Due South

Posted in KIP, food, knitting, people, public transport on August 29th, 2007 by Danny

Last weekend I decided to relive the mediterranean atmos a bit, so I made one of my favourite summer dishes, courtesy of Delia: baked red peppers stuffed with pomodori, garlic, capers and anchovies. cwft: skully needle case, tabi 2 toe, grapes, baked peppers, Harry finished.
I brought a bunch of old home deco magazines to the SnB on Monday, and in return Zwaalie gave me this v kawaii amigurumi. I have the feeling she’s a girl (the panda I mean; zwaalie I’m pretty sure of), but I have yet to name her. Caroline suggested chin-chin, since all pandas in captivity get these double names, and something I forgot, meaning “little one” in Japanese. Other suggestions are welcome; I will award a skein of Opal Rainforest (not these particular colours I’m afraid, but still v nice) to the winner. little panda on the train & about to have a wee snack.

On Tuesday Caroline and I went to Maastricht for the afternoon, a 2.5 hr train ride. Plenty of time for KIPping so, and I also brought some knitporn to peruse in the shape of the VK 25th anniversary issue. The little panda went with us, and we took some pics of her seeing the sights. Pipoos have a really big shop there, and they sell yarn too (unlike in A’dam), but no interesting sock yarn. A pleasant day was had by all, although we mostly strolled and browsed and didn’t get to see the St Pieter caves as planned because lunch took too long (a matter of priorities, what can I say?).
little panda in bed; sashiko coasters come in handy

Anyway, I got home way past the little panda’s bedtime, so I put her to bed right away in the little red bag she’d come in, nicely tucked under her sashiko quilt.

The mothsource prophecies

Posted in home, knitting, wool on August 25th, 2007 by Danny

Finally found the source of the moths that kept appearing in my apartment. I had mothballed the stash, ventilated my wardrobe and vacuumed all nooks and crannies, but to no avail. I even noticed them in the workroom where I don’t keep anything knitting-related. Or so I thought. Turns out they were coming from the leftovers of the crappy fleece on top of a cupboard. They had already munched and procreated their way through a substantial portion, so I decided to chuck the rest. Hope this’ll put a stop to it.

In the meantime..

Posted in food, garden, knitting, people, re-enactment, spinning on August 19th, 2007 by Danny

I have finally, for the first time this year (just couldn’t be arsed somehow) done some gardening this week. With any luck there’ll be spinach and field lettuce in a few weeks, and perhaps some parsley from Italy. not for the birds The wild blackberry bush in the back of the garden (a cutting from the park, planted last year) has yielded a first handful of delicious over-ripe berries and the grapes are coming along nicely too. The birds seem to think so anyway.

The first tabi sock is now finished (piccies later), and Kees has finally received his Dead Chicken Viking Hat three days after his birthday. Marion couldn’t resist peeking from behind the umbrella I didn’t knit the second chicken leg mirrored exactly to the first (the pattern didn’t specify), so now one leg points forwards and the other one backwards. This is going to be Kees’ “Friday Nite Viking hat”; the kind of thing you wear to get in the mood on the evening before an event. Next event will be at Archeon, 1st weekend of September. Which reminds me I need to mend my dress, aargh!

I did some spinning before going out on Saturday nite, and I twined and washed the result on Sunday. hanging out to dry I bought the fleece a few years ago when I had no idea about what kind of fleece spins up well, and it’s pretty crappy; I can’t get a decent thread from it. Having to card it with dog combs instead of carding boards or even a carding mill doesn’t help either, but at least the result looks really rustic and as such it’s perfect for reenactment things, coarsely woven cloth, nålebinding, etc. I hope the camel hair Marion got me from the zoo is going to work out better.
I also got some wool (from the pelt of the acrylicus artificialus) for me and Marion’s Hallowe’en costumes, but that’s going to have to be a secret for now. All I’ll say is: it involves a crime scene…

Napoli 3

Posted in KIP, archaeology, food, holiday, knitting, language, people, public transport, shopping on August 18th, 2007 by Danny

The surroundings: the Gay-Odin shop beneath my room turns out not to be a bar for like-minded Vikings but a very fancy cioccolateria.
Gay-Odin: not only for Vikings of a certain persuasion
Further down the street there’s a barbershop where evangelists can have their hair done,
where the christians have their do’s done
and the square at the end of the street is adorned with three prime examples of Fascist architecture.
the central post office with v phallic entrancethe door sculptures remind me of the Dam monumentlook at the size of my door, baby!
Across the street from the front door is the Bar “Dany 2000” where I have my morning cappuccino before school, and my flatmates have milk and decaf. Giuseppe and his two sons run the place; Angelo looks like Nicholas Cage and his brother Gian-Carlo looks like a chubby little devil. They know everyone who lives and/or works in the street, when they have their Saints’ days, number of kids, etc.

(Some of) the fellow students: Jaqueline, a bronzed French lady in her fifties (I presume) with artificially raised (I presume again) eyebrows, who’ll talk your ears off if you let her. Or so I’m told; I’ve been spared this ordeal, perhaps my French was found lacking. There’s an Austrian called Rudolf who wants us to tell people he’s Czech and who looks like a young Alexi Sayle. Also: a charming multilingual American teacher called Luigi, a sweet English guy called Ben (who, being a “red-blooded Englishman”, doesn’t mind being called sweet but objects to anything anorakky that might (possibly, you never know) come to mind, like vegetarian or geek), primary school teacher Hurya and digital imaging teacher/researcher Clothilde from Paris, fiftysomethings Marie-Noel (French, born in Marocco) and An-Marie (Danish, wed to Japanese) who work for the EU in Brussels. Austrians seem to be in a majority; there are three in my class alone.

From Tuesday on I’m also taking three cookery classes a week, so those days are full and exhausting. It means Italian classes from nine to one followed by pranzo (lunch, usually until three if you want to do it right), a bit of sightseeing and/or shopping and some rest. Out the door again at five to take the Funicolare up to Vomero for cooking and eating, and back at the apartment at ten. All this in >30° temperatures, dropping to a toasty 22-25° at night. The only thing to wear are tank- and spaghetti-tops really, but my supply is limited. Sometimes I do a bit op KIPping on the Funicolare but the ride only takes ten minutes and on the way up it’s rather busy with commuters. I am making good way on my tabi sock though, as I often knit before going to bed, listening to a book or podcast on the Nanopod.
I spot a mistake in the heel, but I can still frog and reknit

On Saturday I go to the beach in Pozzuoli with Ben, Hurya, Alexi and Clothilde.

Ben & Alexi: Ben I wouldn’t mind having toast with some time..

I didn’t bring a bikini so I shop at la Rinascente in advance and find something in black that fits. Am going to stand out like a supernova, since my legs haven’t seen the sun in over a year. My new Birkenstock slippers are giving me a blister; so much for orthopaedic shoes. The “beach” is mostly made of concrete, but we don’t get charged for using a parasol, and the water is lovely. The Italians are definitely “anche in vacanze“, flocking to the coast in droves. Napoli is getting emptier by the day. More shops and restaurants are “chiuso per ferie“, and on Sunday you can almost sense the tumbleweed.

The corso cucina is just excellent. In six evenings we’ve made only two things I probably won’t cook again. Scarola (a kind of endive) seems to be a local favourite, but with too much anchovies even I don’t like it. Our chef Pino (yet another version of Giuseppe) is an architect and the headmaster’s brother, but above all an excellent cook and charming host (the kind of charming I’m usually allergic to, but which fortunately comes with a very nice wife here, one who makes her own liqueurs). Apart from Christian and Stefanie, an Austrian couple (it’s like a bloody Anschluss) and me, the ladies from Brussels are also there for a few nights. We’re all supposed to speak Italian together because we have to learn and Pino doesn’t speak English, but sometimes we’re just not bothered. Only to be polite. On the last evening we get the recipe for homemade Limoncello as an extra. Yum!

In week two things get more difficult in class. I find it harder to maintain concentration and I seem to need more examples before understanding a grammar point. Sometimes my mind’s a blank when it’s my turn to come up with an example: something I’m not used to. We finally get to do the imperfetto, expanding our possibilities to bore others with descriptions of past habits. Comes in handy for my presentation on I Vichinghi.
Hurya & Clothilde at Pompei: Hurya got to have the toast in the end, good for her.
The night before the last day of school I sleep badly, and I decide to skip the first part of the morning. I still feel like shit (or: like my age) when I drag myself from Dany 2000 to school (Giuseppe and sons will also be in vacanze from Saturday, so we say goodbye and I forget to take a picture, fook!), but I don’t want to miss this afternoon’s excursion to Pompei. Which is interesting, and I take some good pics. I never knew there was more than one version of “cave canem”, but it makes sense: many mosaics were prefabbed in workshops elsewhere.
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This family had stepped out of its time machine to spend a day in Pompei:
French family from the fifties
I learn a new French expression from Hurya: “plaquet de chocolat” means “sixpack”. Talk about indulgence.

Saturday is my last chance for the archaeological museum; they have an excellent collection but you have to walk all over the place to get from one highlight to the other. The finds from Pompei and the Gabinetto Segreto are definitely the best bits. The funniest statue is a headless toga with a bulge halfway: you do the math. My feet are already contemplating homocide when I meet up with Rudolf, Andrea (If I said before that Marion is the better flirt: she can take lessons from this woman, OMG!), Keiko and Taka for a goodbye dinner, but by the time we finally find a good place I’m definitely dead. The pasta is excellent, though, as is the company, the drinks afterwards, and the walk back. Nevertheless I’ll be glad to leave for home tomorrow.