Thursday, November 25, 2010

Gobble Gobble

I should start this blog post by saying that Thanksgiving is absolutely my favorite holiday, so I was a little intimidated by my own expectations for recreating this amazing day in New Zealand. BUT it turned out to be the absolute best foreign Thanksgiving I could ask for. All us Americans know Thanksgiving is about three things: food, people and being thankful for both so I have dedicated all of the below words to explaining how I had an amazing day complete with excellent food, excellent people, and a whole lot of gratitude.

I’ll start with the food…It took one full day of cooking plus a day of shopping and prep but IT WAS NOT IN VAIN! Stu and I with the help of our friends Laura, Rhian, and especially Jo, made a really freakin’ delicious meal for24 happy travelers. There was enough food for everyone to be properly (over)full (1 big plate plus seconds for most). It was a pretty traditional meal with all the standard dishes but everything was just right, despite some stretches to find ingredient substitutes.
MEAT: We cooked both a turkey & chicken for our main meats. We did both cooked in the oven (with oven bags—thanks to June's advice!) with a few veggies floating around and salt/pepper/olive oil for seasoning. The turkey and the chicken were actually both about the same size (3 kilos or 6ish pounds) and they took 2 hours and 45 min to cook. At the last minute we bought 2 pre-cooked (little) chickens from the grocery store to supplement…which ended up being a good idea. We also had gravy made from the pan juices AND cranberry sauce which our German friend Laura found at the grocery store! We spent ages looking for fresh cranberries and had sort of given up on the idea of making cranberry sauce but on the day of the feast Laura found some jars of it in the international section at Pack’n Save. The cranberry sauce definitely madethe meal complete.

SIDES: For sides we had two different kids of stuffing (one was a Stu’s mom’s pork sausage and cornbread stuffing recipe) and the other was a variation of a recipe got from Sarah Helinek (bread, chicken stock, celery, onion…+ the turkey giblets…that was my Brittish friend Jo’s addition and it was actually really tasty). We also had mashed potatoes that used sour cream, cream cheese, milk, butter, cheddar cheese, chives, and garlic—sort of an amalgamation of recipes (my brother Jon and Stu’s mom). Then we had sweet potato casserole complete with marshmallows on top (epicurous). The next casserole was a green bean casserole with a cornflake/cheese topping (epicurous + creative input). And of course, to round it all out: rolls and salad (apples, cheddar cheese and Mikaela’s salad dressing which I love on the salad). OH and of course we had asparagus. Stu and Kong and Heho had done some asparagus harvesting just that morning and Kong was kind enough to cook us all that they brought home with an Asian sauce and bacon. Though not a traditional Thanksgiving dish, it was definitely fitting given how much asparagus has been part of our life here in Napier.

DESSERTS: For dessert we had pumpkin pie (four of them, each nicely divided into 6 slices) and a BIG cranberry-apple crumble (or casserole depending on if it’s served as a side or a dessert). Stu’s familynormally serves it as a side dish but we ran out of oven space for the main meal…regardless of it’s order of appearance in the meal it was AMAZING and the dried cranberries we used turned out to be just as delicious as fresh ones. Oh and we had vanilla ice cream to go with thedesserts. It was pretty funny to watch everyone eat at this point because everyone was already full (as they should be) but also couldn't let the dessert on their plate go to waste....I heard about 15 different people say "there's no way I can eat this" and then proceed to all but lick the plate clean.

Now onto the people. I should start by saying that we live in a hostel with about 75 people. Obviously, it is impossible to cook for 75 and I have to say it was difficult to narrow things down to 24. Anyway, that aside, it was a wonderful group complete with all the nationalities I’ve mentioned before. I think we had 2 Mexicans, 6 Germans, 2 Americans, 2 Scottish, 1 Malaysian, 1 Korean, 1 Czech, and perhaps 9 Brits? Definitely a disproportionate number of Brittish people…Everyone who ate with us was a long term traveler, so someone we've known for at least a month now and who we will continue to live with through Christmas or the end of January. Out of all those people only 1 had ever eaten a Thanksgiving dinner before (1 of the Mexican guys lived in America for a few years with his family) so being able to share a first Thanksgiving with 21 new friends was a pretty cool experience.

As for appreciating both of these things… I can’t even begin to tell you how grateful I am. Stu gave a really nice speech at the beginning of the meal. I can’t remember exactly what he said but he talked about being grateful for all that we have and he asked everyone to take a minute of silence to recognized how lucky all of us were to be in a foreign country so far from home, but in each other’s company. I know that the biological family that you grow up with is perhaps the only constant family, but it seems to me that if you are open and honest you can find family almost anywhere you go. I am so lucky to be apart of so many families at this point in my life. I have my Curme family, my Bowles family, my Craft family, my Howe family, my Georgetown family, my Gwynn Valley family…and now Stu and I are a part of this Napier family that is forming. It is made up of travelers so I perhaps this family will not be as permanent as the others, but however transient it may be, it was our family for Thanksgiving 2010 and I am grateful to have shared it with them.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

spargel, espárrago, asparago (ASPARAGUS!)

I’m writing to you again from Napier, and I don’t think it will be the last post from here either! Stu and I are starting to find a rhythm to the life here and it’s starting to feel more comfortable every day.

Job updates: Right now we are both harvesting asparagus 3-4 mornings each week with 4 other people from our hostel (2 Mexicans, 1 Korean, 1 Malaysian). This is something at least, but barely enough to cover rent so we’ve been looking for other things too. So far Stu has found pottery (obviously no income yet, but there is a good chance of selling things in the shop attached to his studio) and I have found a job at a café called Milk & Honey. It is a very cool café-independently owned and sort of eco-themed and pretty upscale, right on the beach. I think I will get on there pretty well. In general, things are pretty slow here in Napier on the job front….the restaurant business has not yet picked up for the summer rush and all the rain we’ve been getting has pushed back the start dates for a lot of the orchard work. We’re hoping that I’ll get lots of hours at the café (and if not perhaps a night time bar tender/waitress job to supplement) and that Stu will pick up either a full time orchard job or a restaurant job sometime in the next week or 2. Work is obviously good for the money but it’s also nice for meeting people and having a sense of purpose and structure to our time here. (Look at me, always trying to structure things…)

Life update: Life outside jobs is pretty awesome. It seems everyone (okay…most of the people) staying at our hostel are pretty cool. Like I said before we’ve got people from lots of different countries (Mexico, France, Malaysia, Korea, Germany, Italy, England, Scotland, Ireland, USA, Canada…) though Germany clearly dominates. Even as I write this, I am listening to a French guy try to explain to a Mexican guy about how to kill and cook a pig (something he did recently on a WWOOFing experience), both of them using a language that is not native to them (English). I love hostels. Most people staying here are above average cooks (with a couple full-fledged chefs!) so there is lots of cooking and meal sharing, which I love. Just today I made my own bread (an Italian recipe that I got by way of my German friend, Laura) and made asparagus soup for a few friends (I have eaten so much asparagus these last 2 weeks, I fear I may turn into one). I’m planning on doing a big Thanksgiving feast as well…if any Americans reading this have recipe ideas please send them along!! When we are not working or cooking, we go to the beach or watch movies in the big TV room (I have officially watched all three Lord of the Rings movies while in NZ) or sit around in the courtyard and enjoy adult beverages. It’s a pretty good life really.

Although it seems crazy, I have sort of enjoyed waking up at 5:45am to go to work. I like the feeling of waking up while the rest of the world stays sleeping. Plus when you leave the house by 6:30am you catch the sunrise and the gorgeous early morning light as you drive by the beach and all the orchards and vineyards….I don’t know it just feels nice to be a part of the early bird crew. Plus on days when you don’t have to work, sleeping in past 8am feels miraculous.

Well, that’s all for now. While we are here (in Napier) internet communication might be sporadic. Connection at the hostel is terrible and expensive so we have to go down to the internet café in town…so if you don’t hear from us for a few days you know why!