Sunday, April 12, 2009

Mililani Car Show

Last night B and I went to a gathering of car enthusiasts showing off their prized possessions. The horse power was so thick in the air you could cut it with a knife...
This is a 2003 SVT Cobra Convertible 10th Anniversary edition (B's car!)
Here is an SS Camaro:This is a 2003 Cobra Mustang (B's friend's car):
GT 500:


And last but most certainly not least, my favorite car of the evening (besides B's car), this is a '69 Mach 1 Mustang with a 428 Cobra Jet engine:



Tuesday, April 7, 2009

P.F. Chang's

B and I absolutely LOVE chinese cuisine. And our favorite place to get our latest fix? Well, P.F. Chang's, of course! I'm working on having a little of each item on their menu, lol...

My favorite dish at Chang's is the Wok-Seared Lamb. Just typing those words made my mouth water! If you like lamb, then you are guaranteed to love this dish. They have numerous other dishes that will satisfy any palatte.

Here is a little sneak-peek of what we had the last time we dined:

The appetizer, crab rangoon:

B's "Asian StreetFare Noodles":

I got the Crispy Honey Shrimp:

One satisfied customer :P

Friday, April 3, 2009

The Waianae Mountains

I loooooove the Waianae Mountains. I see them no matter where I go when Im driving around Oahu. I am constantly stopping to take pictures of them lol...can we say obsessed? Anyhoo...I just learned how to make a decent looking panaramic, so I decided to try my hand at making a
panaramic picture of these big beautiful green mountains that I hold so dear to my heart.
Also, I did a few of the boat harbor in Haleiwa. They're not the best, but, meh...I'm learning.








Thursday, April 2, 2009

ChinaTown

There is a place in Honolulu called "Chinatown" near the Aloha Tower Marketplace...and it is amazing and colorful. We went this afternoon to get the full experience. There is a small market called Maunakea Marketplace in Chinatown, and if you go upstairs there's this neat little museum, the Hawaiian Chinese Multicultural Museum & Archives, it's mainly just a glorified picture gallery; but I thought it was interesting. We learned alot from James G.Y. Ho, the founder and narrator of the little museum.

Here are a few pics of some of the street fare and architecture that you will find in Chinatown:







This is James G.Y. Ho, founder of the Hawaiian Chinese Multicultural Museum & Archives: