Frommer’s reveals top destinations for 2012

What destination are you dreaming of for 2012? The staff at Frommer’s have just unveiled their list of top travel destinations for the coming year. Included in the list is a little something for everyone: large metropolises, secluded beach towns, colorful riverside villas, and more.

But Frommer’s didn’t just rely on their expert editors and author’s for this years list–they also polled readers to find out where they wanted to visit in 2012. Click through the gallery below to see Frommer’s (and their reader’s) picks–including one surprising midwestern city that is the only spot in the United States to make the cut.
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Other Winners:
Top Family Destination: Great Smoky Mountains National Park
Top Cruise Destination: Tromso, Norway
Top Beach Destination: Hanalei Beach, Kauai, Hawaii
Top Adventure Destination: Moab, Utah
Top Food & Drink Destination: Lima, Peru
Top City Break Destination: Chicago, Illinois
Top Endangered Destination: Aysen Region, Chile
Top Value Destination: Albanian Riviera
Top Destination to Get Lost: Whitsunday Islands, Australia

Digital technology meets art with a floating orchestra of ping pong balls

The Poietic Studio in London in the United Kingdom has combined technology with art in their new exhibit, the Floating Orchestra. Here, 19 ping pong balls come to life, becoming orchestral instruments that increase in volume as each ball rises. By manipulating each ball, you can create your own symphony of music. And, how is this all controlled? By technology, of course, via the touchscreen of an iPhone.

The Poietic Studio has a unique approach to art, focusing on “people’s fundamental joy of play, curiosity, and exploration”. Their practice is multidisciplinary, with backgrounds in art, engineering, and interactive and spatial design. By exploring the bounds of imagination, technology, and science, Poietic Studio is able to create “unique mechanical structures that offer memorable experiences whilst celebrating the poetics of engineering”.

Want to see how the Floating Orchestra works for yourself? Check out this video:


Floating Orchestra from Poietic Studio on Vimeo.

Corner Room: London’s best-kept upscale lunch secret

What makes a secret restaurant a secret? It might be off the standard grid. It might be simply unsung, or empty at particular mealtimes. There’s got to be something, however contrived, that allows it to achieve status as a secret. And whatever it is, there’s got to be something of high quality on offer to merit eligibility as a “secret” in the first place. Secrets have to be good. If they’re not good, they’re just irrelevant shards of information.

Corner Room in London‘s Bethnal Green neighborhood is a secret along this equation: very sophisticated food + lack of customers at lunchtime = lunch secret. It’s not as if the people behind Corner Room are afraid of operating a semi-secretive operation, either. The restaurant has no telephone number or website and doesn’t take reservations.

And to make things even more appealing, Corner Room, located in fact in a corner room at Town Hall Hotel, may very well be the best place in London for grabbing a top-notch lunch without running into debt. The set lunch menu is £15 ($23.50), which in London is a steal for two courses at this level of sophistication. You can expect to pay around £22 ($34.50) for a starter, a main, and a dessert.

Corner Room is helmed by Nuno Mendes, who runs the Michelin-starred and very pricey Viajante downstairs at Town Hall Hotel. Corner Room is Viajante’s little sidekick. Big kid Viajante’s menu, with its hodgepodge of Asian and Iberian influences is full of surprises, including wild foraged herbs and grasses. Corner Room repeats some of Viajante’s motifs at a much lower price point and with less variety. The Corner Room menu is short, sweet, and to the point.

Each meal starts with an anchovy-stuffed olive, dense and exciting. The courses that follow are all delicious and surprising. A beetroot and salmon main is probably the best thing I’ve eaten there, though there’s never been something that didn’t delight: fresh granitas; the shock of shiso against goat’s cheese; and unbelievably tender meats, to name three.

At dinnertime I’ve watched Corner Room fill up rapidly and a conversational din gather like vapor over tables, but I’ve never had trouble getting a table at Corner Room for lunch. On my last visit, I had the most delightful long lunch with a friend, three lovely hours.

There are two downsides to a lunch at Corner Room. The kitchen can get overwhelmed with orders, rendering service slow. And portions are on the small side. Otherwise, this is a treat. Just remember that no reservations are taken. You’ll just need to show up and hope that this blog post and other snippets of media attention will not have ruined your ability to have a nice, long, leisurely lunch over a trio of extraordinary courses.

Corner Room is located upstairs off the lobby at Town Hall Hotel, at Patriot Square near the Bethnal Green Tube station.

[Image: Maxine Sheppard]

Bierfest brings the spirit of Oktoberfest to London

While not everyone can find time in their busy schedule to make it over to Germany for Oktoberfest, those in London from October 5-7, 2011, can still experience the spirit of the festival. London will host their annual Bierfest at Old Billingsgate Market, which will be transformed into an authentic-style Oktoberfest celebration with traditional German food, unlimited steins of beer, live music, and servers dressed in costume.

Bitburger will be the official beer supplier for the event, featuring brews such as:

  • Bitgburger Premium Beer, a hoppy beer with a dry-finish that is made in accordance with Germany purity law.
  • Bitburger Drive, an alcohol free, fully-fermented, low calorie beer option.
  • Licher-Weizen (Light Wheat Beer), a refreshing beer brewed out of wheat and “blessed by the sun”
  • Kostritzer Schwarzbier (Black Beer), a barley malt with a mild-hop flavor.

As for food fare, expect options like Bavarian spiced chicken, cold meat & cheese platters, salted pretzels, mini Gherkins, BBQ ribs, and more.

Tickets must be purchased in tables of 10, so get your closest friends together and experience the spirit of Oktoberfest in London.

London hotel offers package for insomniacs

Jet lag, stress, too much work, too much play, and the novelty of being in new surroundings can all contribute to restlessness when traveling. Because insomnia is a malady that affects every traveler from time to time, a hotel in London is introducing a wellness package designed to help you get a good night’s rest.

Through December 22, 2011, London’s Milestone Hotel will offer The Gentle Art of Falling Into a Deep Sleep package. Beyond merely offering a heavenly bed, this package includes a consultation with “sleep, stress and performance therapist Tej Semani;” a one-hour massage; and a gift bag containing aromatherapy oils, lavender eye mask, vouchers for another session with Semani, and an Alpha Sleep pod, Semani’s iPod-like device that releases sound waves meant to induce sleep. The insomniac package also provides you with a pillow menu, a detox breakfast menu, and tailored sleep tips “depending on whether you are traveling for business or pleasure.” Examples of the latter include “Turn off your Blackberry” and “Stop fighting with your spouse.” (At least, that’s what I would suggest.)

Reading about the Milestone’s “Deep Sleep” package left me very relaxed until I noticed the rate. The price per night for this insomnia package is £813.33 (plus VAT), roughly $1,324 going by today’s exchange rate. I don’t know about you, but if I had $1,300 to drop on a hotel room, I think I’d be sleeping pretty soundly already.

[Photo courtesy The Milestone Hotel]