Growing up in Sao Paulo was packaged with loads of fun. As a teenager an extensive amount of time was spent running up and down the streets and town alleys. Both my older twin brothers operated a drinks joint that was set up adjacent to a number of some most prominent night clubs. We’d consume endless hours cleaning up the counter and tables in the morning after a busy night. Come to think of it, actually that sort of became my first job that I worked at. As soon as I completed my responsibilities I would bid my goodbyes and speed off with my best friend, Charlie, to buy tickets for a football match. A sense of urgency was indeed a factor since you needed to go early for bigger match-ups. …show more content…
It’s become home to a large, lower middle-class, even though vast numbers of economic deprived still take to the favelas outskirts. The city is not chock-a-block exhibiting striking must-sees with, myriad museums and ever-changing art exhibitions. Lovely parklands are also interspersed between countless shops, malls and skyscrapers.
There are more pizzerias in the town than any Italian city, with diverse national cuisines and loads of restaurants, Sao Paulo is never short of culinary choices. The staple food may be rice, beans and pork. A number of immigrant recipes have also added world-class Japanese restaurants, Italian dishes and Middle Eastern eateries to the gastronomic spread. There are great options for snack food, juice bars and other light