Tag Archives: Spain

Las Calles de Salamanca

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How does one even attempt to answer the question: What was your favorite day abroad? Does she focus on her first time ordering a café in Spanish, nerves mounting and clogging her throat to the point where it seeps out as a mere whisper? Does she talk about her first walk around Salamanca with Pepita, panicking that she has made a stupid decision to come to Spain when she can barely understand 10% of what her host mom is telling her? Does she refer to the first song she sings with La Clerecía international student choir, where the simple, cheerful notes of the completely foreign melody are the most familiar thing she has heard in weeks?

Any of those questions, if answered, would provide sufficient evidence that they each were, in their own way, the “best” day.

However, after perusing my beat-up handmade journal in search of inspiration, I came across an entry labeled (and I kid you not!): Best day so far in Spain.

Casa Lis

The day started out like every other Saturday in Spain: cathedral bells tolling beneath the bright, chilly December sun, lukewarm coffee at the ready on the little two-person glass table in the kitchen. Pepita was perched on the edge of her white plastic stool, dunking a María cookie and a small plain muffin into her mug of coffee. I sat down across the table from her, still wearing my collared, blue striped “man-j’s” (wanted to make sure I was as modest as possible in these less revealing men’s pajamas) and chatted with Pepita in my slightly less broken Spanish about the day’s errands. She needed to pick up some casanuecesgomas para la cafeteria, and some bacalão.

So off we went to buy some freshly roasted chestnuts from the street vendors on Calle de Zamora, a new rubber ring for the coffee percolator from a ferretería west of Spain’s most beautiful Plaza Mayor, and some fresh Portuguese fish at the Mercado adorned with Christmas lights spelling out Felice Fiesta! We stopped at Plaza 23 on our way to the umbrella repair shop to indulge in some bacon-mousse tapas and café before inquiring whether the umbrella repair shop could fix my umbrella, purchased from the beautiful Casa Lis art nouveau and art deco museum (unfortunately none of the hundreds of leather handles crammed on the walls in the cramped shop could be fitted to the cracked grey handle of my 15€ umbrella).

Because Pepita also needed hair dye (número 6, mind you), we stopped at the farmacia next to our apartment on Gran Vía before lunch and the famous siesta. A little Saturday afternoon studying ensued at our favorite little dive, Café Corillo on Calle Meléndez, endearingly referred to as “The Jazz Café.”

Universitarios Católicos de Salamanca

After an hour or so of reflection and prayer at La Clerecía (there really aren’t words to describe the incredible feeling of calm and awe that washes over you when you sit on the creaky wooden pew, stare up at the chipped golden-plated sculptures of María y Jesús and the many saints surrounding you, and smell the stale incense from the evening’s Misa that ended about an hour before), I walked out onto Calle de Serranos to meet up with a Spanish amigo who was escorting me to an early potluck-style Christmas dinner with our fellow choir friends, in honor of my leaving five days later.

The house smelled of meat and potatoes, stuffed peppers, meatballs, and una tarta de Belén, a luscious homemade cake displaying a tiny paper model of the nativity scene. My contribution? Candy canes!

Sí lo he visto, “Yes, I’ve seen them,” said a friend of mine. ¡Pero nunca en mis manos!, “But never in my hands!”

The deepest, quietest part of the noche engulfed me as I walked home down Calle Jesús to Pepita’s house. I knew she would be waiting up for me (as she always did), Christmas villancicos playing softly from the living room where she would be knitting on the couch.

I looked to my right, down the normally tourist-filled calle towards the silhouette of the two catedrales, rising upwards into the starry sky that blanketed this captivating city.

This had certainly been my favorite día in Salamanca.

A Weekend in Barcelona

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We all smile. We all laugh. We all love.

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Happy Thanksgiving everyone! To usher in the season, some friends and I decided we needed to make some “handmade” turkeys! You know, the ones you make in first grade? Well, we grabbed our construction paper and crayons and, after siesta, headed to a café to commence the arts ‘n’ crafts. After we finished, we went to the Plaza Mayor for a photo shoot with our delectable creations. Needless to see, we kind of stood out (pretty sure we were the subject of quite a few people’s Salamanca photos as well).

Today was another adventure with Pepita! After lunch, Pepita, Pilar and I rode the bus to Santa Marta where we were meeting up with Pilar’s brother and his wife. It was at their house that I saw, for the first time, how you make lace. It was an incredibly complicated-looking process, but Pilar’s sister-in-law insisted that it wasn’t as hard as it looked. Difficult as it looked or not, the lace-making process was absolutely mind-boggling for me, and my kudos go out to her and anyone else who’s ever hand made lace!

After admiring the lace, we piled into the car and drove the 70 kilometers to Béjar. That’s when I met Hugo, Pepita’s grandnephew. Not even one year old, he was all smiles the entire time we were there! His abuelo (“grandfather”), Pepita’s brother, speaks English quite well and he was helping me with my homework before our paseo (“stroll”) with the rest of the family through the streets of Béjar. The snow-topped mountains were visible over the tops of the Christmas decorations just starting to go up around the little town. Almost everyone that walked by us stopped to say hola and smile down at Hugo who was wiggling like a little worm, galleta (“cookie”) in one hand, a corner of his tiny sleeping bag in the other.

All I could think while we were there with this small, precious child was how similar people are to each other. We all smile. We all laugh. We all love. It was refreshing to say the least, to be surrounded by people who are so willing to share these feelings with each other. It was, yet again, another wonderful afternoon in España!

Today’s Adventure: Croquetas

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Croquetas are a staple in the Spanish diet, especially in the world of tapas (small plates usually taken with a caña – “beer” – between mealtimes). These little cylindrical fried yummies include oil, flour, milk and a pinch of salt and pepper. You can then add any kind of “filling” you like, the most popular being jamón y huevos (“ham and eggs”), pollo (“chicken”) and pescado (“fish”).

Well, after I got home from church this afternoon, Pepita decided to teach me how to make Croquetas. My friend Justine, a fellow americana, came over, as well as Pepita’s friend Pilar for the lesson. Pilar knitted while the rest of us mixed and rolled and dipped the little doughy Croquetas.

The Croquetas turned out quite delicious, and I’ll have to say I’m pretty excited to attempt to make them on my own for my family back in Michigan. I hope they go well with a Christmas turkey!

“The rain in Spain falls mainly on the plain”

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There’s nothing I have yet to experience that compares to the moment here in Salamanca between my sleeping and waking when the tolling of the cathedral bells mingles with the finale of the night’s dreams. They end at exactly the same moment, and at that same moment I find myself suddenly awake. Everything I had left behind when sleep came hours before rushes back, filling my head now void of the evening’s dreams.

The only difference this morning was the addition of the pitter-patter of rain outside on my balcony. I was curled up under the light blue quilt, the room a fuzzy blur around me. Then I remembered. Today was a field trip day!

Despite the rain predicted all weekend here in Salamanca and the surrounding pueblos, Pepita had decided to take me to Alba de Tormes, a small pueblo previously “owned” by the Duke of Alba. Situated on the River Tormes, this small pueblo is full of beautiful churches of Romanesque-Mudejar style from the 11th through the 19th centuries. The ruins of the Dukes of Alba Castle also sit regally on the highest point of the pueblo. Built for Fernando the Great Duke of Alba in the 15th century, it was one of the most important palace-castles in Spain, as well as the cradle of the House of Alba. The tower is still standing and inside is a magnificent Renaissance fresco of the battle of Mülhberg and the duke’s many victories.

After touring the castle, Pepita and I visited a tiny artesian pottery shop where we found ourselves in the middle of a tour group of older Andalusians who were visiting Alba de Tormes and Salamanca for the weekend. The man creating the beautiful pottery was a member of only three families who still knew this specific trade.

By six o’clock Pepita and I had already eaten our bocadillos (a type of Spanish sandwich all host-mom’s love to give their host-children) and drank a café con leche, so we opted for Fanta naranja (“orange Fanta”) in the Plaza Mayor. When we left the bar, the rain had stopped and we chatted and laughed our way back to the bus station. On the ride back to Salamanca, Pepita was counting the number of bus stops (in English!) before ours. I think we giggled the entire way back.

Sitting here at the dining room table across from Pepita (who’s been typing this one text message for the last five minutes), I can’t help but think how fortunate I am to be having this experience in Spain (Her niece just had a baby, so she’s passing it on to the rest of the family!). I’m definitely going to miss Salamanca, but mostly I’m going to miss living with Pepita. From the moment the church bells chime until I curl up again under my quilt, I never know on what kind of adventure she’ll take me.

Title courtesy of ramez.