Showing posts with label foreign food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label foreign food. Show all posts

Tuesday, 20 December 2011

20. December

PHEW!
We are leaving for holiday tomorrow!!!!!!
And I did some gift-shopping, packing, driving in queue, packing, cleaning. All this typical "last-minute-before-leaving" kind of things.

Although I did actually have time for getting amused and a bit annoyed at this product.... A complete package for all your needs of five-day fasting. HÖ? you need a bunch of stuff to eat while not eating? And its supposed to "freshen you up"??? I have probably a million things to say about a crap product like this, but then again. kinda in a hurry to do other things more fun/important....

Tuesday, 13 December 2011

13. December

In Scandinavia this is the day of st.Lucia. I am unsure, however, why this patroness saint of Eyesight or Blindness (of all things..) has become so traditional and popular a festival here where its basically strictly protestant church through the history of christianity in this region. There are no saints in protestantism?

Besides, the whole saint-things are quite disturbing. This girl was brutally tortured by boiling oil and other popular torture-tech with no result, so they cut out her eyes and killed her. The saint is portrayed with holding her eyes on a plate in front of her.
Nice Swedish/Scandinavian christmas tradition ... The modern version is that she brings light, (the name is derived from Lux =modern measure of light strength...) yellow and weird shaped buns and has a white dress with a wide red belt. She traditionally even has blond hair and is supposed to help people. In other words, not so much to do with a sicilian girl tortured in the 300 AD. Other than maybe the red symbolizes blood, the weird shaped buns are... the eyes on display??
I've never understood these saints things. And very much less so, when I have learned more about what they actually got to their status of sainthood for....

However, today I got some lemons from a coworker that had bought them in Egypt! They look more like paled limes, but the locals had said and reassured that "this was lemons!" Long traveled food! Which smells extremely good, almost like citrus candies. They are going in my tea tonight. I love this kind of culinary treats! Thank you Anne =)

Thursday, 19 August 2010

food ingredients

When living in another country, the questions about what kinda food or stuff from the store is often raised. Since Finland is not that far away from Norway, culturally,the huge Oops'es has been quite avoidable in daily grocery shopping. But when it comes to names of fish, parts of meat, berries, mushrooms and to simply ask from a customer service counter(those that serve you the x amount of that particular fish or breadtopping you want), has made difficulties.

Most people here know what salmon is in three languages, and so do I. But when it comes to all the other fish-speices we norwegians have on our plate, I have come short with both my english skills, and the clerks.

Many other funny mishaps have happened when talking about and describing berries(simply because in this home we have no clue what the berries are called in English...well, most normal ones we know okay), like "you know that purple eyeball berry" (turns out they are gooseberries in english.)
Or when describing fish speices, like "um, you know that silvery one that can get really big, not shark, but the other one?" or "the one that looks like the one that killed Steve Irvin, but only much smaller and not really like that anyway but its flat atleast."
Or when describing what part of the animal you want, in a butchershop(like this last christmas, when I made traditional lambs-roll thingy from Norway), constantly pointing to ones limbs, telling and almost bringing along a chart to point at.

My help has sometimes been to check this marvelous list of anglo-finno-russo-scandinavian list. But most often I have been in the store, staring at the fish filléts on the ice, wondering and damning myself for not having a copy of most used glossary in my wallet.