After a little Googling, I found my place - Cafelix Coffee House in Jaffa. They roast their own beans on premises (#love) and have two smaller cafes in Tel Aviv. I decided to go all out and visit the roastery in Jaffa. Jaffa is the basically on the oustkirts of Tel Aviv, more to the South aka closer to Rishon, so I expected the journey bus to be fairly simple. But this is Israel so simple turned into a bit of an adventure quite quickly.
I took an express bus which goes to the central bus station in Tel Aviv but I thought that I would get off before the central bus station because that place is sketchy as eff and so confusing that's it's basically impossible to get a connecting bus unless you ask like 70 different people in and outside of the station where you need to go. To my dismay, I had incorrectly interpreted my map (unsurprising) and the bus took me right into the central bus station. After walking out of the bus station, then walking back in, then asking one information booth, then going upstairs and around a corner and walking 200m, asking another information desk and missing my original next connection, I found my bus and was on my way!
A little side note though - a group of artists have been trying to revamp the central bus station to make it less creepy so I stumbled across a wall of graffiti done by various artists. It was actually super cool and did make the place less sketchy. I snapped a few cute pics:
The birds are made of string! |
Filter coffee AHHHHHHH!!! |
The coffee wall of fame |
The cafe also has a coffee wall of fame whereby they have labelled cups for VIPs. If you are a VIP, you go into the cafe, pick up your cup, put it on the counter and order your coffee. To me, that is the coolest VIP membership card out and also a goal of mine although the bus trauma to get there may stop me from ever reaching it.
I also tutor (I say tutor but really we just talk in English with me correcting a few mistakes here and there) a med student every Tuesday with his English and after I'd got my coffee and read my book in the park, he called. As part of our agreement, E has offered to take me to cool places in Israel so we don't get stuck in a cafe for our tutoring sessions. As I was already in Jaffa, he decided to take me to Abu Hassan, which apparently serves the best hummus in Israel.
After devouring that scrumptious croissant earlier on, I wasn't particularly hungry but I'm not one to shy away from food on a full stomach so we both ordered 15 shekel bowls of hummus (that's $5). We actually ordered masbacha which E informed me was like creamy hummus with chickpeas. Cool fact for those players at home, chickpeas are called hummus (with a throaty ch sound at the beginning) so I was basically eating hummus with hummus. They serve it with raw onion, a spicy pickle onion sauce thing and fresh pita bread. I would say quite comfortably that it was one of the best hummus' I've had in Israel. It was so so so creamy and the chickpeas in the hummus were soft and delicious.
After our hummus adventure, E took me to this really cool park in Tel Aviv. Israel is basically all desert so visiting a park with greenery, trees and a lake with ducks was a real treat. It reminded me of Princes Park in Melbourne. I basically couldn't stop taking photos and I really wish I had some bread to feed to the ducks. (Well I did have some leftover pita from our hummus stop but I wasn't in the mood to share it!)
MM x
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