Copenhagen, Denmark

The Most Livable City.

Copenhagen is highly rated as one of the best places to live and work. We understood why only a couple days in. The city really treated us well. People were friendly and it felt very free. Most people showed us a lot of "hygge" which means coziness in Danish. The food, the architecture, the water and the vibe were on point. Not a bad place to ring in the new year.

Accomodations

We decided to stay at Generator Hostel in the City Centre and it was really great. Centrally located, it was a nice, modern space, friendly staff and a very cool, design-centric interior. Very laid back atmosphere (even had a hammock room) in the chill out area.

Seeing the Sights

We visited Nyhavn, Kongens Have, Rosenborg Castle, Church of our Savior, Tivoli, Papirøen or Paper Island (Copenhagen Street Food) which was closed unfortunately. Torvehallerne (KBH Market) and The famous Christiania.  

Food

We had a blast eating and drinking our way through this city. From the street food, bars, cafes to amazing pastries and extremely fine dining. I noticed the attention to detail, quality and pride taken in what you do, is way above par! Make sure to check out some of my highlights in the food section. 

Places visited:  Torvehallerne, Fresh Market, Tapas Del Toro, Hviids Vinstue, Lagkagehuset, Grød, Laura's Bakery, Duck It, Höst, Den Blå Time, The Coffee Collective, Mikkeller, Ørsted Ølbar, Warpigs Brewpub.

My verdicts:
Best Breakfast: Grød
Best Bakery: Laura's Bakery
Best Bar: Mikkeller
Best Coffee: Coffee Collective
Best Restaurant: Höst

Final Thoughts

I really enjoyed this city and everything it had to offer. It really had its own style and I understand why this place is constantly towards the top of the list when it comes to prosperous and livable cities.