Category: Spain

More Reasons to Love Spain

As Beverly said while we were waiting idly for the light to change, and for it to be time for dinner:

“Isn’t it nice to feel like we’re actually early for everything for a change?”

Also, Spain is the kind of place where two women can walk into a bar and say, “We’ll have what they’re having.”

And the punchline is: a giant plate of delicate purple-shelled cockles, swimming in wine and garlic; a wedge of bread smeared with spicy sausage paste (sobrasada); two beers; two refreshing glasses of verdejo; a wedge of sheep cheese; a tapa of succulent ratatouille-ish stuff; and some squid in escabeche.

It’s also the kind of place where we get a free, unasked-for plate of deep-fried nuggets of monkfish liver. And the total tab is less than 20 euros.

No wonder I was in a swoon after lunch yesterday. Not just the jet lag, really.

Spain–First Impressions

Estoy aqui. Jet lag in full effect. But all went smoothly, considering. After the passport hurdle, there was the connection-in-Madrid hurdle: very tight, aggravated by slack US Air rep who said he couldn’t check my bags through to Almeria. Not true, of course, because they’d even been able to pull this trick off in Albuquerque, on my mom’s bags–but I didn’t know this for certain at the airport, and couldn’t dig in my heels.

At least I got to stew about this in the business-class lounge in Philly–Star Alliance Gold status in full effect!

As it happened, my bag was the very first one off the belt in Madrid. When does that happen? I feel like it should be the subject of a business-motivation book: First Off the Belt: Someone’s bag has to be–why not yours ?

I’m gratified to find that my impression of Spanish women, forged years ago, has not changed at all: they have terrible hair!

This is great for me–I fit right in! Last time I was here, I had just “gone blonde,” except the salon lady failed to tell me until after the job that I really needed a double process. So I had that distinctive orange hair that Japanese punk kids (and undernourished children) often sport.

With that, and my tight pants and my glasses, I got asked for directions all the time!

I did a little henna on my hair about a week ago, in preparation for this trip…and the magic is working! I already had to beg the stewardess for an immigration form.

Also, when I saw the chick on my Almeria flight with the big green square glasses and the super-tight bright-pink pants, I knew I’d made the right decision when I tossed my kelly green skinny-leg cords into my suitcase at the last minute.

This ramps up the pressure on my Spanish, but it’s worth it just to feel like my fashion sense is appreciated. Unlike in NYC, where poor grooming and bright colors mean people edge away from you on the subway.

As for my mom, she fits in OK–she’s wearing lots of black, and a scarf. But the dead giveaway is that she has white hair–not brassy orange or jet black. Also, she’s about a head taller than most of the older women on the street, and that’s something that pretty much never happens. In most other settings, she’s often mistaken for a gelfling.

After a big nap this afternoon, we immediately fell victim to Spanish dining times…roaming the street, starving, while waiting for tapas bars to open. We would’ve had a little sweet treat to pass the time, but all the seats at the cafes were already crammed with people enjoying their post-siesta pick-me-up, with churros and cafe con leche and juice on all the tables. Another reason to love Spain–two chances for breakfast!

And, once we got into the tapas window, I truly appreciated how great it is to be doing guidebook research here. Here, it’s totally legit, even expected, to have one drink in a place and leave. Everywhere else I go, I have to steel myself for the evening reviewing session, to cover as many places as possible: drinks and apps in one place, mains in another, maybe dessert in a third. But if I drink too much at the first place, and the food is good, my plan goes to hell immediately.

Tonight, I checked three places off my list in just a couple of hours, without feeling a twinge of regret or having to shrug apologetically at anyone when I asked for the bill.

For the record, my body is humming along on a diet of: blood-sausage stew on toast, bacalao fritters, green olives, delectably bouncy baby meatballs and octopus in garlic mayo so blindingly white it looked like whipped cream.

Hmm. Maybe I shouldn’t have made that list.

I also ate half a clementine. That counts, right? Still, Beverly has the advantage: she ate the lettuce-leaf garnish that came with the fritters.

Madrid Memory Game

I was looking around on my hard drive for a very random file (too random to explain at this juncture, but let’s just say it involved a lot of words copied out of a library book, and I had some plans for them).

Instead, I found this, from summer of 2000:

5 Interesting Things I Saw on a Walk Around Madrid, and Having No Pen and Paper, Developed a Mnemonic System for Remembering

1) Small window display for wig shop containing slightly small-scale man’s head, nearly bald, from behind which came a mechanical arm that slowly placed, then removed, a toupee [imagined a bald head with ONE hair]
2) Pesetas abbreviated as pts., so that I felt like I must play skeeball before I could buy anything [imagined rabid basketball fan shouting, TWO points!]
3) Bulk frozen foods on sale in covered market, all displayed in a deli case–crinkle-cut fries, carrot/raisin salad, peas and carrots, etc. [imagined THREE-bean salad in icy deli case]
4) Dusty, dark, unmarked liquor store selling drinks over the counter–samples, perhaps? [one more FOUR the road]
5) Poster advertising: Live in Concert, Deep Purple, the Romanian Philharmonic Orchestra, and Ronnie James Dio [FIVE rhymes with “live”; counted on absurdity of line-up to stick in my head]

An example of why, no matter who you’re traveling with, it’s always fun to walk around by yourself for at least an afternoon. The funny thing is, even just about a month ago, I thought about these very items. Or the idea of these very items–I could no longer remember the actual things I’d seen. Vague memory of something about a funny heavy-metal poster…and maybe a shady-looking storefront. Ah, Madrid.

The one thing I did remember was something that wasn’t on this list: Calle Lechuga (Lettuce Street), which seems like where I wouldn’t mind living if I were ever to live in Madrid. (Our friend Bob has ruled out many an apartment based on a preposterous street address: “Petunia Avenue! As if!” I don’t blame him.) Even weirder is that I recall I tossed C/ Lechuga from my list because I couldn’t think of a solid mnemonic for it. Yet here it is, still rattling around my brain.

Self-Absorption, Procrastination Reap Rewards: Spanish Dessert Edition

In an attempt to stave off actual writing, I was investigating the mystery of why my old blogspot URL still gets all the action. Following some links in my stats, I happened across a truly mind-expanding item on now-defunct Saute Wednesday: a recipe for toast topped with melted chocolate, olive oil and sea salt.

I don’t recommend it if you’re still trying to get your head around salt caramels, but for those who’ve made the leap, it’s really just the next logical progression. (It’s like guitar with feedback. Could you listen to, say, Wham! after you heard the Pixies? I couldn’t.) And because it’s salty, it seems like a totally legit afternoon snack.

However, it must be said that this is further evidence that the Spanish are very scary (hence, fascinating) when it comes to food. Thanks to the Spaniards, I have nearly a quarter of a whole farm animal in a closet, held in a magical state between rot and not-rot.

More specific to dessert, AV told us all about the highly medieval candied egg yolks (scroll to “For science”), and it seems like every Spanish sweet I’ve seen comes in a super-Goth-looking all-black wrapper and is either stark white or bright yellow. (One exception: the maraschino-cherry-studded egg marzipan I’m eating now–but of course those cherries are red, like BLOOD.)

I would not be the least bit surprised if some Spanish village specialized in, say, rabbit brains slow-simmered for nine days in sugar with saffron, sold in a black box sporting a not-cute-at-all bunny on the label. They would, of course, be a strange texture, yet delicious in a very rich way. You would savor a little bunny brain for an hour, probably, with bitter coffee.

And even though this chocolate/salt/oil toast is apparently some Ferran Adria modern invention, it is not out of keeping with more traditional Spanish sweets. In fact, come to think of it, even the color scheme fits right in with tradition: black chocolate, white bread, yellow oil. It’s so dour and joyless in appearance that it can’t possibly be dessert. You cannot possibly enjoy it. Clever, perverse Spaniards.