
Shopping
If you can't bear the thought of bringing home wooden shoes,
consider bringing home a round of Gouda or Edam cheese (make sure
it's pasteurized so it can pass through U.S. customs).
Rommelmarkt: An indoor flea market where you can find photographs of
nineteenth-century Amsterdam, wooden biscuit molds, tiles from
Art Deco buildings, or antique wooden skates. Looiersgracht 38.
Closed Fridays.
Kitch Kitchen: Retro 60s housewares to cheer up your Stateside kitchen.
Rozengracht 183.
Eating
Good Dutch food exists only in the home. That said, Amsterdam has
mastered the art of snacking. In the streets, try the famous French
fries with mayonnaise (patat met), fried cod with garlic sauce
(kibbeling met sauce), and croquettes.
On the Cheap
The Pancake Bakery has sweet and savory pancakes, a national
favorite. Try bacon pancakes and the tiny sugar rush-inducing
poffertjes. Prinsengracht 191; telephone: 625-1333.
What's Hot
Right on the city's pulse point is The Supper Club, a lounge
where diners loll on mattresses in an Elysian setting. Make
reservations before you leave the United States it's that
popular. Jonge Roelensteeg 21; telephone: 638-0513.
For a Splurge
La Rive is renowned as the best restaurant in the country, with
exquisite French food, an opulent atmosphere, and two Michelin
stars. Prof. Tupplein 1; telephone: 622-6060.
Just for a Drink
By 6 P.M., Amsterdam's "brown cafes" (named for
their tobacco-stained walls) fill up with locals relaxing after a
day's work. Papeneiland has been in business since a coffin maker
began dispensing alcohol to the bereaved in the 17th century.
Prinsengracht 2.