Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Local Flavours, Part Two

Part two of my exploration of culture and taste preferences based on potato chip flavours. 

Spain: Country Style (tomato and garlic), the starting point for Spanish cooking.
Spain: Ham, the essential ingredient in most Spanish meals
Spain:Olive Oil.  Remember this from Greece? Now we can read the label
Spain: Ham again, it's not a meal in Spain unless you have at least two kinds of ham!
Morocco: Hot and hotter, odd because the food is not all that spicy.
Egypt: Cheese and garlic 
Egypt: Lime and hot pepper
Egypt: your guess is as good as mine (is the bag upside down?)
Sri Lanka: Not actually potato chips, but REALLY good!
Potato chips are not called "chips" in Sri Lanka, they are snacks or crackers.
You can get chicken flavour, though!
Sri Lanka: I think it's BBQ pork rind flavour but I'm not sure.
It might actually be pork rinds.
Sri Lanka: Pizza, and it looks like they copied the Pizza Hut colours.
India: Masala Magic
India: American Style
India: The girl in the illustration does not look too happy about the mango flavour.
India: Mad Angles?


India: Chatpata Masala. I wish he was my Uncle Chippy.
Snacks for sale at roadside 
India: What is a funky masala? 
Germany - chips labelled in French and English!

Did I forget about Italy, you ask? Was I enjoying the food so much I forgot about my little obsession? Well, the fact is that aren't many potato chips for sale in Italian grocery stores. They are sold in plain white bags and are labeled "Potato Chips". No interesting flavours. Do you think Italians too seriously?


Local Flavours

These chips came from Russia, but they look more like Germans to me!
Maybe it's an exotic imported flavour.
Beer & Sausage? 

I believe that we can learn a lot about people by paying attention to what they eat. (Is this an excuse for me to snoop in other folks grocery carts?) I made a little hobby of taking pictures of potato chips while we were travelling. Favorite flavours do reflect the food preferences and culture of the locals. Here are some samples:

Beijing: Martial Arts chips in a can (also other ingredients of an afternoon snack for John)
Russia: caviar (NO kidding!)
Russia: Wild Mushroom 
Turkey: hot pepper, strange label
Budapest - Yogurt 
Greece: olives (saw this one in Spain too!)
Greece: ???, Pesto and ??? I wonder why some labels have English and some don't?
Greece - oregano
This is just part one, stay posted for more flavourful adventures. 






Friday, August 6, 2010

On the way home

July 11, 2010. Final game of the FIFA world cup, Spain vs. Holland.
We are cheering for Spain.

Did we watch the game?
NO! We were in transit between Berlin and Vancouver.

There is no World Cup coverage in Dusseldorf Airport.
It is hot, and the floor is really shiney.


There are no seat back entertainment units on Air Belin
No world cup coverage
... but John is still smiling.



We could not watch the game so we watched the clock. "The game is starting now....the game is ending now..." We could not have been the only ones because soon after ending time a flight attendent announced that the crew DID NOT have the final score and they would tell us as soon as they knew. As we approached Vancouver airport we heard an announcement in German and a bunch of people cheered. What? What? It is SPAIN!!!! and it is touchdown in Vancouver. "Please remain in your seats until the aircraft has reached a full and complete stop at the terminal gate and the captain has turned off the seatbelt sign...."



Are we smiling because we are home, or because Spain won the World Cup?



You decide.

Berlin -- Our History

Berlin .... a city full of public art and modern architecture.

Berlin...the only school crossing sign I have every seen
where the girl is helping the boy across the street!
Berlin....not just history.
Sunbathing on the Spree River.
While we were staying in Rome we met an American fellow who taught teaches philosophy (or was is psychology?) at a Univeristy in New York. We shared the wireless access point in the lobby. He was teaching an on-line course, so he had to stay in touch with his students and we were booking our accomodation and transportation for the last three weeks of our trip. One of our conversations was about our plans to visit Berlin because it's our history. Events that shaped, are shaping, Europe now, happened in our lifetime, in Berlin. I think we almost convinced him to change is travel plans and go there too. Berlin did not let us down, not at all. It's a fascinating city.

We rented an apartment in an area called Charlottenburg. The neighbourhood reminded us of Kitsalano in Vancouver: tree lined streets, restaurants, interesting little shops, small apartment buildings. It is in the area that was West Berlin was the only part of city that was not intersected by the Berlin wall. The apartment had all the things we needed, plus free internet access (no excuses for not getting the blog out) and a huge soaker tub in the bathroom.
I could live here!

Bike riding suits all of us as a manner of transport, so our first event was "Fat Tire" bike tours. Highly reccomended as an orientation to the city and its recent history. The city itself is a living museum because there are memorials commemorating events of the 1930s to the fall of the wall all over the place. A person can experience a lot just walking around and visiting these sites.

John and the group, listening to our tour guide. The TV tower in the background is the focal point of Alexanderplatz and was the pride of East Germany.

Berlin...divided city.

The route of the wall that separated east and west Berlin is marked by a double line of bricks that runs through the city. This is one of the only places where a part of the wall is still standing. The fence on the right side of the wall is to keep people from chipping pieces off for souveniers.

We visited three excellent museums: The Story of Berlin, The German History Museum and the Science and Technology Museum. "The Story of Berlin" is a multi-media museum with displays that trace the development of the city from the swamp to the present day. Three displays stood out for me. The transition years between WW1 and the rule of the National Socialist Party are recorded in the stairwell going down to the lower level. The first wall is covered with photos of the leading people in politics, business and the arts of the time. At each level there are the same set of photos, but fewer and fewer of the faces are there. Instead the photos are blank and printed with labels: suicide...missing...emigrated...arrested... It's a very effective way of illustrating the methods the government used to take control of all aspects of society. The stairway ends in a hallway that is lined with piles of books, and under the glass floor are more books illustrating the books that were burned by the Nazis. Anne of Green Gables! Following the WW2 section there is a display illustrating the conditions of life for the people of Berlin, and a duel display of side-by-side living rooms showing the differences between life in the east and west sides of the city. There is a full size model of a section of the wall, and visitors can peek through spaces in the wall to see films of people at the time peeking through sections of the wall as it was being built.

I was really impressed with the way that the German History museum is laid out. Instead ofhaving artifacts organized by category, the whole works is organized chronologically. Each display includes paintings, furniture, clothing, candlesticks and so on that relate to the theme. It gave me a good idea of what life was like, and if I wanted to know more I could log onto the computer displays or hit the next button on my audio guide. If you happen to go there, and if you are a museum type person, think of it as a two day museum. Do the upstairs on day one (beginning of time to end of WW1) and the downstairs on the second day (1914 to present day).

The third museum was the Science and Technology museum and I have to confess anything I could say is only hearsay because I didn't go! Nelson and John thought it was great. I figured shopping on the Kurfustendamm was more fun. We all enjoyed our day in our own way, I got souveniers and a good look at street life in the city, they got to play with airplanes, trains and hands-on science experiments. They never did find the real-working brewery, so maybe that's a two day museum as well.

Berlin...not just a city of history, but a place for the future.

This is the view from inside the dome of the Reichstag.

Camping in Italy

We finished the last Canada crossword!
Now how will we entertain ourselves while we enjoy our afternoon "tea"?
Woops....has it really been a month since I updated the blog? Blame camping in Italy, if you every want to relax and excape from all your worries and stress, try it!

We left Rome on June 20th and spent the next two weeks at campsites in nothern Italy. We stayed in Eurocamp facilities, which means we had a choice of fully furnished tents (true!) or small "caravans" as they call them, which we would call RV's, but they aren't really mobile. The caravans have two bedrooms, a kitchen, a toilet and shower room, a front porch and, (in Piantele) a view of Lake Garda. The camp grounds have pools, activity programs, sailing, gelato, and we got to watch most of the FIFA world cup soccer action in the on-site pubsw. Truly, these places are like self-contained little cities, and there are more campers on site than there are permanent residents in the town of Creston! The only problem was that we did not improve our Italian much because most of the other campers were German, Swiss or Netherlanders.

Our entertainment was not along the lines of the usual museum-church-historical site visits, but it was a cultural experience non-the-less. We visited water parks and adventure parks, tried archery, rode bikes, swam, finished crossword puzzles and played board games, even attended a Medievel Theme night dinner that included knights in shining armour competing for the hand of a beautiful princess and all the "meade" we could drink.

Canada Day! I carried that flag all the way just for today!

John relaxes after beating me about 57 times in a row at the game "Connect Four". Observe the luxury living they call "camping" ---- fully equiped kitchen, comfy couch and all.

Friday, June 25, 2010

For Harry Potter Fans

Do you recognize this evil character?



We really enjoy the food in Italy, as John says, you have to try hard to get a bad meal. The trouble with Rome is that it’s so expensive we are limited to the breakfast, which is included in the price of the hotel room and one other meal. Is this a diet plan? There were no extraordinary meals in fancy restaurants for us on this trip. We sampled a lot of pizza by the slice and grocery store salads. Our hotel was close to Termini train station and the church of Santa Maria Maggiore, in the heart of the tourist zone, so many of the eating places in the neighborhood cater to budget travelers like us. Every restaurant posts a menu outside the door and most of them list a fixed price tourist meal that includes an appetizer, a pasta and a drink in the 10 to 15 euro range. Some of the more enterprising restaurants also have tables on the sidewalk and post a waiter outside the door to lure tourists in. During the evening passegiatta (pre-dinner walk about that happens in every Italian town) Nelson and I stopped for a glass of wine (me) and a beer (Nelson) at one of these places and it was a lot of fun to watch the street waiter interact with the travelers and the local folks. He kissed and tickled every baby, chatted in Italian, English, Spanish or German to every passing tourist, and was quite troubled that I had two glasses of wine but nothing to eat (you MUST eat with your wine, Madam, or you will be drunk!). Some of the restaurants use really creative signs, as well as friendly waiters, to draw in the crowds, the "scary hot-dog guy" above is one that caught my eye.