Wednesday, September 11, 2013

CNNGo.com

CNNGo.com


CNNGo in Cambodia

Posted: 10 Sep 2013 03:00 PM PDT

We love Angkor Wat, too. But it's just the start of things to see and do in Cambodia
Cambodia travel

No matter what you want to achieve in Cambodia -- a spirit journey to the land of temples in Siem Reap, mastering the art of bargaining at Phnom Penh's Central Market -- this month's CNNGo has it covered.

In this episode, we travel from the country's capital of Phnom Penh to Siem Reap to find the best noodle stands in local markets, dress like a local rocker, visit a floating village and meet the locals.

Here are five places we visited:

Wat Phnom

Wat PhnomPhnom Penh tranquility.​Located atop a hill in Phnom Penh, Wat Phnom is one of the city's major religious spots.

Built in 1373, this Buddhist temple is the tallest religious site in the city.

Visitors come not only to pray, but to buy small birds to release for good luck.

Wat Phnom, Norodom Boulevard, Phnom Penh; open daily 6 a.m.-6 p.m.; $1 for entrance

More on CNN: Mike's Burger House: Phnom Penh's In-N-Out-inspired fast food joint


Central Market

Central MarketThrifty buys.​Marked by a golden French colonial-style dome, the Central Market is a tourist-friendly place to shop, though locals still shop here, as well.

A big draw for locals is high quality, secondhand clothes and shoes. It's like a large, practical thrift shop.

There's plenty of local food, from barbecued squid to the Cambodian version of the pancake.

The market is covered, so it's not a bad stop if you find yourself in Phnom Penh on a rainy day.

Central Market, Neayok Souk, Phnom Penh; open daily 5 a.m.-5 p.m.


Royal Palace

Royal PalaceThe Big Guy still lives here. ​The prettiest place in Phnom Penh, the Royal Palace is still the official residence of the King of Cambodia.

Visitors can wander the grounds to see multiple pagodas and other stunning buildings.

It's just across the street from the Sisowath Quay Waterfront.

Royal Palace, Samdech Sothearos Boulevard, Phnom Penh; open daily 7:30-11 a.m. and 2-5 p.m.; $3 entrance fee plus $2 for each camera and $5 for video camera.

More on CNN: Under the big top at Cambodia's edgy Phare Circus


Mechrey Floating Village

Mechrey Floating VillageA personal village experience.

Located on a flood plain, Siem Reap has numerous floating villages to visit.

A lesser known village is Mechrey. You can rent a boat for about $60 and have a personalized tour.

Mechrey isn't a Disneyfied version of a floating village, it's an authentic example of how people live and work on Tonle Sap Lake.

Mechrey Natural Tourism, Peam Ta Our Village, Keo Por Commune, Puok District, Siem Reap

More on CNN: 10 meals every visitor to Cambodia should try


Angkor Archaeological Park

Bayon, Angkor WatStone wonder.​This complex not only includes Angkor Wat, but many smaller, memorable temples, such as Bayon and Ta Prohn.

You can get around by hiring a tour guide, renting a tuk tuk or biking around this 400-square-kilometer wonder.

Angkor Archaeological Park, Siem Reap; open daily 5 a.m.-5 p.m.; an Angkor Pass can be purchased at the entrance from $20 (one-day pass) to $60 (seven-day pass).

Mike's Burger House: Phnom Penh's In-N-Out-inspired fast food joint

Posted: 10 Sep 2013 06:40 AM PDT

From Khmer Rouge misery to Los Angeles and back, a Cambodian man is finding salvation in big, juicy burgers
Mike's Burger House

After one too many helpings of the local street food,  even the most seasoned traveler sometimes craves a taste of something familiar.

For Westerners, when that moment strikes in Phnom Penh, Mike's Burger House is the joint to hit.

It's a modest establishment, attached to a gas station -- a prime location to lure the motorbike-riding lunch crowd.

​Products from the United States line the walls: Vanilla Coke, Cheerios, even Pepto-Bismol.

More on CNN: CNNGo in Cambodia

Mike's Burger House motto: Two bites, don't like, don't pay.

Finding a bottle of Hidden Valley ranch dressing for sale in the middle of Cambodia is nothing short of random, but for owner Mike Chenda Im, it all reminds him of the country where he embarked on his second life.

A year after the 1979 fall of the Khmer Rouge, a brutal regime that killed an estimated two million people during its reign in Cambodia, Chenda Im decided to leave.  

"The country has nothing left," he told himself.  

On September 4, 1980, he touched down at Los Angeles International Airport with several family members.

"Oh my God, we're in heaven," he says he thought upon arriving in his new home.  

For more than 20 years, Chenda Im built his version of the American dream.

He got a job at a post office, bought a house and eventually started a business.

But after a failed first marriage, he realized he was missing a piece of the puzzle to make his life whole -- a family.

More than 30 years after leaving Cambodia, Chenda Im is now back and running a restaurant, this one inspired by his new wife, Borey, who missed the taste of L.A.'s famed In-N-Out burgers. 

Chenda Im decided the only way to satisfy her cravings would be to open a restaurant where she could enjoy burgers every day.

In 2009, Mike's Burger House was born.  

More on CNN: Under the big top at Cambodia's edgy Phare Circus

"We were ready to die" 

Mike's Burger House"The country has moved forward like everybody else," says Chenda Im of life in Cambodia. ​Chenda Im sees food as a way to connect with people, sharing something that at one time was denied to him and his country.

The Khmer Rouge forced the people of Cambodia out of cities and into the countryside to work.

At the age of 14, Chenda Im says he worked all kinds of jobs -- building dams, harvesting rice and working construction, all in pitiful living conditions.

He slept on floors, battled severe illness and came so close to starvation that his body looked like a chair.

Chenda Im lived in this way for four years, aware that others -- including his brothers and sister -- were being taken away and killed. He lost hope that anyone would ever help his country.

"We were ready to die," he says.

Today he says he has no regrets about coming back: "The country has moved forward like everybody else."

It's that attitude that he says keeps everyone smiling.

"That's a natural Cambodian. We're born that way."

More on CNN: 10 meals every visitor to Cambodia should try

Mike's Burger House315 Sokimex Station​, Russian Blvd., Phnom Penh; +855 (0)1 263 3971