Seattling Down

Thursday, June 23, 2005

Bay Area Restaurants


Before we leave the Bay Area, my wife and I are trying to get a few items crossed off our "things to do before we leave the bay area" list. One of the major items we want to get through is to visit several bay area restaurants that we enjoy or think we'd enjoy.


So, we started off our restaurant trips a couple weeks ago, with our first vist to Limón, a great Peruvian restaurant in the Mission district of San Francisco. We heard about it a year ago, and have run into a couple raving reviews since, and decided we finally had to make the time to go. We enjoyed their chicha morada and sangria, my wife had a great saltado de pollo, and I had a yummy arroz con mariscos. We were with a group, so were able to taste a good set of appetizers and desserts. Everything was delicious, and the service was impeccable.

Last week we had dinner at Taste Paul K, a self-described "edgy mediterranean" restaurant in Hayes Valley. The food was great. We ordered the mezze platter as an appetizer; the lamb riblets that came in the platter had been marinated with pomegranate syrup and just melted in one's mouth. I had the pressed sumac chicken, and my wife had their pan roasted halibut. It's definitely not your standard mediterranean food, and its quite well done.

For a year now, we've been frequenting a Chef Chu's whenever we're in the mood for chinese food. The restaurant has been around since 1970, and is in my opinion, the best chinese restaurant in the Bay Area1. The sauces are the best I've tasted. We had lunch there a few days ago, and I'm sure we'll want to go again within the next four weeks.

I'm sure we'll go to several more restaurants before we leave, though we haven't planned anything in particular. However, we have chosen our first "we've left California" restaurant. On the drive up from San Francisco to Seattle, we're going to spend a night in Ashland, OR, just north of the California-Oregon border. There, we have reservations at Amuse, a Northwest/French restaurant with a tasty looking menu.

[1] The Great China in Berkeley comes in second.


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Saturday, June 18, 2005

Looking for a house

So, we're looking to buy a house in Seattle. We're living about 850 miles away from Seattle. That's a 15 hour and 13 minute drive without traffic. But, it turns out we can find an incredible amount of information about Seattle houses on the Internet, without ever leaving our living room. I probably shouldn't be surprised, this being the information age and all, and computers being my, you know, my job and all. But I am.


Here's what my wife and I do every day. Or at least, the days on which we feel like procrastinating on our PhDs (I'll write about that some other time):


We start our search by going to BradHinckley.com, an easy to use web site listing real estate. There seem to be quite a few sites seem to work well, but we've settled on this one. It's very easy to do a property search for houses that have come on the market in the last day 1. Give it a try. The listing show up on a map, and you get to see details including (usually) photos. Here, there's already a lot of information at your fingertips.


If we find a house we like, the next step for us is to check out the neighborhood. The first thing we do is look at maps.google and get a better idea of where in Seattle the address is. This is important to us, since I'd like a reasonable commute to work, and we both want to be in walking distance to shops and restaurants. To check out traffic, I use the Puget Sound Area traffic congestion map, giving current and historical traffic data every ten minutes going back to October 2003.


To check out the neighborhood shops, we use Yahoo Maps (I won't go into the reasons, but, while I find Google Maps to be a much prettier map, I find Yahoo's local search much easier to use). Finally, if we're looking at a neighborhood we haven't explored recently, we go to a third site, A9's yellow pages and look up some of the nearby restaurants and cafes. A9 has photos of most of Seattle's businesses, and it's easy to "walk" up and down the block and get some feeling for what the neighborhood commerical areas are like.


If we find a house that we like, but it seems to be underpriced, we wonder what might be wrong with it. Now, it's time to do just a little bit more digging, so here's what we do. First, we'll pull up a satellite map of the area using Terraserver. Google Maps has satellite maps too, but Terraserver's are more detailed. Terraserver doesn't pinpoint the address perfectly, however, so we still don't know which house on the satellite map is the one we're interested in. So, now, we have to go to King County's Parcel Viewer. Searching for an address here gives you a view of all the lots in the neighborhood, and you can count how many houses you are from the corner. With these two tools together, you can usually tell whether there's anything obviously wrong with the house, such as nearby freeways, power plants, etc. It's really quite a nice tool.


King County's parcel viewer gives a lot more information as well; I'd encourage you to poke around. You can look up recent tax information, summary descriptions of the house, and some permit information. More permit information is also available at Seattle's department of planning and development.


Finally, take a look at the real estate section in the Seattle Times. They have interesting articles every week or so. I originally found the King county records and DPD sites from an article here.




[1] If you want to check for new houses more than once a day, you can use decimal numbers, such as "0.5" to search for houses that have come up in the last 12 hours. Here's a cheat sheet of fractions if you don't feel like pulling out a calculate or pencil and paper: If you checked for new listings 6 hours ago, use 0.25; 4 hours ago, use 0.167; 1 hour ago, use 0.042. Not that we do this. To be honest, the real estate market in Seattle doesn't change that quickly.


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Friday, June 17, 2005

An introduction

My wife and I are finishing our theses and will be joining the real world over the next few months. During this process, we're going to be moving from the San Francisco Bay area up north to Seattle. I'm hoping to use this space to talk about a few different things:



  • Finishing the thesis and leaving the student life: After ten years of college and graduate work, it feels good to be almost finished. I'm sure it will feel even better to be finished.
  • Moving away from the Bay Area: Though I travel a lot and have spent some time on the East Coast and Europe, I've had always had one foot in California. My wife and I are already making lists of things to do before we leave.
  • Buying a house for the first time: We've started looking at the real estate market in Seattle, and have even been pre-approved for a mortgage. We like the houses we see. Unfortunately, the ones we're seeing now aren't going to be on the market by the time we get up there. That's ok. I feel an emotional roller coaster beginning already.
  • Settling down in Seattle: I've been to Seattle quite a few times, and probably spent a total of 6 months there, all told. It's a great city and I'm looking forward to learning its ins-and-outs.


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