Separator

Separator

Thursday, 14 June 2012

Customs and fast food


Just when we thought that rent-a-car companies would never do us a favour, except to make our wallets lighter, we find ourselves blessed with a beam of anglo-hispanic cortesy.
Not only were we given the possibility of leaving our rental in a different country, but we also managed to cross the border on foot, deliver the car keys at the airport counter and board the plane to the City. Particularly interesting to see this in a piece of land where apes are in higher numbers than human inhabitants!
Essential element in the puzzle was the muffin we had to buy to be able to leave the car at the parking lot of a globally known fast-food joint. And that ended up in the bin of the no man's zone between the two countries.
Thank God for cheap food, and online check-in!

Do you want a brew?

Tuesday, 6 March 2012

Chang and Brahma


In many ways Thailand is like Brazil. If you want to get from A to B, you can be sure to arrive there, but just forget about the means and the sequence - there's no possible trace of logic to help you there.
Our ferry ticket says 12h but we actually leave after 2pm, because we need to wait for them to pass lugagge and people from one boat to the other in open water. And then if the sea gets rough, just duck and pray... and be aware of any chairs flying across the upper deck.

Then the airport transfers. Most of them stop for months during the rainy season but the proud drivers still think a new blasting sound system and flashy moving disco-like lights are a pretty good investment to entertain tourists or, more likely themselves. There's no communication possible - most of them say "yes" and nod to pretty much anything you ask. And we worried for a second thinking where the hell would they put all the luggage when the van was already full of people - just until the driver climbed to the top and started laying down suitcases and rucksacks, tied up with one and only thin rope - we didn't loose any of them though.

We left Ko Lanta with some other tourists - our destination was Krabi airport. We started in a pick-up truck. Then when one of us was already riding on the back (cause there were no other seats left) we changed to a van. On pep talk basis we asked the girl in front of us where she was going and she replied "Bangkok". And we said: "Oh! You're also going to Krabi airport then!?", to which she replied: "No!". We stopped the conversation there for the sake of our souls. In the end we were the only people to get out at Krabi airport - the others continued to God-knows-where. Our flight to Bangkok took more than one hour. We don't know how long it took her, but we believe she saw the light of the next day in the capital.

Ko Lanta, Thailand

Tuesday, 14 February 2012

Late lunch on my way to Munich

Today, for the first time I had a business trip cancelled while in route.
Due to the heavy snowfall in Bucharest, the flight MUC-OTP was cancelled and I decided to fly back home instead of waiting for the next morning.

Total travel time: ~4h (LH2287 at 12:50 and LH2290 at 15:20)
How to go: Lufthansa assures 8 daily flights to Munich from Brussels and return
When to go: during heavy snowfall in Bucharest
Average ground temperature in February: -5ºC
Menu (in both flights): Styrian Pumpkin Salad with Tuna Strip;
Goat's Milk Cream Cheese Tartar on Parsley Pesto;
Bean Salad made of Five Different Beans aromatized with Cumin, Savory, Dried Dice Tomatoes and Red Chilli,
and Balsamic and Pear Jelly Cubes.

Friday, 16 December 2011

Macau and Pastéis de Nata

Our 3-day visit to Macau ended up in a gastronomic experience. We could already sense it upon arrival, with the ‘boa noite’ (good evening) that the passport control lady gave us, that we were in for a treat.

Forgetting the fact that Macanese drive on the wrong side of the road and have squinty eyes, one could easily imagine himself in a Portuguese downtown, well packed with small rococo churches and colorful façades.

We had read that many restaurants were famous for their Portuguese menus so we decided for ‘Caravela’ (Pátio do Comandante Mata e Oliveira), honoring the boat that took Portuguese adventurers to discover new worlds. We could as easily be in a small ‘tasca’ in Lisbon. The atmosphere was the same… small tables too close to each other to let people pass; RTP channel screaming news from Portugal out of the TV set; loud customers talking about how much better they would run the country…

We ordered in Portuguese – even though the waitress didn't speak it (but recognised somehow the sounds) – carrot soap and seafood rice but not any food rice – sauce was flooding the plate and it had swimming crabs, oh nostalgia!!! When we were about to pay an old man with a cane walked in and said “I want a galão, please!” – ‘galão’ is a drink of espresso and foam milk. Rustically delicious, but don’t expect to drink a gallon of coffee, we are serious people mind you.

By counting the incredible number of windows with custard tarts (‘pastéis de nata’) we decided on a benchmarking, giving the winning prize to a local joint not far from ‘Caravela’. They make them crustier…

We ended our day splendidly by going to ‘A Lorcha’ – more Portuguese delicacies, including ‘pastéis de bacalhau’ (cod fritters) and açorda (bread porridge). A chinese fellow sitting next to us thought that we were Brits at first. We explained “we are Portuguese”, to which he promptly replied “ah! you know that Portuguese were here in Macau for many years?”. Talk about short memory loss! We just left the place in 99. He even added “Oh! You should have gone to Shanghai instead”. Big red and blasting WRONG!

Macau, Casino Lisboa


Thursday, 8 December 2011

Lonely Planet and fishing quotas


Hong Kong will be always present in our memories as the place where we’ve eaten the best shushi of our lives. We were in Hong Kong Island and it was late. 2pm is not time anymore for lunch for an average ‘Hong Konger’, mind you. The place was gloomy, in one of these narrow streets behind striking grey skyscrapers, smelly, rubbishy. It was nevertheless referenced in Lonely Planet and we treat our literature as serious stuff. The kitchen was about to close, we had to rush ordering. Service was unremarkable, no frills decoration, decaying restrooms. But a second after tasting that fresh, soft and salty tuna all the surroundings faded away and we imagined ourselves swimming freely in the Pacific waters, in a time where Bluefin is not synonym for fishing quotas.

Hong Kong

Saturday, 26 November 2011

"Why Seattle?"

Mrs. Noz2 has already revealed that we got married in Sao Tome and Principe, the smallest country in Africa (not counting with the Seychelles). Ever since, we decided to celebrate each marriage anniversary in a different continent. Ok, I admit, this was a whim, that the majority of our friends could not even think about... and not the most suitable wish for a compromise that we had accepted for the whole life, as there are only six continents… Nevertheless, until today we managed to fulfill such desire... sort of: North America (East Coast), Southeast Asia, North America (Pacific Coast). Though, this year we decided to stay in Europe. Normally, next year we will go to South America.

Coming back to the title of this post, last year we started our annual big trip in Vancouver, BC and went down to LA, Ca, passing by Lake Tahoe, spending our anniversary in the former and the New Year's Eve in Seattle. Obviously, we have a couple of good stories from our time among the Canucks compatriots, but the point now is to talk about the capital of the grunge.

We all keep memories and live our life relying on them. I, for instance, will never forget the taste of my grandmother's omelet or the smell of the french washing powder that my aunt would bring every summer or even that poem that I recited for X-mas when I was 8 years old, not to mention the precise moment when I fell deeply in love in December '06. Having said that, going to Seattle was all about memories: we both grew up with Pearl Jam, smoked weed listening Nirvana (Mums: that's not true, just wanted to make a point...), went to parties where Alice in Chains played (well, not really…) and followed the several rehabs of Scott Weiland.

Moreover, there was this radio presentator/shrink that influenced us in a way never seen before, and we have followed all episodes of Seinfeld, Lost, That 70's, HIMYM, The Office, The Simpsons, South Park...

Were these, reasons enough to go to Seattle? The locals don't seem to think so, as we were asked more times than the Pearl Jam"s debut album title: "Why Seattle?" I started to count:






6. Jimi Hendrix





Again, the number 10...

It was the summer of 93 and I was 15. Didn’t have much to do while on school holidays and the afternoons were spent with older friends either at a bar watching MTV or at the place of one of them, drinking whisky "borrowed" from my dad's collection. How many times did we hear “Jeremy”, “Alive”, “Black” or “Even Flow”? More than ten, for sure. That summer the video for "Jeremy"was put into heavy rotation by MTV and won the Video of the Year and Best Group Video at the 1993 MTV Video Music Awards.

Why Seattle?” Because that was the best summer of my life!


Friday, 25 November 2011

Coffee and Schengen


One would think that the probability of speaking German with locals on a Malaysian island is undoubtedly low. Well, maybe not when the owner of the hotel you're staying in is an Indonesian married to a Swiss germanophone. And things got linguistically messier when we discovered we could speak French to her son, who had studied in France for a while. And this in a place where female staff go around with theirs heads covered. We also learned that the hotel's furniture came by boat from Indonesia. And we go on about Schengen…! We had our heads in a twist but a few things remained in our memory: how to say cockroach in Bahasa: 'lipas'; and that Indonesians repeat a word twice to form the plural, so coffees become 'kopi kopi' – now that's simply clever!

Malaysia, Truly Asia