Sunday, December 3, 2017
Wednesday, July 19, 2017
addendum to juices
monday, i bought these (new for me) juice cartons from the rimi next to the townhall building
the pina colada was really good |
then there's something else they drink here, which might belong in the "unusual" category
butter -- or cream -- or oil
not by itself,...but with fresh carrot juice -- carrot juice supposedly needs something oily to help ingest the carrots' vitamins -- something like that -- in trakai (the little castle town, a half-hour from vilnius), the waiter brought out a little pitcher of olive oil, with my order of fresh carrot juice -- maria tells me that in grocery stores, next to the fresh carrot juice, there are small packets of oil available -- i haven't seen them
Monday, July 17, 2017
back to drinks
when i started writing about drinks i've met in lithuania, i did it, chronologically -- from the very first drink i met, and so on,...as i met them
i was going to continue, in that vein -- then i decided to...put a little more effort into it -- so i wrote down all the drinks i've met, and put them in groups -- came up with four categories -- juices, teas, alcoholic drinks, and unusual drinks
i'll start with the juices -- and there are a lot of 'em
they must love their juices, here
most restaurants have two categories of juices on the menu -- just plain "juices,"...which i guess means they're from bottles the restaurant bought, and freshly squeezed juices -- they call 'em sultys naturalis (i think that's how it's spelled) -- ones they squeeze, in-house -- the most popular fresh-juice combinations are orange-and-grapefruit and carrot-and-apple -- most restaurants have both
the grocery stores...are where the real action is -- juices galore -- and they're delicious -- even the "drinks" (not 100% fruit juice) are really good
in maxima, one of the four grocery-store chains, i was shocked to see a carton of prickly-pear juice – that was the morning i left here, in march -- now, surely, lithuania cannot be a great producer of cactus fruit -- i love prickly-pears, but i've never seen prickly-pear juice; that doesn't mean it doesn't exist elsewhere -- just that i haven't come across it
do you see the price on the beet juice -- 1.16 -- a euro and 16 cents -- that's about a buck-and-a-quarter -- the prices are great -- i get a bottle of carrot juice, almost every time i'm in a rimi, another of the chains -- 1.49 -- i got a bad one, last week -- maria sent me an e-mail address for them -- they were "right on it" -- credited her rimi shopping card
there are a lot of great berry juices
tea, alcohol, and the strange,...coming up
i was going to continue, in that vein -- then i decided to...put a little more effort into it -- so i wrote down all the drinks i've met, and put them in groups -- came up with four categories -- juices, teas, alcoholic drinks, and unusual drinks
i'll start with the juices -- and there are a lot of 'em
they must love their juices, here
most restaurants have two categories of juices on the menu -- just plain "juices,"...which i guess means they're from bottles the restaurant bought, and freshly squeezed juices -- they call 'em sultys naturalis (i think that's how it's spelled) -- ones they squeeze, in-house -- the most popular fresh-juice combinations are orange-and-grapefruit and carrot-and-apple -- most restaurants have both
this one's not in lithuania, but...it's a juice -- fresh-squeezed apple juice -- moscow airport, in march |
in maxima, one of the four grocery-store chains, i was shocked to see a carton of prickly-pear juice – that was the morning i left here, in march -- now, surely, lithuania cannot be a great producer of cactus fruit -- i love prickly-pears, but i've never seen prickly-pear juice; that doesn't mean it doesn't exist elsewhere -- just that i haven't come across it
funny thing about that picture -- i took it, back in cleveland, the morning i arrived, some 30 hours after i bought the juices from maxima -- my friend maria would not be happy about that -- calls those fresh juices, after they've been sitting outside for a few hours, "wine" -- and they do start to get a little vinegary,...after a while -- a decent while
do you see the price on the beet juice -- 1.16 -- a euro and 16 cents -- that's about a buck-and-a-quarter -- the prices are great -- i get a bottle of carrot juice, almost every time i'm in a rimi, another of the chains -- 1.49 -- i got a bad one, last week -- maria sent me an e-mail address for them -- they were "right on it" -- credited her rimi shopping card
there are a lot of great berry juices
this granata wasn't cheap -- this was in march -- granatai must be a generic form of the word, or the plural -- the pomelo looks like it was cheap -- it wasn't sweet, though |
an unusually tart green-apple juice -- yum -- maria says it's not 100% fruit juice |
surprising color, for apple juice -- at the discount german chain lidl, which has just entered the market |
those plastic bags are funny -- yogurt drink, that you squeeze,...out of the bag -- very good |
i thought this was a children's drink -- on a shelf with a lot of other colorful bottles with cartoon characters and animals -- i liked the bottle -- yummy -- lot of banana juice, here |
Labels:
apple,
banana,
beet,
berry,
carrot,
drinks,
fresh squeezed,
granata,
juices,
lithuania,
pomegranate,
pomelo,
prickly-pear,
yogurt drink
Tuesday, July 11, 2017
steamy felicie mushrooms
it's in the mid- to high-seventies, this afternoon -- according to the weather channel's web-site, it's 78 or 79 degrees now -- somewhat humid -- feels a lot hotter,...like it's in the nineties -- maybe that's because of how cold it has been -- in the mid-forties, and maybe even colder
yesterday,...walking around in the afternoon,...i got tired and sleepy -- was warm,...relatively speaking -- could have also been tired because of my...sleep patterns
back to felicie and mushrooms
i found a picture of the outside of felicia, from my visit in march
the mushroom soup we had there featured the special lithuanian mushroom baravykai -- called boletus, in english -- umm-umm -- i'm gonna try getting some, and cook them,...even though they might only be available now, frozen or dried
in case i haven't mentioned it before, mushroom- and berry-picking are a big thing here
Monday, July 10, 2017
the great corelli
i've been listening to a lot of franco corelli, lately -- he's unbelievable -- my new god
i'm getting this collection
watched this tribute to him, from 15 years ago -- in parma -- such a nice guy, too
watched this tribute to him, from 15 years ago -- in parma -- such a nice guy, too
Labels:
collection,
corelli,
opera,
parma,
rai,
recordings,
singing,
tenor,
tribute
Saturday, July 8, 2017
shakshuka
i'm starting another series -- because, thursday, i went to the best restaurant i've been to in vilnius
first, though, about the weather -- when i looked at the weather app on my phone, thursday night, it said that it was going to dip to 46 degrees, at six o'clock, yesterday morning
i asked maria -- she said her colleagues said it got down to three degrees -- celsius -- equals...38.4 fahrenheit
back to food
i first met this restaurant in march -- i was walking around, and saw these antique instruments in the window
it's between town hall and the gates of dawn (ausros vartu (that's awsh'rus), the only remaining gate to the city), a place of good luck
then, i passed the restaurant again, a month ago, when i was on my way to see hales turgus for the first time -- a popular market, on the other side of ausros vartu
a week before, i went to another turgus -- kalvariju -- i'll get back to that one
when i passed the restaurant, i took two more pictures of the instruments -- thought i might get a better result than the first time
then i looked at the menu
WHOA -- SHAKSHUKA (the bottom-left item) -- WHAT THE HECK!
on mother's day, we went for a brunch at table 45, in the intercontinental hotel, on the cleveland clinic grounds -- hani, the egyptian man at the omelette station, made me an omelette -- very good -- then my ex-brother-in-law went -- hani offered to make him an omelette, arab-style -- shakshuka
we loved it -- lots of tomatoes,...well cooked -- stewed,...i guess...is the word -- with onions -- i think khalid said that cooking the tomatoes well, takes care of the acidity -- the eggs are cracked onto the cooked ingredients -- the egg whites get mixed in, but the egg yolk is left intact, until the end -- then,...a little cut in each,...to let the yoke leak out
so i made it a goal to have a shakshuka here
after spending more time walking around hales turgus than i should have, i finally headed back (towards the library), and i stopped at felicie, to check it out
we finally made it there, thursday -- a holiday here -- mindigas day -- the founder of lithuania -- brought the country together -- its only king -- but the founder of a dynasty,...i think -- one of his descendants, gediminas, founded vilnius,...responding to a vision of a wolf
the shakshuka was great
only difference,...the egg yokes weren't cut -- were cooked just slightly more than...to make them ooze-able -- i told the waiter...about everything -- he was going to tell the cook
actually,...looking at the picture now, i see that the egg whites weren't mixed in with the rest of the ingredients -- a la hani's shakshuka
oh -- something important -- when i first told the waiter why we were there, he said that they were no longer making shakshuka -- that it wasn't a popular item, so they took it off the menu -- i asked him, please -- he checked with the chef -- bob's your uncle
and we were the only ones in the restaurant -- inside or out -- they have a nice seating area outside -- great location
before the shakshuka, though, we had their baba ghanouj -- very different than what i'm used to (levantine arab style) -- excellent -- i loved it -- jewish style, the waiter said -- with mayonnaise -- funnily enough, the plain crackers worked better with the baba ghanouj than the soft bread did
and the mushroom soup was outstanding too -- a special local mushroom -- i don't remember the name -- something like buletas or bulentas -- i'll get it -- mushrooms are so amazing
maria wanted the baked goat cheese -- with caramelized beet roots -- she loved it -- i thought it was just all right
the gira was very good too
and look at the couch there
we sat on a similar couch -- looking at that one -- the outdoor seating area is to our left
i told the...replacement waiter -- our first waiter was great -- very friendly -- he left, though -- well, i told her that i've been to 20 or 30 restaurants in vilnius, and this one was the best
i'm going back -- for everything
first, though, about the weather -- when i looked at the weather app on my phone, thursday night, it said that it was going to dip to 46 degrees, at six o'clock, yesterday morning
i asked maria -- she said her colleagues said it got down to three degrees -- celsius -- equals...38.4 fahrenheit
back to food
i first met this restaurant in march -- i was walking around, and saw these antique instruments in the window
it's between town hall and the gates of dawn (ausros vartu (that's awsh'rus), the only remaining gate to the city), a place of good luck
then, i passed the restaurant again, a month ago, when i was on my way to see hales turgus for the first time -- a popular market, on the other side of ausros vartu
reminded me of the women who sit on the ground outside the gates of jerusalem, selling their produce |
the woman was wagging her finger at me,...about taking pictures -- i then walked by her, and we smiled at each other |
i haven't talked about the rye bread -- unbelievable -- maybe the best thing here -- certainly,...the greatest discovery...from my first trip |
when i passed the restaurant, i took two more pictures of the instruments -- thought i might get a better result than the first time
then i looked at the menu
WHOA -- SHAKSHUKA (the bottom-left item) -- WHAT THE HECK!
on mother's day, we went for a brunch at table 45, in the intercontinental hotel, on the cleveland clinic grounds -- hani, the egyptian man at the omelette station, made me an omelette -- very good -- then my ex-brother-in-law went -- hani offered to make him an omelette, arab-style -- shakshuka
we loved it -- lots of tomatoes,...well cooked -- stewed,...i guess...is the word -- with onions -- i think khalid said that cooking the tomatoes well, takes care of the acidity -- the eggs are cracked onto the cooked ingredients -- the egg whites get mixed in, but the egg yolk is left intact, until the end -- then,...a little cut in each,...to let the yoke leak out
so i made it a goal to have a shakshuka here
after spending more time walking around hales turgus than i should have, i finally headed back (towards the library), and i stopped at felicie, to check it out
we finally made it there, thursday -- a holiday here -- mindigas day -- the founder of lithuania -- brought the country together -- its only king -- but the founder of a dynasty,...i think -- one of his descendants, gediminas, founded vilnius,...responding to a vision of a wolf
the shakshuka was great
only difference,...the egg yokes weren't cut -- were cooked just slightly more than...to make them ooze-able -- i told the waiter...about everything -- he was going to tell the cook
actually,...looking at the picture now, i see that the egg whites weren't mixed in with the rest of the ingredients -- a la hani's shakshuka
oh -- something important -- when i first told the waiter why we were there, he said that they were no longer making shakshuka -- that it wasn't a popular item, so they took it off the menu -- i asked him, please -- he checked with the chef -- bob's your uncle
and we were the only ones in the restaurant -- inside or out -- they have a nice seating area outside -- great location
before the shakshuka, though, we had their baba ghanouj -- very different than what i'm used to (levantine arab style) -- excellent -- i loved it -- jewish style, the waiter said -- with mayonnaise -- funnily enough, the plain crackers worked better with the baba ghanouj than the soft bread did
and the mushroom soup was outstanding too -- a special local mushroom -- i don't remember the name -- something like buletas or bulentas -- i'll get it -- mushrooms are so amazing
maria wanted the baked goat cheese -- with caramelized beet roots -- she loved it -- i thought it was just all right
the gira was very good too
and look at the couch there
we sat on a similar couch -- looking at that one -- the outdoor seating area is to our left
i told the...replacement waiter -- our first waiter was great -- very friendly -- he left, though -- well, i told her that i've been to 20 or 30 restaurants in vilnius, and this one was the best
i'm going back -- for everything
it's pronounced felitsia |
Labels:
baba ghanouj,
bread,
crackers,
egg yolk,
felicie restaurant,
gediminas,
gira,
goat cheese,
hales turgus,
jewish,
mayonnaise,
mindigas,
mushroom soup,
omelette,
shakshuka,
table 45,
tomatoes,
vilnius,
waiter
Tuesday, July 4, 2017
brrrrr
before i get back to drinks or bibliotekas,...or anything else,...a little weather report
people have been wearing overcoats here,...today and yesterday -- raincoats,...jackets,.... -- maybe the days before too -- i don't remember -- it's 57 or 58 degrees, at four o'clock -- the high hasn't gone much over 60, the last two days,...if it has even reached 60 -- it's to get to 50, overnight -- might have dipped into the forties, the last couple of nights -- my summer costume is always,...t-shirt and shorts (polo shirt, half-sleeve shirt, whatever) -- not today or yesterday -- long-sleeve shirt,...for sure -- and long pants -- socks, too -- although i've been formal here -- want to look presentable,...when i go into these libraries -- haven't worn shorts yet,...i don't think -- maybe once,...for a very short foray -- reminds me of being in baghdad
actually, i just looked at the weather channel's web-site -- even though it reaches 66, 65 and 67 degrees, the next three days, it goes to 46, 45 and 47, overnight
funny
it's supposed to warm up, saturday -- crack the 70-degree mark
i finally was able to find the temperatures for past days, on the weather channel's web-site -- the high was 62, yesterday; 59, sunday; 70, saturday
now,...back to drinks or bibliotekas -- i like saying "biblioteka"
people have been wearing overcoats here,...today and yesterday -- raincoats,...jackets,.... -- maybe the days before too -- i don't remember -- it's 57 or 58 degrees, at four o'clock -- the high hasn't gone much over 60, the last two days,...if it has even reached 60 -- it's to get to 50, overnight -- might have dipped into the forties, the last couple of nights -- my summer costume is always,...t-shirt and shorts (polo shirt, half-sleeve shirt, whatever) -- not today or yesterday -- long-sleeve shirt,...for sure -- and long pants -- socks, too -- although i've been formal here -- want to look presentable,...when i go into these libraries -- haven't worn shorts yet,...i don't think -- maybe once,...for a very short foray -- reminds me of being in baghdad
actually, i just looked at the weather channel's web-site -- even though it reaches 66, 65 and 67 degrees, the next three days, it goes to 46, 45 and 47, overnight
funny
it's supposed to warm up, saturday -- crack the 70-degree mark
i finally was able to find the temperatures for past days, on the weather channel's web-site -- the high was 62, yesterday; 59, sunday; 70, saturday
now,...back to drinks or bibliotekas -- i like saying "biblioteka"
Friday, June 30, 2017
vilniaus bibliotekos
that's libraries of vilnius -- not too hard -- i just had to learn the ending -- endings -- of both...vilnius and biblioteka
* * *
before we get back to drinking,...a little work
when i was in cleveland, and decided, three months ago, that i would spend the summer in vilnius, i thought i'd teach english during my stay here -- i corresponded with a few schools here, and they told me that to teach english here, one needed a certificate -- after arriving, i learned that a program to get the certificate lasts four or six weeks, and costs a thousand or so euros -- in the meantime, i thought i'd put up a shingle, offering writing and editing services -- i told aneta, at my old hotel, and my landlord that i was looking for work -- zita sent me links to three translation agencies here (vertimu biuras) -- the place is littered with them -- one of them, which provides translation services for businesses and the e.u., responded -- that they were actually looking for someone to write for their blog -- they liked some of my ideas,...so that meant i needed a library -- i've been to seven or eight
the first one was the closest to my apartment of the ones recommended -- lietuvos technikos biblioteka, on sventasis ignoto gatvé -- saint ignatius street -- sventasis starts with a "sh," and is always abbreviated "sv," with a little wide v accent mark over the "s," to make the "s" a "sh" -- somebody tell me what that accent mark is called -- most of the streets in old town, especially the pre-war streets, are narrow alleys -- cobblestoned streets,...or brick streets -- alleys, really -- the way they've been, for hundreds of years -- now with elevated pavements on the sides -- probably added, early in the twentieth century
it's quiet -- the cubicles are wide -- not too many people have been there -- friendly staff
this library quickly became my favorite -- then, what i discovered, a week or two ago, made it...soar...into the stratosphere -- into...something,...supernatural
busy place -- it was hard to find desk-space
* * *
before we get back to drinking,...a little work
when i was in cleveland, and decided, three months ago, that i would spend the summer in vilnius, i thought i'd teach english during my stay here -- i corresponded with a few schools here, and they told me that to teach english here, one needed a certificate -- after arriving, i learned that a program to get the certificate lasts four or six weeks, and costs a thousand or so euros -- in the meantime, i thought i'd put up a shingle, offering writing and editing services -- i told aneta, at my old hotel, and my landlord that i was looking for work -- zita sent me links to three translation agencies here (vertimu biuras) -- the place is littered with them -- one of them, which provides translation services for businesses and the e.u., responded -- that they were actually looking for someone to write for their blog -- they liked some of my ideas,...so that meant i needed a library -- i've been to seven or eight
the first one was the closest to my apartment of the ones recommended -- lietuvos technikos biblioteka, on sventasis ignoto gatvé -- saint ignatius street -- sventasis starts with a "sh," and is always abbreviated "sv," with a little wide v accent mark over the "s," to make the "s" a "sh" -- somebody tell me what that accent mark is called -- most of the streets in old town, especially the pre-war streets, are narrow alleys -- cobblestoned streets,...or brick streets -- alleys, really -- the way they've been, for hundreds of years -- now with elevated pavements on the sides -- probably added, early in the twentieth century
the library is on the right side of the brick wall,...down the road a bit |
that's the other end of ignoto -- the library is behind us, on the left |
entering, from another gate |
before you enter the reading room -- which is around the glass case to the right |
i don't know if this library is attached to any university or college -- its web-site says it was founded by the ministry of defense, last year, and that it's funded by the state -- i've seen a few men in military uniform here -- one, with his little girl, in the cafeteria -- its books are divided into design, architecture, landscape, aviation and other technical fields -- a good percentage of them are in english -- maybe 10 to 20 percent
it's quiet -- the cubicles are wide -- not too many people have been there -- friendly staff
this library quickly became my favorite -- then, what i discovered, a week or two ago, made it...soar...into the stratosphere -- into...something,...supernatural
next day, i went to the national library, on gedimino prospektas -- the main boulevard of the new city -- gedimino starts, directly across the street from the great cathedral
that's the library building -- to the left is the parliament building, one of the main sites of anti-soviet demonstrations -- which began in 1987 |
the building was constructed in soviet times -- i think, begun, in 1963 -- but they've been redoing the inside, for 10 years -- just opened up
i like their system of numbering the days of the week -- you see that, everywhere -- shops, restaurants, etc. |
i couldn't understand what those were -- right across from the main desk |
lot of lockers
it looks like i've got myself another series -- and i'm not even done with the second item in the series
same bat channel
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