Taste of Prague Czech Podcast, Ep 4 - Tomáš Berdych o cestování a jídle

Taste of Prague Czech Podcast, Ep 4 - Tomáš Berdych o cestování a jídle

Vítám Vás u třetího dílu našeho podcastu v češtině. Tentokrát byli naším hostem Gabi a Petr, food bloggeři píšící pod názvem PG Foodies, manželé a od nového roku majitelé a provozovatelé bistra Etapa v Karlíně. 

Zuzka vždycky žertem říká, že jako každý absolvent filozofické fakulty jsem měl vždy sen otevřít si vlastní kavárnu, abych si tam mohl žvanit s ostatními. Trochu kruté, ale v jádru pravdivé. Je taky záhodno přiznat, že během slabších chvilek jsme se se Zuzkou zamýšleli nad tím, že bychom si otevřeli něco vlastního, ale záhy jsme tu myšlenku opustili - na vlastní podnik máme příliš rádi cestování, navíc bychom se asi po týdnu zcela určitě rozvedli.

Gabi a Petr, kteří už blogují o jídle čtvrtým rokem a kteří minulý rok vyhráli hlavní kategorii soutěže Food blog roku, si vlastní podnik otevřeli - Etapu v pražském Karlíně. Hodně se na něm nadřeli. Všechno dokumentovali na Instagramu. A nerozvedli se.


Taste of Prague Podcast, Ep 8 - Journalist Joann Plocková

Taste of Prague Podcast, Ep 8 - Journalist Joann Plocková

Influencers, as a new phenomenon in travel and food, never cease to fascinate us. And we are not talking about the Kardashian lookalikes that will try to sell you anything from energy water to teeth whitening products. We are talking about the people who you may not follow, or even know about, but influencer the way you eat or travel even without you realizing it. And when you think about it, journalists are the prototypical influencers. So you read an article about a destination and though hmmm, that sounds nice… maybe we could go there next year, what interests me is who wrote that piece, who edited it and in what way, who decided to run it in the first place, and so on.

Which brings us to the guest of Episode 8 of our little podcast, Joann Plocková. Joann is travel and design writer who has written pieces for the likes of The New York Times, Monocle, AFAR (once about us, yay!), Financial Times, Conde Nast Traveller and others. And she also wrote a part of the Louis Vuitton guide for Prague and the Wallpaper guide for Prague. Talk about influencing the way you travel! 

Anyway, Joann is one of the nicest writers we have ever worked with - she does not just phone it in (and believe us, we have worked with multiple journalists who hardly did anything but phoning it in, and they are, sadly, influencers too) and she takes her research and writing very seriously. She also happens to be a US expat who has been living in Prague steadily since 2007 and has a unique perspective on Prague and Central Europe as a whole.

We met in the great Ronin Coffee Spot in the Vinohrady district and chatted about her life as an expat in Prague, about the hustle of being a freelance journalist, about the success rate of her pitches (you’ll be surprised - she knows a thing or two about pitching), and about a thing that I have been discussing quite a bit: who actually writes the narrative about a destination, and can locals do anything about it? Like when Buzzfeed puts out a picture of the horrendous trdelník pastry and in a few weeks, it becomes the most Instagrammed food of Prague, while local foodies just shake their heads in bitter disbelief, is there anything we can do to change that?

Anyway, if you have ever though about influencers, narratives of different destinations, or ever though about being a freelance journalist or travel writer, this episode is for you.


Best Coffee Shops in Prague, 2020 edition

Best Coffee Shops in Prague, 2020 edition

We wrote about Prague’s coffee scene and the reasons why it’s so great last week (TL;DR version: specialty coffee now a standard, young people, barista a viable career here, and high standard of skill), but this week it’s time to list our favorite specialty coffee shops in Prague. Before we get to the list, a few details on how we choose the coffee shops and why maybe your favorite is not included. 

We write this blog as a service to the guests of our awesome Prague food tours, and these best-of’s are primarily targeting foreign visitors to Prague who may have just a few days here, so our key criterion here is consistency. If we drag you across the town for a cup of coffee, we better be damn sure they serve good coffee EVERY DAY. So if a coffee shop served us the best cup of coffee ever on one occasion, but a mediocre cup the next day, it may not have made the list. We don’t want to run the risk of our readers coming in on that mediocre day. 

As Jarda Tuček, one of the founders of Doubleshot Coffee Roasters told us, once you reach a certain level of quality in coffee, the rest is just preference or nuance. So all of the Prague coffee shops below should pass the basic bar: they use good beans freshly roasted by a high-quality, independently-owned roaster, ground just before brewing, by a barista that has been properly trained and uses properly maintained equipment. Even on that mediocre day, the places listed here will serve coffee that is drinkable, but the coffee shop may not make the must-go cut.   

How have we divided the coffee shops? Easy. We have roughly used and adapted the Michelin guide principle. The Must Go Coffee Shops are the three Michelin stars: worth a separate trip if you like coffee or coffee culture. The Other Favorite Coffee Shops are the two stars: worth a detour on your trip. And the coffee shops included in the neighborhood guides are the single stars: worth a stop if in the area or on the way. Easy, right? Enough talk, let’s do this.


Taste of Prague Podcast, Ep 7 - Chef Bára Simunková

Taste of Prague Podcast, Ep 7 - Chef Bára Simunková

Okay, all Czech chefs who worked, not staged, in multiple three-Michelin star restaurants in a big city abroad, hands up! Okay, there must be only one. Bára Šimůnková has worked in Eleven Madison Park, Le Bernardin and Per Se, three 3-Michelin stars in New York City. Again, was not there on a stage (except Eleven Madison Park) - she actually worked there as a line chef. And now she’s coming back and is hopefully due to open a restaurant in Prague in the spring. Oh yeah, and she’s not even 30.

Anyway, we have heard of Bára when she came back and worked at our favorite bakery in Prague, Praktika, and it was nearly mythical: „have you heard of this Bára? She worked at Per Se and Le Bernardin and she’s amazing.“ And as will be revealed in the podcast, she was praised by Paul Day when he hired her for Sansho as her first job out of school. Given all that, it’s a wonder that Bára has been moving below the radar and has not been filling the title pages of major Czech cooking and food magazines.

Maybe it’s because she’s laser-focused and does not waste a lot of time. She knows what she wants and does not take sh*t from anybody. When she felt being passed over for promotion because she was a girl from the East, she went straight to the managers to talk it over. When she arrived in NYC, she basically sent emails to what she thought were the best five restaurants in town, and got a response from three right away.

And now she’s back and due to open a restaurant in Prague. What are the differences between chef life in NYC and Prague? How does she feel about the Prague food scene, having come back from the best restaurants of NY? How demanding is work in a three-Michelin restaurant? What will her Prague restaurant be all about? Listen to find out. Enjoy the podcast with Bára!


Specialty Coffee in Prague: the 2020 edition

Specialty Coffee in Prague: the 2020 edition

So it’s been nearly three years since we wrote about specialty coffee shops in Prague. And it’s high time to revisit Prague coffee again - just last year, Prague saw the opening of nearly 10 coffee shops that serve specialty coffee - which is astonishing, if you realize that we didn’t even have 10 coffee shops that served specialty coffee some eight, nine years ago.

This time, we’d like to split our coffee guide to Prague into two posts: the first that explains the local coffee culture and will help you navigate the lay of the land when it comes to coffee in Prague. You know, a post we would like to read before we travel anywhere. The second post will list our favorite coffee shops in Prague. Okay? Let’s get right to it.


Taste of Prague Czech Podcast, Ep 3 - P&G Foodies o otevření Etapy

Taste of Prague Czech Podcast, Ep 3 - P&G Foodies o otevření Etapy

Vítám Vás u třetího dílu našeho podcastu v češtině. Tentokrát byli naším hostem Gabi a Petr, food bloggeři píšící pod názvem PG Foodies, manželé a od nového roku majitelé a provozovatelé bistra Etapa v Karlíně. 

Zuzka vždycky žertem říká, že jako každý absolvent filozofické fakulty jsem měl vždy sen otevřít si vlastní kavárnu, abych si tam mohl žvanit s ostatními. Trochu kruté, ale v jádru pravdivé. Je taky záhodno přiznat, že během slabších chvilek jsme se se Zuzkou zamýšleli nad tím, že bychom si otevřeli něco vlastního, ale záhy jsme tu myšlenku opustili - na vlastní podnik máme příliš rádi cestování, navíc bychom se asi po týdnu zcela určitě rozvedli.

Gabi a Petr, kteří už blogují o jídle čtvrtým rokem a kteří minulý rok vyhráli hlavní kategorii soutěže Food blog roku, si vlastní podnik otevřeli - Etapu v pražském Karlíně. Hodně se na něm nadřeli. Všechno dokumentovali na Instagramu. A nerozvedli se.


Prague Food Scene: 2019 in review

Prague Food Scene: 2019 in review

We dread the „Year in review“ articles. „Oh, nothing has opened this year. What are we going to write about? Prague is not NYC, you know? It’s not like something new opens every week. Jeez, this is gonna be boooooring!!!!“ Oh well.

But then you start counting. What the heck? 48 new places worth a mention? And we’re pretty sure we forgot a few. Which boils down to nearly… wait for it… one opening every week. Yup. Hold our beer, NYC! Prague coming through! Well, obviously, we’re not there yet, but in hindsight - and despite the perceived lack of „major“ openings, 2019 was a great year for the Prague food scene. Food and coffee in Prague flourished last year, and we could honestly write a separate version of our Prague Foodie Map just covering the openings of 2019, and it would still be a decent guide. Let’s keep that going in 2020. 

What follows is a list and a small description of the new openings on the Prague food scene in 2019, followed by a handy map and a “cheat sheet” - a downloadable and printable checklist of the 2019 openings to brag to your friends how many you’ve covered so far.


Taste of Prague Podcast, Ep 6 - Lindsey Tramuta and Wendy Lyn, Paris

Taste of Prague Podcast, Ep 6 - Lindsey Tramuta and Wendy Lyn, Paris

oday’s podcast episode is a bit special because it’s the first time we have taken the podcast on the road, namely to Paris, the City of Lights. You know, we have been visiting Paris quite frequently over the years, and while the first, pre-Taste of Prague visit was absolutely delicious dreadful, we’ve learnt to navigate Paris our own way, avoiding the tourist traps and enjoying what Paris does best - food and wine, obviously.

Now, we have posted our tips for Paris previously quite some time ago, but we thought it would be fun to talk to some insiders who have lived in Paris for quite some time and whom we have been following to get some inside scoops about what’s what in the French capital. And it this podcast, we have spoken to two absolutely fantastic ladies who are just that.


Taste of Prague Czech Podcast, Ep 2 - Filip Šimoník o marketingu restaurací

Taste of Prague Czech Podcast, Ep 2 - Filip Šimoník o marketingu restaurací

Vítejte u druhého dílu našeho podcastu v češtině. Tentokrát byl naším hostem Filip Šimoník, marketingový stratég, který byl do letošního roku šéfem marketingu skupiny Ambiente.

Měl jsem vždy pocit, že marketing restaurací má u nás velmi špatné jméno - je to něco, co jenom zakrývá nebo záplatuje nedokonalosti v provozech, co je zbytečné a navyšuje to cenu jídla, kterou pak platí ošizený host. Zároveň by marketing měl být zbytečný - dobré zboží se prodává samo, nebo snad ne?

Ne. Neprodává. Zeptejte se v Miladě. Nebo v Simply Good.

Zároveň jsem si nedávno u jisté příležitosti, kterou na začátku podcastu popisuji, uvědomil, že o marketingu restaurací toho nevím zhola nic. Proto jsem se obrátil na někoho, kdo v jistém smyslu zastával v tomto konkrétním oboru tu nejvyšší pozici u nás: na Filipa Šimoníka, donedávna šéfa marketingu skupiny Ambiente.

Filip se stal šéfem marketingu Ambiente ve věku 23 let, best zkušeností z gastronomie, doslova ze dne na den. Filipa jsem často v jednotlivých podnicích potkával - vždy jakoby dolevitoval ke stolu, často - ne-li většinou - sám, a pak jen tiše pozoroval provoz nad kávou. Byl usměvavý a milý, zároveň zadumaný a soustředěný. A přesně takový byl i při nahrávání tohoto dílu - přišel perfektně připraven, dobře naladěn a zároveň ochoten okamžitě mluvit k věci. Natáčeli jsme v kavárně Spell Coffee v Jindřišské. Mysleli jsme si totiž, že tam bude klid. Nebyl, ale snad ty občasné ruchy odpustíte.

Bavili jsme se o tom, co marketing restaurací všechno obnáší, jaký vypadal jeho první den v Ambiente a jaký team zanechal odkaz, co mohla Milada udělat líp, jak funguje marketing v rámci skupiny a jak na marketingovou činnost reagují jednotlivé provozy, jak marketing Ambi reagoval na změny a problémy v Grils a v Myšákovi, proč si Ambi v podstatě neplatí reklamu a jaký potenciál mají tradiční značky. Na konci rozhovoru se také dozvíte, co jí Filip ze všeho nejradši a s čím si dává řízek.


Taste of Prague Podcast, Ep 5 - Concierge Petr Zezula

Taste of Prague Podcast, Ep 5 - Concierge Petr Zezula

Hey there! It’s another Thursday, which means another episode of the Taste of Prague podcast, a podcast by Taste of Prague food tours about travel and food in Prague and the rest of the world. This episode is again more about tourism than food, but we are super excited. We don’t think high-ranking hotel concierges often get to - or want to - talk, so that’s why we are stoked to have been able to record an episode with Mr Petr Zezula, former managing concierge of Prague’s Four Seasons hotel.

When we started Taste of Prague food tours back in 2011, we had absolutely no prior experience with tourism. How it worked, how did the product get to the customer, who do you promote to, how to work with the individual stakeholders, who were the gatekeepers and the movers. But soon enough, having made friends in the industry and meeting and sharing experience with like-minded people who ran tours, too, one name started popping up quite a lot. The ultimate player in the industry. The guy sitting at the very top. The one and only. Capo di tutti capi. Petr Zezula, the managing concierge at the best hotel in town, the Prague Four Seasons, and the President of the Czech Chapter of Les Clefs d’Or organization.

But meeting Petr eye to eye, capo di tutti capi would probably be the last thing on your mind. He is friendly yet dignified, projects a sense of calm and is soft-spoken, and he’s a great listener with a keen and authentic interest in what you have to say. One would even say introverted. But just a few words into the conversation, and you’ll realize Petr is an incredible wealth of knowledge, the person who always knows what to, what the protocol is, and whom to call. And he has this sense of self-confidence that one assumes can only come from years of experience, while being open to new ideas he has not been confronted with.

And perhaps because he resigned from the position and left the Four Seasons a year ago for deeply personal reasons, we had the unique opportunity to talk to him and ask him about the role of the concierge, his own career, and what he misses and does not miss from his old job. We think this episode is a rare insight into the world of a high-ranking concierge and their world that, at times, seems to be rooted in the old, better days of a 1960s Bond movie. (Without the sexism, obviously.)

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