Time Sep

(Jeff_L) #1

94 TIMESeptember 3–10 2018


In 2017 Edouardo Jordan became the
irst black chef to win the James Beard
Award for Best New Restaurant

Serving truth
JUNEBABYSEATTLE

FANTASY ISLAND
WARNER BROS. WORLD ABU DHABIABU DHABI

Few chefs serve food like
Edouardo Jordan whose
Seattle eatery offers up
soul-food staples (pulled
pork fried chicken candied yams) while
educating diners about their complex
history. JuneBaby’s walls are lined with
artwork featuring slaves and its website
includes an “encyclopedia” of menu
ingredients that explains for example
how corn bread became popular among
slaves. (It didn’t require a fork and a
knife.) “This is the food that fed a lot of
people to build America” says Jordan
a St. Petersburg Fla. native who last
year became the irst black chef to win
the James Beard Award for Best New
Restaurant. “We shouldn’t hide that. We
should embrace it.”
—Ashley Hoffman

THE NEW


WORK-STAY
TRIBE PERTH
PERTH AUSTRALIA


LURING


MILLENNIALS


ABOARD
THEA


Opened last year in
laid-back Western
Australia Tribe brings
a taste of affordable
luxury to the tech-
savvy co-working
generation. The
property—branded
as “part collaborative
workspace part
social club”—does
away with perks like
concierges and room
service in favor of
sleek design and
no-fuss check-ins
with rooms starting
at $120 per night.
—Suyin Haynes


U by Uniworld’s
millennial-focused
cruises nixed a
21-to-45 age limit
but they’re still a
far cry from sedate
river tours of old. U’s
black-hulled ship
simply calledA
oficially debuted
in April sailing on
the Rhine Main
and Danube rivers.
It’s “part boutique
hotel part yacht
part local hot spot”
the company says.
Replete with photo
booth and farm-
to-table cuisine
A docks at hip
European cities for
fun day excursions.
—Joseph Hincks


THE WORLD’S GREATEST PLACES 2018


The United Arab Emirates
became home to two of the
world’s largest indoor theme
parks when Warner Bros. World
opened in July. The Abu Dhabi Yas
Island park—which cost $1 billion
to build and spreads across 38 acres
just a little smaller than the garden
of Buckingham Palace—is designed
to entertain all kinds of Warner
Bros. fans and also ofer them a
reprieve from the region’s often
sweltering heat. Attractions are
grouped into six “neighborhoods”
including Gotham and Metropolis
(from the DC Comics universe
featuring superheroes like Batman
Superman and Wonder Woman)
and Dynamite Gulch and Cartoon
Junction (with animated classics
such as Road Runner andLooney
Tunes).—Gabby Raymond
Free download pdf