repeatedly.
"I'm the King!"
Bean was more interested in the architecture than I gave him credit for. He was always looking around, forming opinions on things. He found this windowsill (I won't tell him if you don't) which he decided was in fact a very grand throne. He loved that it even had a place to put his backpack. 
That's not my...bench.







On St. Peter's Hill there is a small play installation. Bean watched for a while before joining in with the other kids. He looked so morose as he sat there but I knew he was just working stuff out in his head.
Watching the other kids and waiting for his turn on the roundabout.



Selfie on the millennium bridge.

 As we reached the end of the bridge, there was a bigger boy sliding down one of the support beams, so Bean just had to have a go too. I was a tad terrified because it doesn't just slope downwards, but sideways too, so if he went too high he would've slid off the top. He was happy to listen to my worries and thankfully never left my arms reach. He invented a game where he had to slide down a land on a 'darlek eye' (a bolt to you and I). He couldn't come off until he'd got the high score, apparently.

While we made our way a tube station, Bean discovered he could make the lights on the floor go out by covering them up with mud. Then he did a lovely big H for Henry in one of them.
outside the Tate Modern.
We stayed at a good friend's house, you know, the kind who've been in the family for so long, they are actually family now. It's actually my Mum's best friend of twenty five years, they've watched me grow up and now they're watching my babies grow up. 
They have a hot tub in the garden and after all that walking, a few warm bubbles with some familiar faces is exactly what we needed. Bean happily fell straight to sleep in the spare bed with no arguments.

Big Ben selfie.
The next day, as we headed off to the aquarium, we got the tube to Westminster so he could see Big Ben since he'd mentioned it on the train. He was so impressed by how tall it was, his little face dropped as we came up the steps onto Westminster bridge. He's obviously seen it on TV and it is much bigger than he thought. He wasn't happy with just seeing it from the bridge as we crossed the river, and insisted we walk over to the bottom and then see it from all sides-which of course isn't possible what with all that fencing and all. So he climbed along the fencing for a bit until he realised the aquarium was in the opposite direction.
Big Ben.
Big Ben selfie from the other side of the river.
We finally made it to the London Aquarium. Because we hadn't bought our tickets in advance as I had previously planned to (thank goodness we didn't though, as we didn't make it for the time slot I was going to book them for), we had to queue for about forty minutes. Thankfully Bean was ok, he's not normally great at any kind of queue, but I had a little stash of sweeties to keep him going.
It cost the two of us £38 and it took less than two hours to get round (I'd read online it should take three). It was great and Bean will remember it always I'm sure, but I think maybe there are better value aquariums around. I wouldn't bother going again.
The penguins were super fun!

Shark face/photo bomb.
Bean had been given some spending money so he bought himself this cute little shark. Talk about over loved! It is now a tad on the black side after spending the rest of the day travelling around grubby London and will be lovingly hand washed later today.
Behind the London Eye.
Yummy sausage.
We found a real food market behind the Royal Festival Hall to grab some lunch from. One of the fabulous things about Bean is he'll eat almost anything, so when we go out, I know I can always find him something. His brother isn't anywhere near as easy to please. He grabbed a hot dog from one of the first stalls we passed, a lovely sausage from a farmer who was obviously passionate about his pigs. I chose the most delicious gallette from a crepe stand, full of goats cheese, caramelised onion and rocket. This is Bean tucking into his while we waited for mine to be cooked, it was so busy he had to stay by my feet but he happily sat on the floor and chomped away. Ate the whole thing too.

Then we got the tube from Waterloo to North Greenwich so we could go on the Air Emirates Line cable car across the river. We didn't really know where we were going, which made Bean's tired legs even worse. But we worked it out and he was fine.

He might be a bit tired :(
He found a sign he liked and decided to pose for a photo for the only time in the whole trip (aside from the selfies which I only get a second to catch).
We queued forever for the cable car. We had to queue to get a ticket for Bean (I used my oyster card).
Note to all; buy online before you go! 
Then we had to queue again to get on. Thankfully there were loads of benches I could plonk my tired Bean on. And it was totally worth it! Considering how little it costs (£2.30 for a child, I think £3.30 off my oyster), it's short but very very sweet. It goes so high! Definitely doing that again!

A view over the Thames.
Air Emirates selfie.
Bean was very impressed by the O2.
We then got the DLR and tube to Embankment, where we walked over to Trafalgar Square to check out the giant lion statues.
There were loads of people climbing on them, and Bean so wanted to get up there but he misjudged just how big they were and once he'd got up he was freaked out so we checked out the water fountains instead.
"Too high Mummy"

It was time to go find our train, which was messed up by line closures. We had to run from London Euston to St Pancras, then through St Pancras twice trying to find the right platform. Poor Bean's legs! He was so tired! But we made it, with five minutes to spare. And we'd managed to get some dinner (Marks & Sparks sandwiches) on the way.
Our train left at 6:00pm, so obviously he was shattered and that involved a fair amount of messing about. We had to get four different trains to get home, but he was brilliant and it wasn't so bad. When we got off the train, he insisted on hiding the things that we had bought his big brother (a little toy stingray from the aquarium and a Big Ben keyring) behind his back so he could surprise him in the car park where Daddy and Ed were waiting for us.
We had an amazing time. It was so good spending time with my little guy, doing what interested him and going at his (very slow, very observant) pace.
We never did do the book trail or the quiz, but we did other stuff instead, so at least we were never bored or short of choice, though how anyone can be bored in London with a loaded Oyster card is beyond me.

Ed had spent the weekend with Daddy. Apparently they were practising fishing in the living room...I'm not commenting haha.
I'm looking forward to Ed's weekend which is coming up very soon - watch this space.