At T+L, we know our readers love San Francisco for its food, so we thought we’d let you know about a promising new restaurant on Nob Hill that opens today. Located inside the Ritz-Carlton, Parallel 37 features a menu by Chef Ron Siegel that celebrates the geographic latitude Parallel 37 near the San Francisco Bay Area.
Do you know where this beautiful arched ceiling is?
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UPDATE 12/12/11:Way to gochristianx! This is the Natural History Museum in London. With 4.6 million visitors a year, it is the 11th most visited museum in the world.
Lyndsey Matthews is an assistant digital editor at Travel + Leisure.
Since Americans are still recovering from Thanksgiving, it's only appropriate that this week's Guess Where is of food. Can you guess where
this delicious treat
is?
Log in and leave your guesses below and check back on Monday for the answer.
UPDATE 11/28/11: This one was easy for you guys! This cinnamon dusted ring of pastry called the trdlo is found in Prague, Czech Republic.
Lyndsey Matthews is an assistant digital editor at Travel + Leisure.
This is a great area for camping, hiking, and winter activities once all this luscious greenery fades away. Can you guess where it is?
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UPDATE 11/07/11:We stumped you! Maybe this was too hard because of its remote location, but this photo was snapped driving through south from Hansen, Idaho through Rock Creek Canyon into the South Hills. Beautiful, isn't it?
Lyndsey Matthews is an assistant digital editor at Travel + Leisure.
This might be an easy one if you've visited this gorgeous place. I haven't, but I would love to be there right now to see the beautiful fall foliage. Wouldn't you?
Log in and leave your guesses below. Check back on Monday for the answer.
UPDATE 10/31/11:tommyelay guessed right! This is Oxbow Bend in Grand Teton National Park.
Lyndsey Matthews is an assistant digital editor at Travel + Leisure.
In theaters today, OKA! is an adaptation of the memoir of an ethnomusicologist from New Jersey, Louis Sarno, who moved to the remote forests of the Central African Republic to record the music of the Bayaka Pygmies over 20 years ago, fell in love and stayed.
Kris Marshall (Love Actually) gives a fine performance as the ethnomusicologist, but it’s the local Bayaka ensemble cast and the lush African rainforest that are worth your attention here. The plot is familiar—a capitalistic politician wants to destroy the Bayaka’s forest home to make way for a logging company’s expansion—but don’t be quick to dismiss this as another Fern Gully rip-off. The beauty of this film is in the moments that aren’t trying to move the plot along—children singing in perfect syncopated rhythm together, a group of women making music in a river using the water as their only instrument, and the documentary-worthy wildlife shots.