Category: Spain

Barcelona: Thanksgiving Dinner for 46

Every year since who knows when, our friend Frank Plant has hosted Franksgiving in his fantastically cool digs in Barcelona. By the time we got around to attending, it had already grown from a cozy meeting of close friends into an insane, overcrowded phenomenon, and shrunk back to a more manageable size. If you can’t be ahead of the curve, it’s a lot better to be well behind it.

Turns out that “more manageable” now means 46 people. That’s 46 people expecting Thanksgiving dinner with all the trimmings, even if they’re Spanish and don’t really get the whole deal and wonder why we insist on eating the exact same thing every year, and without even any pork in it.

When Peter and I told Frank we’d finally be able to come, Frank drafted us for kitchen duty. Which is no surprise–I think every time we’ve visited Frank, we’ve wound up cooking dinner. Though usually only for about 20.

So, uh, this time it would be 46. Did I mention that already? Last time I cooked for that many people, for a friend’s wedding in 2002, I nearly had a breakdown I was so exhausted.

Peter did the turkey. Two Dutch friends, the Statler and Waldorf of the whole event, were complaining about previous years’ turkeys, so Peter took the bait–he’d brine those birds and smoke them.

This also freed up Frank’s rather tetchy oven for other work. Honestly, I have no idea how he’s pulled it off in years past.

But he’s done it. He has a vision, and he has shopping lists. And he has a crew of people at the nearby Hostafrancs market who were delighted to help. We picked up three turkeys from the poultry stand, where the sturdy ladies use a set of counter-mounted shears to ka-chunk carcasses into pieces. We loaded up on snacky things and sherry vinegar. We snagged some rare radicchio for this bean salad thing Frank wanted to try.

Then we got down to business. Or tried to. Peter went up to the terrace to assess the grill for smoking. As he was poking around, the whole bottom of it dissolved in a shower of rust.

I learned in 2003, when Peter and I had to build the rigging for a lamb roast, that if you’re going to embark on an improbable dinner scheme, then someone involved should be a welder.

Handily, Frank is one.

Safety first!

He patched up the grill, and even added a little smoke chimney and built Peter a rake for the coals.

Good as new! Nothing a little aluminum foil can't fix...

Once the birds were squared away, we could get down to kitchen business.

Here’s where the story gets boring. Thanks to a small army of volunteers chopping onions, peeling potatoes and running out to the store, everything went so smoothly I thought I was forgetting something.

That left me time to concentrate on my favorite thing: gravy. I made about half a gallon. My capacity for portion assessment ends at about 20 people–after that, I just imagine the Mongol Horde.

Periodically Frank would pop by the kitchen and ask how everything was going. And he would say exactly what I was thinking: “Shit! 46 people!”

One time Frank rolled through, I put him to work slicing the radicchio. Ah. Turned out it was red cabbage. Classic grocery-shopping-in-a-second-language issue. We rolled with it.

At this point, I have to give credit to Spain as a whole, despite their lack of radicchio. Were it not for its customary insanely late dinner hour, we would’ve been screwed. But with guests arriving at 9pm, and aiming for a sit-down time of 10pm, not only was everything done well ahead, but I even had time to take a shower and change into turkey-fat-free clothes. I hereby propose American Thanksgiving be forthwith considered a late-night affair. That traditional afternoon start is a bitch. No wonder everyone falls asleep.

Anyway, meanwhile, upstairs, the heavy lifters and Anna’s thorough vacuuming (which sounds better in its Spanish-cognate form, ‘aspiration’) had transformed Frank’s workshop into a banquet hall.

The stage is set.

Peter pulled the by-now-gorgeous birds off the fire.

And Jim got to carving.

I'm impressed that Frank's kitchen even has an electric meat slicer!

We gave everything a little reheat, tossed the candied walnuts in the now-red-cabbage-and-green-bean salad and ladled out the gravy. There was plenty to go around.

And, magnificently, room around the table for all 46 people.

Places, everyone.

The photo of Jim carving comes courtesy of Jan, the Dutch Statler, who at least admitted the turkey was better than it was in years past. And all agreed the red cabbage was far better than the radicchio would’ve been–happy accidents.

Another way we should tweak American Thanksgiving: have dancing after. Thanks Drew, Jim and Kris for rocking it till the break of dawn.

Dude. That boom box blinks in time with the music. Frank is a genius.

The next day, which was surprisingly un-fuzzy, considering the dancing till dawn, we rolled out on the train to Verona.

Guess what vegetable they just love in Verona and seemed to be selling at every corner market? Radicchio. Whatever. Over it!

I could end on this note, but it seems a little dishonest–it sounds like I just whip up this kind of party all the time, no prob. In fact, over the past five or six years I’ve gotten burned out on these heroic-cooking events (yes, after publishing a cookbook that’s very much in favor of such events). I got sick of being frantic and never getting to talk to anyone properly, or even enjoy the food, and now Peter and I are happy to have six or four or even just two people over for dinner. But Franksgiving was a great example of how these events are so inspiring when they go right, when the prep is really just a pre-party, a great chance to chat while prepping mounds of vegetables, and to solve problems on the fly. Thanks to Frank for reminding me.

*********

Here’s the rough logistics, should you be up against a similar killer situation:

For 46 people:

  • 3 turkeys, about 18 kilos. We had two of them cut into quarters, for easier maneuvering/faster cooking on the smoker. We used the backs to make stock.
  • 9 or 10 kilos potatoes; boiled them ahead in the morning, then ran most of them through a ricer about an hour before serving. 20 minutes before serving, mashed up with melted butter, hot milk.
  • 6 kilos sweet potatoes; parboiled in the morning. Made syrup of brown sugar, tangerine juice, Cointreau and poured over sweets in baking dishes. Dabbed with butter, topped with toasted hazelnuts and baked in last 20 minutes before serving.
  • 2 kilos green beans, 4 small heads of (ahem) red cabbage, about 500g feta cheese and 500g walnuts. (It was this recipe to start with. Oh well.) The night before, candy the walnuts. Dressing was a standard vinaigrette: garlic, mustard, sherry vinegar, olive oil, a squeeze of honey.
  • 2 kinds of cranberry sauce: Mama Stamberg’s crazy business with horseradish (really! have never eaten this–turns out it’s actually good), and a cooked sauce with orange peel, 2 bags of cranberries each. Made both of these the night before.
  • Stuffing…I couldn’t tell you. A bit of a blur. Reheated it for about 20 minutes, about 40 minutes before sit-down. If you have an oven with two racks (likely), you could do it at the same time as the sweets.
  • Half a gallon of gravy is, it turns out, definitely too much.

Top 10 Food and Travel (mostly) Highlights of 2009

Everyone’s got a top 10 list! So I will too. I don’t know why I don’t do them more often–I certainly love making lists.

Like a lot of people, I’m coming away from this year feeling like it was pretty craptastic. But the nice thing about making a list like this is that you (I) realize there were some really good concrete things that happened, or that I managed to pull off. The crappiness, I think, just comes from feeling overworked and generally unfocused. And, of course, the creeping realization that there will never come a day in my freelance life when I get so fabulous that people are beating down my door offering me work. In fact, I will continue to have to rustle it up myself. Which, you know, is why I’m going on vacation for the next three weeks. (Holy crap! To Asia! Never been to the other side of the world!)

What I’m pretty pleased with, in no particular order:

1. I made croissants! This is fresh in my mind because it happened just a few days ago, only nominally fulfilling my 2009 resolution to work with yeast dough more. I can’t tell you how miraculous it is to make these things. I actually laughed out loud with delight the first time the dough rose. Simple (borderline idiotic) pleasures.

croissants 029

2. I traveled for a month in Mexico and did not get shot, kidnapped, ticketed or asked for a bribe. Actually, this is not such an accomplishment. Contrary to everything you read in the newspaper, Mexico is not a war zone. Allow me to briefly hijack my top-10 list for a mini-lecture: not going to Mexico because of the drug war is like not coming to the US because of the drug war. San Cristobal de las Casas, Merida and Tulum are a world away from Juarez–just like, say, Seattle is a world away from inner-city Baltimore.

3. I hiked for nine days and did not die. Granted, this was about the most candy-ass form of hiking–traipsing merrily from village to village in Andalucia, stopping for many glasses of tinto de verano along the way, carrying nothing but some almonds and a change of clothes (and barely that). But there were real mountains! We were up at 2,000 meters! And we hiked by moonlight once! But the biggest miracle of all is that both Peter and I, dedicated urban travelers, actually had a nice time out in nature, and thought we might do it again. Next up: hiking across an island in Greece.

Sierra Nevadas

4. I jogged. Sure, it was only twice around the track. But, honestly, it’s something I’ve never done in my life. It was right after the Spain hiking trip. Peter and I were jet-lagged and feeling like we needed to capitalize on our newfound fitness. It was satisfying. But then I got horrifically sick for the next week. A friend told me that’s normal when you first start running–all these toxins get pushed out. Sadly, I have not jogged again since.

5. I stayed at a ridiculously nice resort in Mexico, on assignment. I know, this isn’t really much of a personal accomplishment, and I’ve stayed at nice places before. What made this one nice was that it was free of schmoozing (my expenses were paid; I was incognito). And for once in my travel-writing life, I managed to get all the work done that I needed to do beforehand, so I really could just lie on the beach and wave at the waiter for a margarita. The funny thing is that now that I’ve done that, I really have no huge craving to do it again.

ff

6. I wrote a cookbook. Oh, yeah, that. The high point and sense of accomplishment came mostly in the last days of the manuscript-tightening process, at the very beginning of this year, and not actually at the time of publication, in October. This is because, by the time the book came out, there’d been so much wrangling over the layout, and of course, the title, that it was a chore to even think about the book. And in the interim, I’d also written large portions of three other travel guides, which effectively erased Forking Fantastic! from my mind. Can the publishing industry speed up, please, at least just so authors can get more of a thrill out of the process?

7. I became a “guru.” On the basis of the wit and charm and deep, deep knowledge displayed in Forking Fantastic!, Tamara and I were on The Brian Lehrer Show every week this December. It’s kind of hilarious to hear yourself introduced as a “holiday entertaining guru.” And I love Brian Lehrer–hardest-working man (along with his crack producers!) in public radio. We got some excellent calls too. The segment on holiday food traditions made me so proud to live in New York City.

8. I cooked dinner for Jamie Oliver (as shown on TV in 2009). Speaking of being proud to live in New York: Back in late 2008, Tamara and I taped a segment with Jamie Oliver, for his series Jamie’s American Road Trip. Seeing how I’ve loved Jamie Oliver’s cookbooks since early, early days (like, Naked Chef days) and I’m floored by all the cool food advocacy he does in Britain, it was really an honor to meet him. But that was technically the year before.

The real honor came when I finally saw the finished episode, which focused entirely on food in Queens, and especially on immigrant culture. Honestly, I cried the first few times I watched it. The Peruvian ladies with the secret restaurant! Colombian George, who feeds homeless illegal immigrants! The Chinese noodle dude! The ranchero musicians on the subway! It was great TV, and I felt proud to have had a hand in it (I directed them to Ali and the live-poultry place). Unfortunately, it hasn’t been picked up in the US, and likely won’t be, and there are only a few clips online–here’s one (ignore the freakout about the live-poultry place; oy).

podcastlogo

9. I started Cooking in Real Time. If you’re not subscribed to my home-cooking podcast, go ahead and do it now. It’s like that Cookalong with Gordon Ramsay thing, except it’s not a ridiculous variety show, and it actually teaches you something.

What I’m really proud of, though, is that I designed the logo and header, and built the website myself. OK, so the site was mostly template-tweaking, but it was still immensely satisfying to learn how to control all these little elements. It was very nice to have a project that ended with a concrete result (aside from cooking, which is my usual make-stuff-with-my-hands outlet) and that involved both creativity and code-cracking. Unfortunately, just this week, I dropped my voice recorder on the floor and broke it, so now CiRT has to go on hiatus while I’m away in January.

10. I painted the dining room pink and orange, with gold trim. The vision of the Bollywood dining room, finally realized! The real accomplishment here is that I triumphed over decision paralysis, as presented by 8 million paint chips, and finally picked some colors. Plus, I exploited visiting child labor to get the painting done.

Zora O'Neill and Tamara Reynoldsphoto courtesy of Katja Heinemann

Happy new year, everyone! Here’s to an exciting new decade! Health care and croissants for all!

The Sangria of Queens; or, How to Use Fresca as a Mixer

On our Spain hiking trip, Peter and I swilled tinto de verano at every opportunity. It is the perfect wine-y refresher when it’s hot. (Beverly and I drank a lot of it on our earlier trip too, even though it wasn’t quite verano in April.)

For years, I thought tinto de verano was just red wine and lemon soda. Turns out there are subtleties–such as a splash of sweet vermouth, or of sweet sherry. And if you walk into a bar in Abrucena, Almeria, the woman proprietor offers to add a few drops of lemon essential oil to the top of it, for a beautiful perfume.

An excellent guy we met, who’d worked in the French wine industry for a decade, and clearly had a palate, explained the logic of the drink to us. “The base is all about dry–dry red wine, plus the driest soda you can find. In fact, they often use diet soda, because it’s not so sweet.”

Diet soda? We hate diet soda. Except, apparently, for when it’s mixed with red wine and vermouth. And at home, we certainly like Fresca.

Pues, here we are, in the heat of summer in New York City. And we are cheerfully drinking the official summer drink of Winslow Place: the Winslow Red, aka Tinto de Winslow, aka the Sangria of Queens.

I highly recommend: equal parts cheap-ass red wine (we buy $7 liter bottles of Greek red, to make it more authentically local) and Fresca, with a slosh of sweet vermouth on top. Pour over ice and garnish with lemon and orange slices. Makes an excellent pitcher drink.

Spain Hiking Photos

Photos of the grand Spanish hiking excursion are up, all over at Flickr. Lots of pics of us looking winded and sweaty on hillsides, and some beautiful tomatoes and a very silly video of Peter trying out all the public gym equipment they have in the villages.

Also, there’s a separate set from our afternoon of “fonting”–kind of like birding, but looking for obscure fonts. And boy, there are some doozies in Granada. (AV, why did you never mention this? It seems so right up your alley… And the Auto Escuela Dorado right by your apartment!)

The photos contain the juiciest anecdotes, but let me just say, in brief: Peter and I may actually live to hike again. It’s hard to believe, but we enjoyed ourselves. Peter was such a convert, in fact, that he walked home from the East Village the other night. I’m not giving up my bike anytime soon, and I still feel a little embarrassed about being seen in public with a backpack (ooh, a matching backpack with Peter’s, no less! That’s what happens when you emergency shop on the day before your flight). But it was a good trip.

And as a guidebook-updating gig, it was fantastic. I could only travel so fast, and was not expected to travel any faster, which is the exact opposite of any trip involving a car and an impractical number of small towns. But I still didn’t manage to buck the Curse of the Missed Swimming Pool. This occurs whenever I have a night planned in a really nice hotel, and I think, “Ooh, maybe I’ll just be able to check in and chill out by the pool that afternoon!” No. Inevitably, my schedule gets jacked up, and there is no swimming or sunning or anything, after I check in at dinnertime, totally pooped. On this trip, it meant that the night we were scheduled to stay at the really lovely place, we got lost near the end of the day, finally found our way, slogged through the river bottom and clambered up the hill just as the sun set and a cold shadow was cast over the pool. We swam anyway, but it wasn’t what I had envisioned.

I’m Back! Plus, Spain pics…

Back from Syria, overstuffed, exhausted and happy. More on this in a bit, but in the meantime, I’m finally caught up with my previous trip, to Spain–the photos from all over Granada and Almeria are up here on Flickr.

Just a few phrases to get you excited about clicking over:

aged manchego
supermarket souvenirs
creepy clowns
cuttlefish snuff
tortillitas de camaron (really!)
tomato dresses

Go!

Spain–Outta Here

I think I just ate my last ham croquette for a long time.

My feet are very sore. My back hurts. My lips are chapped. My tongue is kind of coated, and I’m dehydrated from drinking nothing but wine all day. (Poor me!)

And the ice cream I eat doesn’t help. (Double poor me!) Now that I’ve hit most of the restaurants and bars I wanted to see, I’ve been subbing in pistachio gelato for lunch and drinks. I think the ladies at Los Italianos are starting to recognize me. Fortunately, today I found out that in Spain, it’s a sign of affection, and even sexiness, when someone gives your belly fat a little squeeze.

I’m about to get on the midnight bus from Granada direct to the Madrid airport. As a guidebook author, I feel irresponsible for not having known about this bus in the first place. I’d just planned on taking the expensive, inconveniently timed train to Madrid, then shelling out for a hotel, then humping our luggage across the metro system to the airport in the morning.

Fortunately, the excellent woman whose house we were staying at tipped me off in time for me to cancel both train tickets and hotel.

I am no fan of buses, but if they save me more than $150 and dragging my luggage across a whole metropolis and two subway transfers, I can live with it. Plus, it’s the plush kind of bus like they have in Mexico. Beverly and I each have our own little one-seat row by the window–we are so primed for snoozing.

Did I mention I’m tired? Today I was walking around, checking on hotels (which I had to leave till the last minute, because they were all full last week), and I felt that glazed-over, totally jaded vibe descend. “This block looks just like those other blocks…and in fact just like every other kinda-crumbly Mediterranean city I’ve ever been in….,” I thought as I trudged. Beirut? Istanbul? Athens? I was no longer charmed by various funny signs and window displays. Everything looked dusty, the plants on the balconies were drooping, and the sidewalk texture even looked the same as every other random city.

My Spanish has totally deteriorated too, in anticipation of no longer being needed. How many hotel desk clerks looked at me perplexed today, as I stumbled through my, “Hi, I’m researching a guidebook and I’d like to see a room please, if you have one available, I mean, I’m assuming you do because it’s no longer Semana Santa, boy wasn’t that a crazy week…” shtick. It was working fine yesterday. Today: hopeless.

It reminded me of my last day in Morocco, on a trip nine years ago. I woke up that morning and could just no longer speak Arabic. I got Jim totally the wrong kind of ice cream after lunch, and no coffee. By evening, Jim was reduced to doing this weird pantomime of a bobble-headed toy to a street vendor and saying “El tigre?” in order to find the one he liked, because I couldn’t remember the word for “tiger.” (Alas, I never knew how to say “bobble-head” in Arabic.)

Oh, by the way: the apartment we’ve been staying in here in Granada used to be owned by the friendly neighborhood prostitute. I feel right at home, with my name and all.

Next time I post, I will have been ham-free for maybe 24 hours. I hope I don’t get the shakes.

Spain–He Is Risen!

Now that I’m Greek Orthodox, I’m not supposed to say this, but today is Easter. And you’d think that would be a day of rest in Spain, right? I mean, teams of 40 men have been carrying immensely heavy statues through the streets nearly all day, every day for a week. There was a special 100th-anniversary-of-something procession yesterday with all of the statues. Today everyone kicks back and eats, right?

Yeah, no. Three more groups are parading today, starting at noon. Como se dice ‘overkill’?

But to be fair, even last night I was still stunned by a procession. We caught one coming up a hill, without much of a crowd around. There’s this great super-slow Doppler effect with the band, which follows behind the statue. So the music’s getting louder and louder, but if you’re around a bend you can’t really see anything. And then the music is bouncing off the walls of the buildings super-loud just as the statue, surrounded by candles, emerges from the side street.

And then, as the statue goes by, and you’re boggling at how heavy it is, the band finally emerges and it is even LOUDER. And the bass drums go by last.

I saw this effect for the first time a few nights ago, with a statue of Christ hauling the cross, surrounded by centurions with huge feathers in their helmets. When the statue emerged from the side street, with the band blaring, all we saw first was the feathers. By the time the whole statue was visible, I expected Jesus and the soldiers to be doing a big kick line routine.

On the research front, things have gotten a little easier. We’ve figured out the route to break out of our little procession island, and know better to avoid bars right on the routes, because they’re mobbed and are basically pulling tapas out of their asses. “Beer coasters? Toss ’em in the fryer! Forty more people just showed up!”

Yesterday was a good day for research–I checked a fair amount of stuff of my list, and it even felt a little easy and like I was ahead of the game.

Then I looked at my watch, and I realized I’d been walking, with Beverly tagging along behind, for ten hours straight.

We started out after our churros and chocolate–the logical thing to eat when it’s 44 degrees out. But apparently the rest of the city thought so too. I have never seen bars so frenzied, even at night. The place where we did finally get our ch-and-ch fix–an excellent rec from AV–looked like a war zone inside, with empty chocolate cups four deep and two high stacked all along the bar. So we sat outside, which was for the best, since we were wearing every layer of clothing we packed (six each), and it would’ve been too difficult to adjust to a heated room.

The chocolate was thick as pudding, and the churros actually had a little ridgy texture, which I have seen only up in northern Spain–down south here, they’re usually they’re just smooth round tubes. And they were so perfectly fried and light they were almost empty inside. We shared a table with an older Spanish couple, the only people we saw all day who were as bundled up as we were.

Later, I admit, we did stop for a fairly nice lunch. Lovely baby beans with ham, and some nice fancy mushrooms. A real live green salad. And some too-creative-sounding veal with cardamom that turned out to be good. Finished with a little dab of orange wine that the waiter, who looked like Peter Dinklage, gave me for free, because apparently it was available only by the bottle. Crazy.

And later we took a 15-minute break in a bar that went from funky-neighborhoody to totally skeevy in the time it took for the foam to settle on our beers. While I was looking in the kitchen and noticing that when the sign said “food cooked with love,” they really meant “food cooked with cigarette butts and dirty wads of paper towels,” the older regulars at the bar were replaced by strung-out hippies, one of whom was doing the junkie lean into his beer. The review I was writing in my head was quickly discarded, and I pushed my octopus tapa around, feeling bad that it had died in vain. We fled up the street and took solace in a church with a very strange collection of artifacts, none labeled.

Which reminds me–earlier in the day, we saw an honest-to-God shrunken head in another museum! Why that museum is not listed in the guidebook I cannot for the life of me imagine. I can’t wait to rectify that oversight, and type the words “shrunken head” in the manuscript! First I will have to figure out what the whole point of the museum is, though–the guided tour was in Spanish, and while I thought I understood what the guy was saying most of the time, when I strung it all together at the end for Beverly, I realized it made no sense at all.

I’m sure a million other funny things have happened, but they’ve all been beaten out of my head by those bass drums. Monday is going to be quiet, right?

Spain–Live Blogging: Semana Santa

Ooh, they’re cheering outside!

Ooh, the brass band is playing!

Ooh, the drums are drumming!

Ooh, they’re singing!

Repeat, for seven hours.

Actually, the singing is novel. And that did just happen as I was typing it. Otherwise, no need for actual live blogging–you get the idea. And it will go on till Sunday.

I’m in Granada now. We started running across Semana Santa events a few days back, as we’ve moved to progressively larger towns, and now the big city. In each case, the bands have gotten tighter, the statues have gotten more humongous and the crowds have gotten more giddy and festive, rather than somber. They’ve also gotten monstrous, to the point where we could not get home tonight for a couple of hours because we happened to be on the wrong side of a procession.

It’s like New Year’s Eve, Halloween and the Fourth of July all mixed together. (Not for the fireworks–just lots of brass bands.)

Oh, also, for us Americans, toss in a smidge of a good old-fashioned lynching, what with all the pointy hoods and the fires blazing. I did a little research today, and no one seems to know why the KKK dress up like Catholic penitents, when they hate Catholics so much. And now they’ve gone and given a whole country an image problem. Maybe the Spanish can get together with the Navajo and lament the misuse of the swastika as well.

And can I just emphasize the not-somber factor? I was surprised by this. I’m used to New Mexico, where, aside from the occasional clown at a pueblo dance, religious ceremony is Some Serious Shit. No teenagers are taking pictures of their friends with their cell phones in NM, and damn sure no one’s ducking out of their band duties to have a glass of wine at the nearest bar.

Oooh, they’re cheering outside again. This happens whenever the team carrying the statue successfully negotiates a curve in the street. This involves a great deal of shuffling in place–like a 200-point K-turn.

Every time I see them do it (and you can only see their feet under the whole howda-like construction upon which the Virgin Mary or Christ is resplendent), I have flashbacks to all the times I had to turn the car around in tiny villages in the past two weeks. I may not be Catholic, but I am with them in spirit.

Oooh, there are some woodwinds chiming in. That’s new.

What else? Well, the guys in the hoods are supposed to be the penitents, but they’re followed by this enormous crew of women in very glam black gowns and long lace mantillas and sleek black stockings…and tippy little pointy high heels. Dudes might be hoisting a wooden cross–but walking stop-and-go, museum-style for seven hours in stilettos? Those women probably just have to cut their feet off at the end of the night and start fresh. I hope they’re in religious ecstasy.

OK, totally dazed by lack of sleep. Putting my earplugs in and calling it a night, at the weak-ass hour of 1 a.m. There will be plenty more opportunities. Somehow, just now, I am not singing “I Love a Parade.”

And, before I could get to the earplugs, the street… I was about to type ‘has gone completely quiet.’ But no–there’s the brass band again. Nighty-night. Tomorrow I try to figure out whether any of the tourist attractions I need to research will actually be open.

Spain–I Love a Bidet!

Not much more to say about that, really. Except I sing that to myself (to the tune of “I Love a Parade”) every time I see one in my hotel bathroom. And I do kind of love a bidet. But the separate one? That, what, you have to sort of stay crouched and shuffle over to from the toilet? I have never really understood that procedure.

Anyway, away from the toilet and onto the food. Things are sort of looking up. I all on my own, not cribbing from any guidebook but using only my inborn restaurant Spidey-sense, found us a super-tasty place for lunch in a little village up in the mountains. It looked like a promising village because there were a bunch of small trucks sporting the names of different cheese companies, all with addresses there.

So we wound up with wild mushrooms, all sauteed till crispy and caramelized and drizzled with garlic cream, and some rabbit in an almond sauce and little chicken croquettes to die for. Oh, and extra-nutmeggy chicken croquettes. No green vegetables, but who needs ’em? Name of tiny town and restaurant available on request. (Oh please, oh please don’t tell me it’s already in Fodor’s…)

Then, uh, things got bad again. I stupidly followed the advice of the same book that had led me to the wicker-chair-and-foie-gras horror show. And for my trouble (and it was a fuck of a lot of trouble–there is no parking in Baza!), I got chicken soup that tasted distinctly of margarine. Beverly got some macaroni that was Chef Boyardee-like in its gumminess. And we both got disapproving glowers from the waiter who cleared our main dishes. They were just 10 percent eaten and the rest shoved under a pile of soggy fries.

The cruel part is that I stopped in what smelled and looked like a great restaurant to ask directions to the crappy restaurant.

There was another hideous lunch, too, but I think I’ve just blotted that out.

The last two days, we’ve skipped lunch altogether (I mean, except for that ice cream today…), mostly because I’m sensing a mutiny in the ranks. Beverly goes to bed every night whimpering about how full she feels and saying plaintively, “Tomorrow will be a light eating day, right?”

So I’m a little fried on the food front. Have seen neither hide nor hair of the tortillitas of Bittman fame. Am only semi-hopeful…

On the general charmed-by-a-foreign-land front, though, things are going well.

For instance, the pillows in Spain are all exactly as wide as the beds. Granted, I’ve only slept in twin beds–I don’t know if they expand on larger beds. But very comfy.

Also, in Spain, they have these ingenious electric heaters that fit into the base of a table, which you then cover with a heavy blanket, and stick your feet under the blanket and on top of the heater to get all toasty.

If I’d had one of those when I lived in Cairo, I might’ve actually sat and done my Arabic homework instead of crawling into bed to get warm and feel less depressed. In fact, all those places where they think the weather is balmy enough not to warrant proper indoor heating could benefit.

Finally, in Spain, as if it needs to be said, they are into the ham. Creepily so. I saw a cartoon mural in one town of a Catholic king and a Muslim emir sitting down to a giant pig dinner. Sort of malevolent, no?

More heartwarming, though, are the words I’ll leave you with. Overheard on a street one morning in Laujar de Andarax, from one old Spanish man in a cardigan to another old man in a cardigan:

“Eat some ham. It’ll make you feel better.”

Spain: F***ed by Grandma

My mom has this joke involving a guy who sees a sign for Grandma’s Whorehouse. He gets all excited, and follows the sign all over the place, then after a long time through streets and down hallways, he winds up in a back alley facing another sign that reads “You’ve just been fucked by Grandma!”

We’ve said that twice now, after meals, which is not a good track record.

See, I have this ethic that if a restaurant is expensive and/or far away, that’s the restaurant that I should definitely eat at (as opposed to cruise by and ogle the food and the people, which, it’s true, is the case for some restaurants in guidebooks). Because if it sucks, it’s going to suck extra hard, and the bad vibes from the angry traveler will rain down on me.

Now, after two nearly back-to-back meals that were both expensive and far away, I’m thinking…maybe expensive and far away is just a guarantee of terrible? I can certainly think of a few examples from places I’ve lived–there’s that special-occasion/Sunday-drive factor that puts people in the frame of mind to enjoy whatever crap is put in front of them. But if I lived by this new judgment, and just ignored all restaurants in this category, there’d be no room for El Bulli. (Which is not my territory for this book, but you get the idea.)

The first act of Grandma was a couple of days ago, in the beach town of Almunecar. Following the recommendation of another guidebook (I know, bad form–but it happens!), I drove out to this place that allegedly merged Belgian and Spanish. It was the tail end of lunch (see, already I’m getting late for things), so when I saw some of the initial warning signs of badness, I didn’t feel like I had other options. These warning signs were: painted wicker furniture, a menu in a terrible curlicue font and many tables full of families.

The waiter glided up and told me it was a “menu gastronomico,” which I thought might be a polite way of saying “It’s a little fancier than you’re used to, honey,” but was in fact referring to the set eight-course menu that they were serving that day.

As we sat down, I noticed some food on other tables. I saw red-leaf lettuce as a garnish. I saw something that looked suspiciously like fish fingers. I saw that the waiters’ vests fit them all poorly, and that one of the waiters had a palsy. And yet, I still did not run.

We settled into our slightly-too-low wicker chairs (as those damn wicker chairs always are). The first course was unobjectionable–avocado, goat cheese and pimientos in a twee little column.

But it went so downhill from there. I’ve blotted the traumatic details from my mind, but suffice to say, I now know how to say “fish fingers” in French. (Goulettes, I think it is.) And I’m saying that even though there was foie gras and prunes soaked in Armagnac. Somehow, in the world of high-end dining, even that has become a horrible, horrible cliche.

So…that was interesting. And cost about $100. (Can I just complain at this point that I get paid in dollars, and the euro has of course gained value since I did all the math for my expenses and signed my contract? Argh.)

It was also illuminating because this other guidebook that recommended the place sounds very authoritative on the food front. But if that gets a fancy best-of-the-best star, then I think I can safely chuck that book, and no longer feel a twinge of guilt every time I think about poaching from it.

Grandma’s Round 2 came last night, in Granada. We drove up a million mountain roads (it’s true–the Moor’s Last Sigh is just a highway pullout now), toured the Alhambra and finally found our hotel. We’re on the edge of town, because we have the car at this juncture, and I noticed we’re actually very close to Granada’s expensive, out-of-town-but-allegedly-worth-the-drive place. It’s listed in all the guidebooks I have as being stupendous.

It’s a Monday, but I call to make reservations. Actually, I ask, “Do we need reservations for tonight?” and the guy says, “Why, yes, indeed!” So I get a reservation for half an hour hence, using my new alias, Sara. (Turns out Zora means ‘whore’ in Spain Spanish–no wonder people look at me funny. Also, when I ask waiters what ‘cogollos’ means–I just did a Google image search, and all I got were pictures of pot plants.)

We get ourselves looking moderately fancy–as fancy as possible, considering it’s freezing outside and I didn’t pack for a nice restaurant and cold weather. Suffice to say I’m wearing my fancy shoes with socks.

We trundle down there, and even from our hotel it seems like a long haul. We stride in through the door–nobody. We walk up the grand alabaster stairs–re-nobody. Just the toilets, marked with cheesy brass flamenco dancers and bullfighters. (Did I mention? The place in Almunecar had those terrible pissing-children plaques. Another terrible sign.)

Finally, I try one of the many unmarked inner doors–ah, there’s the party. Or at least a couple of members of the waitstaff. I give my alias, they consult the list seriously, and then…we’re whisked into an empty dining room. In the next room over, we can hear a few people–but we’d foolishly chosen non-smoking when given the choice. I thought back to college, when smart people I knew said they were smokers on their housing forms, so they’d get cooler roommates.

So, we sit alone in this giant tchotchke-filled dining room, every table set with every piece of silver and possible glass. The walls are so crammed, it’s like a Spanish version of TGIFriday’s.

Our waiter, however, doesn’t have much flair. In fact, he’s a little skinny and anxious. He gives us English menus, but I have to ask for the Spanish because the English is so strange and unappetizing.

After we finally order, the waiters arrive with a plate of toasted bread with olive oil–appealing, not stupid-fancy–and our amuse-bouche. Which is hideous. It’s this poor denuded, hollowed-out tomato that’s hiding a wad of inferior tuna, set on a bed of pimiento. There’s some gratuitous eight-inch-long spiky cracker thing sticking out of the top. The tomato is horrible, all sickly and wan (when over in Almeria province, there are special tomatoes in season–argh!), and the whole thing reminds me only of what I had for breakfast the day before.

Worst of all, it’s cloaked in this horrendously bitter olive oil. And our toasted bread is soaking in the same vile bitterness.

It all goes downhill from there: the first artichokes in my life that I’ve not been able to eat, some off-tasting shrimp and this blood-pudding lasagna, which is actually the best of the bunch, but the sweet tomato-carrot sauce on it is cloying.

By the time our main dish, a baby leg of lamb, turned up, we were very dispirited. Which was sad, because the lamb was pretty good. Not trying to be anything but lamb, with a little rosemary, and nice crispy skin. But it was so wee (it was billed as suckling lamb), it was depressing. There’s no reason to eat suckling lamb–it doesn’t taste any better than regular lamb. Let the little guys frolic a while! Eat some grass… I’ll check back later, when it doesn’t seem quite so pointless to kill it and serve it in some random restaurant by the side of the road on a Monday night.

Anyhoo, we at least had a little room for dessert. But the dessert list looked lame, except for one thing. Which they were out of.

We high-tailed it out of there. The diners in the other room had just left, and we were the only people in the place. We went upstairs to the bathrooms, we peered at the weird decor… Why was a reel-to-reel tape player sitting next to an old Singer sewing machine in a tableau of Olde Thinges? And why did that giant oil painting depict a naked boy with a very prominently shaded penis, and a creepy-looking man with his arm around his shoulder?

And why, oh why, did that basket of decorative apples still have their little produce stickers on? If I’d noticed that when I walked in the door, maybe I would’ve actually run out. But maybe not. After all, I’d driven all this way…

Remember, kids, I eat at the bad places, so you don’t have to. I get fucked by Grandma, so you don’t have to.