Yene Ethiopian Restaurant


We passed through Noryangjin Station but did not see any of the station cats. Also the overpass still has merchant protesters but they also allow pedestrians through.

The underpass was closed.

Looks like it's been like that since maybe last fall, judging by the leaves.


Bereket explains the tea ceremony.


We tried tej, which tasted surprisingly similar to Korean traditional alcohol.

A quick scan of the menu, which I joked was as well-designed as a Denny's menu (which I meant as a compliment).

We had middle left.


And upper left.


This was the meat-based one.

And the vegetarian one, which I want to have next time.

The whole spread. I didn't use this photo in the article for two obvious reasons.

Here's the raw beef.


And the unseasoned raw beef.

This picture we probably used.

I think I used this one too.

After we did some damage.

At the end, there was a tea ceremony. She jumped over that burner wearing that white dress, and I'm not sure how it didn't burst into flames.

I think I used this picture because it showed the contents of the pot.

There were many pictures involving Bereket.

Popcorn was part of it apparently. It seems Ethiopians like to have snacks like this when they drink coffee, sort of like Koreans prefer when they drink alcohol.

Two other Edmontonians.

And here you can see the two sisters.


Serving.


I got a picture of around the time when everyone tried a sip.



Looking for patterns.

Here is the night shift manager wondering why I'm not back at the office yet.

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