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stockstradr
ParticipantMy wife is mainland China born, and we lived in RB for several years, moving away last year. We know the San Diego Chinese restaurants really well. (Now we are in Bay Area, where obviously the Asian (and other) restaurants are better by an order-of-magnitude)
I rarely agree with the fat_union_guy on any post, but in this thread I’m agreeing, mostly.
We agree that Pearl (Emerald Chinese Seafood Restaurant) is quite good for dim sum at lunch when carts are pushed, and we like it also for evening dinner. It is actually somewhat authentic, and well liked by the many local Chinese patrons
However, it is an exception to the trusty rule that the best authentic Asian restaurants in San Diego are all within one mile of Jasmine on Convoy. Jasmine certainly is an important restaurant, as many in San Diego’s active Asian community consider it THE place to have dim sum on weekend late morning/early afternoon with family/friends. Also, Jasmine has one of the better Lion Dancing shows every Chinese New Year. We think their dim sum is good, relative to San Diego’s other options. Yet, I often find myself thinking Pearl has BETTER dim sum (but is often not as fun as Jasmine’s raucous weekend Dim Sum fests)
An example of a Convoy area authentic Chinese restaurant usually highly regarded among Chinese (and usually unknown among non-Chinese) is: Spicy City Chinese Restaurant. Expect to wait for a table if you arrive during dinner rush. You might read what yelpers have to say: http://www.yelp.com/
Some locals say their quality has suffered a bit since they lost their great chef some years ago.
Spicy City
4690 Convoy St Ste 107
(between Engineer Rd & Opportunity Rd)
San Diego, CA 92111
(858) 278-1818Another example of good Chinese restaurants in that area is:
Shanghai City Restaurant
3860 Convoy St Ste 105
(between Aero Dr & Kearny Mesa Rd)
San Diego, CA 92111Keep in mind that Shanghai City is not comparable to a restaurant like Pearl in RB. You go to Shanghai City restaurant for gritty low-brow authentic Chinese, and because is decorated very much like some restaurants you’ll see in mainland China; something about Shanghai City restaurant makes me feel I’m back in China. FYI: the Chinese buffet which is a few paces away (behind you as you enter Shanghai City) is HORRIBLE.
We completely agree with other posters that New Panda in RB is one of the best Chinese buffets, but we last sampled it at least a year ago; hopefully their quality has held up.
http://newpandabuffet.com/However, if cost is ignored then for buffet we would always head instead for: Onami Sushi and Seafood Buffet. (which I acknowledge is not Chinese buffet)
For good (Americanized) Thai, we really like Spices Thai Cafe in RB, especially for their Tom Kah Talae in Hot Pot, which is seafood in spicy coconut soup & mushrooms. However, the quality of that soup totally depends on if the good chef is cooking; when you get the good chef then that soup is GREAT.
http://www.spicesthaisandiego.com/For earning points with your woman, a great Thai-fusion place in an upscale ROMANTIC setting is Rama. It is worth the trip just to try their Crazy Duck Salad. If on a date, then ask for a table by the waterfall.
http://celadonrestaurantgroup.com/When your next up in LA, you must try Din Tai Fung because eating their Xiao Long Bao is nearly a religious experience! I was recently in Beijing, where they have another branch, and eating those dumplings was heavenly. How good are these dumplings? There is NOT a restaurant anywhere in the Bay Area having soup dumplings which even approach the standard of Din Tai Fung, and trust me, we have trecked to MANY Bay Area restaurants seeking that end of the rainbow.
http://www.dintaifungusa.com/stockstradr
ParticipantMy wife is mainland China born, and we lived in RB for several years, moving away last year. We know the San Diego Chinese restaurants really well. (Now we are in Bay Area, where obviously the Asian (and other) restaurants are better by an order-of-magnitude)
I rarely agree with the fat_union_guy on any post, but in this thread I’m agreeing, mostly.
We agree that Pearl (Emerald Chinese Seafood Restaurant) is quite good for dim sum at lunch when carts are pushed, and we like it also for evening dinner. It is actually somewhat authentic, and well liked by the many local Chinese patrons
However, it is an exception to the trusty rule that the best authentic Asian restaurants in San Diego are all within one mile of Jasmine on Convoy. Jasmine certainly is an important restaurant, as many in San Diego’s active Asian community consider it THE place to have dim sum on weekend late morning/early afternoon with family/friends. Also, Jasmine has one of the better Lion Dancing shows every Chinese New Year. We think their dim sum is good, relative to San Diego’s other options. Yet, I often find myself thinking Pearl has BETTER dim sum (but is often not as fun as Jasmine’s raucous weekend Dim Sum fests)
An example of a Convoy area authentic Chinese restaurant usually highly regarded among Chinese (and usually unknown among non-Chinese) is: Spicy City Chinese Restaurant. Expect to wait for a table if you arrive during dinner rush. You might read what yelpers have to say: http://www.yelp.com/
Some locals say their quality has suffered a bit since they lost their great chef some years ago.
Spicy City
4690 Convoy St Ste 107
(between Engineer Rd & Opportunity Rd)
San Diego, CA 92111
(858) 278-1818Another example of good Chinese restaurants in that area is:
Shanghai City Restaurant
3860 Convoy St Ste 105
(between Aero Dr & Kearny Mesa Rd)
San Diego, CA 92111Keep in mind that Shanghai City is not comparable to a restaurant like Pearl in RB. You go to Shanghai City restaurant for gritty low-brow authentic Chinese, and because is decorated very much like some restaurants you’ll see in mainland China; something about Shanghai City restaurant makes me feel I’m back in China. FYI: the Chinese buffet which is a few paces away (behind you as you enter Shanghai City) is HORRIBLE.
We completely agree with other posters that New Panda in RB is one of the best Chinese buffets, but we last sampled it at least a year ago; hopefully their quality has held up.
http://newpandabuffet.com/However, if cost is ignored then for buffet we would always head instead for: Onami Sushi and Seafood Buffet. (which I acknowledge is not Chinese buffet)
For good (Americanized) Thai, we really like Spices Thai Cafe in RB, especially for their Tom Kah Talae in Hot Pot, which is seafood in spicy coconut soup & mushrooms. However, the quality of that soup totally depends on if the good chef is cooking; when you get the good chef then that soup is GREAT.
http://www.spicesthaisandiego.com/For earning points with your woman, a great Thai-fusion place in an upscale ROMANTIC setting is Rama. It is worth the trip just to try their Crazy Duck Salad. If on a date, then ask for a table by the waterfall.
http://celadonrestaurantgroup.com/When your next up in LA, you must try Din Tai Fung because eating their Xiao Long Bao is nearly a religious experience! I was recently in Beijing, where they have another branch, and eating those dumplings was heavenly. How good are these dumplings? There is NOT a restaurant anywhere in the Bay Area having soup dumplings which even approach the standard of Din Tai Fung, and trust me, we have trecked to MANY Bay Area restaurants seeking that end of the rainbow.
http://www.dintaifungusa.com/stockstradr
Participant>> where is the recession?
My strategy for investing (or speculating!) can be summed this way:
An opportunity to make money exists when mass investor perception diverges markets significantly from the inevitable future conclusion of present and unfolding underlying economic conditions.
While the future is never truly certain, sometimes underlying market conditions all come together acting in concert to make a particular market future nearly certain
I want all of you to believe we are not in or near an economic recession. That will add to the mass mistaken perception that’s swinging financial markets at extreme, away from underlying economic fundamentals. That’s money in my pocket.
Rewind to October of last year. The S&P 500 had climbed up 25% in fifteen months, in blind optimism against a backdrop of the beginning collapse of one of the greatest real estate (and overall credit) bubbles of this century.
What is that? That my friends is opportunity, exceptional opportunity.
However, as the market climbed into Oct ’07, I saw I was down many tens of thousands on paper on bets I had previously accumulated, having expected the market would have already fallen by Oct. Do I dump and cut my losses? I admit I was rattled, but I steadied myself and objectively re-evaluated: is the market being irrational or AM I being irrational?
I concluded by rational analysis, and also by undeniable sense of the inevitable felt deep in my core: fundamental economic conditions were at total odds with market behavior, and a market correction was certain.
I did what I call “walking into the fire.”
As the market climb accelerated into Oct ’07, I tripled my short market bets, and added leverage in form of more PUTS.
You know how that played out. Zoom ahead: today we again have an S&P 500 that’s climbed up over 10% off the March bottoms where I dumped my shorts.
And again I find I’m down tens of thousands on new downside bets I had placed after the market had climbed back up “only” 5%.
This time I’m not even rattled. Got that déjà vu feeling? Last week with the market at 1400, I walked into the fire and bought more puts to open. Even if the S&P 500 goes straight up from here to 1500, I’ll just again double-down or triple-down my short bets because then the market will even be more at odds with economic reality.
This is easy money.
Now as for my short oil bets, I’m sure some forum hangers-on will remind me of that, but I never claimed short oil was a sure bet and I didn’t bet my chips like it was. I understood that move was a pure Vegas’ gamble. Some things are far from being easy money certain. Oil has moved up to $125, but I have never increased my short position beyond my initial bet. I’m not crazy.
stockstradr
Participant>> where is the recession?
My strategy for investing (or speculating!) can be summed this way:
An opportunity to make money exists when mass investor perception diverges markets significantly from the inevitable future conclusion of present and unfolding underlying economic conditions.
While the future is never truly certain, sometimes underlying market conditions all come together acting in concert to make a particular market future nearly certain
I want all of you to believe we are not in or near an economic recession. That will add to the mass mistaken perception that’s swinging financial markets at extreme, away from underlying economic fundamentals. That’s money in my pocket.
Rewind to October of last year. The S&P 500 had climbed up 25% in fifteen months, in blind optimism against a backdrop of the beginning collapse of one of the greatest real estate (and overall credit) bubbles of this century.
What is that? That my friends is opportunity, exceptional opportunity.
However, as the market climbed into Oct ’07, I saw I was down many tens of thousands on paper on bets I had previously accumulated, having expected the market would have already fallen by Oct. Do I dump and cut my losses? I admit I was rattled, but I steadied myself and objectively re-evaluated: is the market being irrational or AM I being irrational?
I concluded by rational analysis, and also by undeniable sense of the inevitable felt deep in my core: fundamental economic conditions were at total odds with market behavior, and a market correction was certain.
I did what I call “walking into the fire.”
As the market climb accelerated into Oct ’07, I tripled my short market bets, and added leverage in form of more PUTS.
You know how that played out. Zoom ahead: today we again have an S&P 500 that’s climbed up over 10% off the March bottoms where I dumped my shorts.
And again I find I’m down tens of thousands on new downside bets I had placed after the market had climbed back up “only” 5%.
This time I’m not even rattled. Got that déjà vu feeling? Last week with the market at 1400, I walked into the fire and bought more puts to open. Even if the S&P 500 goes straight up from here to 1500, I’ll just again double-down or triple-down my short bets because then the market will even be more at odds with economic reality.
This is easy money.
Now as for my short oil bets, I’m sure some forum hangers-on will remind me of that, but I never claimed short oil was a sure bet and I didn’t bet my chips like it was. I understood that move was a pure Vegas’ gamble. Some things are far from being easy money certain. Oil has moved up to $125, but I have never increased my short position beyond my initial bet. I’m not crazy.
stockstradr
Participant>> where is the recession?
My strategy for investing (or speculating!) can be summed this way:
An opportunity to make money exists when mass investor perception diverges markets significantly from the inevitable future conclusion of present and unfolding underlying economic conditions.
While the future is never truly certain, sometimes underlying market conditions all come together acting in concert to make a particular market future nearly certain
I want all of you to believe we are not in or near an economic recession. That will add to the mass mistaken perception that’s swinging financial markets at extreme, away from underlying economic fundamentals. That’s money in my pocket.
Rewind to October of last year. The S&P 500 had climbed up 25% in fifteen months, in blind optimism against a backdrop of the beginning collapse of one of the greatest real estate (and overall credit) bubbles of this century.
What is that? That my friends is opportunity, exceptional opportunity.
However, as the market climbed into Oct ’07, I saw I was down many tens of thousands on paper on bets I had previously accumulated, having expected the market would have already fallen by Oct. Do I dump and cut my losses? I admit I was rattled, but I steadied myself and objectively re-evaluated: is the market being irrational or AM I being irrational?
I concluded by rational analysis, and also by undeniable sense of the inevitable felt deep in my core: fundamental economic conditions were at total odds with market behavior, and a market correction was certain.
I did what I call “walking into the fire.”
As the market climb accelerated into Oct ’07, I tripled my short market bets, and added leverage in form of more PUTS.
You know how that played out. Zoom ahead: today we again have an S&P 500 that’s climbed up over 10% off the March bottoms where I dumped my shorts.
And again I find I’m down tens of thousands on new downside bets I had placed after the market had climbed back up “only” 5%.
This time I’m not even rattled. Got that déjà vu feeling? Last week with the market at 1400, I walked into the fire and bought more puts to open. Even if the S&P 500 goes straight up from here to 1500, I’ll just again double-down or triple-down my short bets because then the market will even be more at odds with economic reality.
This is easy money.
Now as for my short oil bets, I’m sure some forum hangers-on will remind me of that, but I never claimed short oil was a sure bet and I didn’t bet my chips like it was. I understood that move was a pure Vegas’ gamble. Some things are far from being easy money certain. Oil has moved up to $125, but I have never increased my short position beyond my initial bet. I’m not crazy.
stockstradr
Participant>> where is the recession?
My strategy for investing (or speculating!) can be summed this way:
An opportunity to make money exists when mass investor perception diverges markets significantly from the inevitable future conclusion of present and unfolding underlying economic conditions.
While the future is never truly certain, sometimes underlying market conditions all come together acting in concert to make a particular market future nearly certain
I want all of you to believe we are not in or near an economic recession. That will add to the mass mistaken perception that’s swinging financial markets at extreme, away from underlying economic fundamentals. That’s money in my pocket.
Rewind to October of last year. The S&P 500 had climbed up 25% in fifteen months, in blind optimism against a backdrop of the beginning collapse of one of the greatest real estate (and overall credit) bubbles of this century.
What is that? That my friends is opportunity, exceptional opportunity.
However, as the market climbed into Oct ’07, I saw I was down many tens of thousands on paper on bets I had previously accumulated, having expected the market would have already fallen by Oct. Do I dump and cut my losses? I admit I was rattled, but I steadied myself and objectively re-evaluated: is the market being irrational or AM I being irrational?
I concluded by rational analysis, and also by undeniable sense of the inevitable felt deep in my core: fundamental economic conditions were at total odds with market behavior, and a market correction was certain.
I did what I call “walking into the fire.”
As the market climb accelerated into Oct ’07, I tripled my short market bets, and added leverage in form of more PUTS.
You know how that played out. Zoom ahead: today we again have an S&P 500 that’s climbed up over 10% off the March bottoms where I dumped my shorts.
And again I find I’m down tens of thousands on new downside bets I had placed after the market had climbed back up “only” 5%.
This time I’m not even rattled. Got that déjà vu feeling? Last week with the market at 1400, I walked into the fire and bought more puts to open. Even if the S&P 500 goes straight up from here to 1500, I’ll just again double-down or triple-down my short bets because then the market will even be more at odds with economic reality.
This is easy money.
Now as for my short oil bets, I’m sure some forum hangers-on will remind me of that, but I never claimed short oil was a sure bet and I didn’t bet my chips like it was. I understood that move was a pure Vegas’ gamble. Some things are far from being easy money certain. Oil has moved up to $125, but I have never increased my short position beyond my initial bet. I’m not crazy.
stockstradr
Participant>> where is the recession?
My strategy for investing (or speculating!) can be summed this way:
An opportunity to make money exists when mass investor perception diverges markets significantly from the inevitable future conclusion of present and unfolding underlying economic conditions.
While the future is never truly certain, sometimes underlying market conditions all come together acting in concert to make a particular market future nearly certain
I want all of you to believe we are not in or near an economic recession. That will add to the mass mistaken perception that’s swinging financial markets at extreme, away from underlying economic fundamentals. That’s money in my pocket.
Rewind to October of last year. The S&P 500 had climbed up 25% in fifteen months, in blind optimism against a backdrop of the beginning collapse of one of the greatest real estate (and overall credit) bubbles of this century.
What is that? That my friends is opportunity, exceptional opportunity.
However, as the market climbed into Oct ’07, I saw I was down many tens of thousands on paper on bets I had previously accumulated, having expected the market would have already fallen by Oct. Do I dump and cut my losses? I admit I was rattled, but I steadied myself and objectively re-evaluated: is the market being irrational or AM I being irrational?
I concluded by rational analysis, and also by undeniable sense of the inevitable felt deep in my core: fundamental economic conditions were at total odds with market behavior, and a market correction was certain.
I did what I call “walking into the fire.”
As the market climb accelerated into Oct ’07, I tripled my short market bets, and added leverage in form of more PUTS.
You know how that played out. Zoom ahead: today we again have an S&P 500 that’s climbed up over 10% off the March bottoms where I dumped my shorts.
And again I find I’m down tens of thousands on new downside bets I had placed after the market had climbed back up “only” 5%.
This time I’m not even rattled. Got that déjà vu feeling? Last week with the market at 1400, I walked into the fire and bought more puts to open. Even if the S&P 500 goes straight up from here to 1500, I’ll just again double-down or triple-down my short bets because then the market will even be more at odds with economic reality.
This is easy money.
Now as for my short oil bets, I’m sure some forum hangers-on will remind me of that, but I never claimed short oil was a sure bet and I didn’t bet my chips like it was. I understood that move was a pure Vegas’ gamble. Some things are far from being easy money certain. Oil has moved up to $125, but I have never increased my short position beyond my initial bet. I’m not crazy.
stockstradr
ParticipantI think time for ME to concede, that marion has the best post! I love that Three Stooges image of our present candidates. So true.
stockstradr
ParticipantI think time for ME to concede, that marion has the best post! I love that Three Stooges image of our present candidates. So true.
stockstradr
ParticipantI think time for ME to concede, that marion has the best post! I love that Three Stooges image of our present candidates. So true.
stockstradr
ParticipantI think time for ME to concede, that marion has the best post! I love that Three Stooges image of our present candidates. So true.
stockstradr
ParticipantI think time for ME to concede, that marion has the best post! I love that Three Stooges image of our present candidates. So true.
stockstradr
ParticipantAhh, items that bother us, the list is endless…
Sometimes I wonder about myself however, that I let too many things bother. Better to let it slide…
stockstradr
ParticipantAhh, items that bother us, the list is endless…
Sometimes I wonder about myself however, that I let too many things bother. Better to let it slide…
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