A Relaxing Stroll Around Florida Street
Argentines are really into enjoying their food…and snacks. Quite unlike Chile and Mexico, Argentina has cultivated a strong taste for sweet pastries and cakes (tortas), and these delights can be found almost anywhere you go. Cafes are everywhere. Dulce de leche, which is literally “sweet of milk” or “milk candy” in Spanish, is especially popular in Argentina. It is actually cooked condensed milk. They make cakes, cookies, pastries, desserts from this caramel-like syrup. In Chile, it’s called manjar (pronounced as ‘maan har’); in Peru, it’s called manjarblanco.

Having cake and tea in Buenos Aires

This yummy cake above that we had is called Porteño, a classic local cake made with thick meringue on top of a chocolate sponge base and a slab of dulce de leche in between the layers.

The naval building near our apartment

Well-dressed locals go for their shoe shine

Paraguay Street

The massive but empty Harrods Building (the famed British department store) was once the place for porteños to shop, but it has been sitting dark and abandoned on Florida Street for years. In 1997, the British court issued an injunction to restrain the Buenos Aires Harrods store from trading under the Harrods name since the store became independent of Harrods since the late 1940s.

You can find many newspaper/magazine kiosks along the streets. Our favorite daily paper is the Buenos Aires Herald, the only English newspaper here.




hi grace & Pedro,
how has your journey getting on? It has been almost 1/2 year since the start of travel. Miss home(s’pore)?
Take care. Look forward to reading your blogs on the travelling.
Regards
tiffany
Thanks
The traveling has made us very adaptable to different surroundings and cultures. Time flies so fast we don’t really notice it, guess it’s all the work that needs to be done and the fun of being on the move much of the time