Saturday, November 30, 2013

Barcelona Day 2 - The Food Market

We love a good food market so when we found La Boqueria off The Rambla on day one we decided to go back on day two for lunch at one of the busy counters.  First, let's wander around the different offerings….nuts. veg, candy, mushrooms, fruit, fish (so fresh the hook is still in its mouth) and meat.

 What kid wants to eat a candy fried egg?  Those eyeballs, on the other hand, were quite tempting...
 I wish I could have bought some of these but I wasn't sure I could bring fungus back to the UK.  They look so delicious and earthy.




For lunch we wandered around until we found two seats together at a counter.  The list of tapas was long so we just told the guy to bring us whatever he recommended for lunch. Grilled seafood platter for two coming right up!


 For afters I wanted to get a crepe from a guy we watched the day before.  I chose white chocolate with strawberries.

 It was as good as it looked.  

Friday, November 29, 2013

Barcelona Day 1 - - Park Guell

We started the day in Gaudi's Park Guell.  Everything is rounded, colorful, playful.  I loved all the tile and couldn't get enough of it.  Being here makes me want to go home and cover every room with tile. It was a beautiful day - 50's and sunny - and it's nice to still have light all afternoon again.  









I couldn't find turkey on a menu here so I went for the next best thing that said "America" for Thanksgiving - a mini tapas hamburger and hot dog.
Not a bad way to spend Thanksgiving!  We even got a jump on Black Friday - without the deals, of course….or the insanity. 

Thursday, November 28, 2013

Happy Thanksgiving from Barcelona!

Bill and I flew into Barcelona for the long weekend.  This is Bill's birthday present…not the actual trip - just my AGREEING to the actual trip. Here is a tip - if you are bitchy all year and contrary to everything your partner wants, agreeing to something becomes a treat!!    
 Bill has been wanting to go to Barcelona but since I've already been (on my fabulous Lisa vacation in the 90's)  I was dragging my feet.    So for his birthday I booked us a trip over Thanksgiving.  These are pictures at our boutique hotel in the city center.  I'm outside on our private terrace - nothing but the best for my man's birthday!
 Our room - #8.  Check out that tiled floor!
 Our dinner spot - only a few doors down from the hotel.  Very cute, great food, not too touristy.  (I equate sitting next to boxes of glassware inventory as "not too touristy", right?)

 It's going to be a weekend of tapas.  This course was the grilled prawns - heads and all.  Bill asked for tips on how to eat them but the waiter basically told us to pick them up in our hands and start gnawing.
 Carnage.
 Back to the hotel - this is me leaving Bill to smoke outside.  Happy Birthday to Bill and Happy Thanksgiving to our readers!!

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Pigs are flying

If I compare Jen when we first got together to this new sporty Jen ..... why it's chalk and cheese.
This FitBit obsession has turned things ass over tit.  Watching Jen in the running store was as confounding as if Mother Entwistle became a nun.  (no offence, Mother Entwistle)






As different as chalk and cheese

Meaning

Two things that are very different from each other.

Origin

We have hundreds of phrases to indicate the similarity of one thing with another and similes like 'as alike as two peas in a pod' are commonplace in everyday speech. There are far fewer expressions that explicitly refer to the difference between things; 'as different as chalk and cheese' is the most commonly used. This is an old expression and the earliest citation is in John Gower's Middle English text Confessio Amantis, 1390:
Lo, how they feignen chalk for chese.
Tourist boards in several of the chalkland areas of the UK try to place the phrase's origin in their locality and allude to vague connections between chalk and the local cheese. None of these is convincing and they clearly owe more to marketing than to etymology. So, how did the phrase come about?
There must have been a time in the development of English when we had no standard phrase to express the idea that two things were 'as different as X and Y'. When someone coined such a phrase, and that someone may well have been Gower in 1390, clearly he needed candidates for the roles of X and Y. That doesn't sound difficult, after all most things are different from most other things.
"Maybe, 'as different as a cormorant and a lamp-post'", thinks our coiner, "or 'as different as floorboards and greengrocers'". "No, 'as different as chalk and cheese' sounds better". Why? For no better reason that the fact the 'chalk' and 'cheese' are short and snappy words that alliterate. The English language is packed full of phrases that contain pairs of rhyming or alliterating words - often just because the person who coined them liked the sound of them; for example, hocus-pocusthe bee's kneesriff-raff etc.
Chalk and talkA modern-day spin-off of 'chalk and cheese' is 'chalk and talk'. This refers to the traditional teaching method where the teacher stood at the front to address the class while writing on the blackboard with a stick of chalk (which those of a certain age will well remember). The phrase emerged in the UK in the 1930s but had a shortish run as a widely used expression as classrooms began to be equipped with whiteboards in the 1960s. 'Dry-wipe marker pen and talk' never caught on.

Ass over teakettle is one of many variants of an expression meaning 'head over heels; topsy-turvy; in confusion'. The usual British version is ass over tip(or tit), which occurs in James Joyce's Ulysses, among other works. This form also occurs in America. For instance, in The Grapes of Wrath Steinbeck has a character say "You jus' scrabblin' ass over tit, fear somebody gonna pin some blame on you."
The earliest known example of the phrase is in an 1899 book about Virginia folk exressions, which defines "ass over head" as "Head over heels; topsy-turvy." (Note that "ass over head" is a logical expression for a messed-up situation, as opposed to "head over heels," which would seem to be the natural order of things.) However, there must have been many different variants even at that time: a 1943 book about Indiana dialect in the 1890s lists "ass over appetite," "ass over applecart," and "ass over endways." The common "teakettle" variation is first found in a 1946 book about fighter pilots in WWII, in a euphemized form: "He displayed a rump-over-tea-kettle aggressiveness in seeking dog-fights."

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Nǐhǎo (hello in Mandarin)

Here are some pictures from the other side of the world.  Sam sends me photos all the time.  We mostly exchange photos of ourselves to show what outfits we are wearing.  It didn't seem weird until I just typed this.
Here are a few of them.

Sam has taken to the bow tie.  His little kitten has too.

In Newburyport we apple pick.  In Shanghai they orange pick.
 Su Su has these Despicable Me guys.  I don't know why they are still in their packaging.  She must be the Chinese Felix Unger.
 Su Su's boyfriend.  Despite the face I don't think this is an angry sign.  It's not the Brits backward victory salute.
 Sam's girlfriend made him dinner.  Chinese dinner looks so much prettier than British dinner.
 Wall Street Sam.
 Sam's sister and his kittens.
 Sam and his girlfriend.  I think they were celebrating the fact that she is now able to cross the street on her own.  (Get it?  She looks really young ..... )
 Chinese Mob Guy Sam
 Sam.  King of the Selfie.

Monday, November 25, 2013

This is what happens when you don't have Thanksgiving….

We started Saturday in downtown Windsor having breakfast with Louise.  Even after living here for a year and half we still love the daily changing of the guards.

Then we headed into London.  I read that there was a Christmas market in Hyde Park.   We covered a LOT of ground before we found it.  This is my "Has anyone seen the Christmas market?" look.  As you can see, it turned out to be a cheesy amusement park so we ditched and headed over to Marylebone.

London is totally decorated for Christmas.  It started a few weeks ago and at this point, it's in full swing.  I realized that since the Brits don't have the buffer of Thanksgiving, they go right into the Christmas season from Halloween.  In the US we have a speed bump in November to keep Christmas at bay.





Love this shot - - the guy behind me must have heard us counting 1-2-3 to time the jump.  I heard him laughing after the shot and assumed he was laughing at me - not realizing that he was jumping with me!




I've been playing Charlie Brown Christmas since October so I'm good with this accelerated schedule.  I love the lights, the shopping, the music…Hello Christmas!!  :-)