Sunday, August 2, 2015

Ah, the memories that carry us onward

Hi folks,

It is summertime! That means swimming, barbecue, corn on the cob, gardening, fiery sunsets and misty mornings. It also means that anything related to technology, at least in my world, disappears almost entirely as I find myself spending nearly 10 hours a day outdoors. I have resorted to checking facebook and email once a week, perhaps twice, and my blogs have been relegated to the few spare hours a month when I can speedily write in a short post before running back outdoors again.

The nature of my work allows for ample time to reflect on the ideas and feelings we carry with us and that shape our thoughts and daily interactions. Most of us have heard the commonly stated idea that we completely change every seven years. That our personality, physical characteristics, thoughts and ideas, pass from one narrative to another. Passing into and out of narrative, an invisible narrative, the results seen in the rippling of grasses after a breeze.

The nature of this blog is in many ways like snapshots capturing the rippling grasses where the breeze had once blown, the swaying still seen in the snapshots. We cannot, with concrete certainty, demarcate where we have been. Being is nothing without meaning, and meaning is as varied and invisible and unplaceable as the wind. "There are three truths: my truth, your truth, and the truth," states a Chinese proverb. My truth is encased in a room hidden to all but myself. Your truth is invisible to me. If you shine a light upon it perhaps I can see the shadow of it upon the wall. The truth is immense. Its density and mass too much to decipher. Too much to even think about.

While the narrative rolls on, many things change and many stay the same. One that has stayed the same is this blog. For two and a half years I have written this blog. I have updated it with photos and stories, insights on reflections and activities that come and go. But the blog has continued, despite, or perhaps because of, the numerous changes that confront one in the everyday. Like life, some of the posts have heart and passion in them, others were written half-heartedly, in  moments lacking the passion and verve that show through in intermittent bursts as crisp autumn sunlight passing through the sparse, colored foliage, glancing in light and shadow upon golden hillsides. The passion is there in moments, but much of the time the passion must be derived. It needs to be worked at and developed.

Like life, some of these posts were written in the passionless moments. Simple efforts to maintain a blog because I had made it a commitment to maintain. Similar to other commitments, this blog has its bright spots, the posts that glow with energy. And it has its apprehensive posts written out of need, but lacking in desire.

Unlike life, however, when most things change, this blog has stayed. At moments it has lived as a thread, going months with no posts. Other times it has been as a thick rope, with several posts a week. But the blog lives on, like a life it changes focus and develops as the narrative marches forward. From thread to rope to thread. The narrative wind blows unseen, only indirectly visible in the ripples formed in water or the swaying of trees. This blog photographs moments in the rippling and the swaying, and in the past two and half years it is one of the few things that, for my life, has not changed.

Cheers,

Kyle

   

Sunday, July 12, 2015

UV Buena Gente Social Club, Parrilla building 2.0

"Eh, che, todo bien?"

"Dale boludoooooo"

Hi y'all,

UV Buena Gente Social Club en Salt Hill Pub-Photo courtesy of Jennifer Roby


Buena Gente! - Photo courtesy of Jennifer Roby
Everything's well in Vermont right now, despite the added stress of building a parrilla, or my derivative of one, in less than a week. I've also begun organizing weekly spanish conversations at a local pub through the Upper Valley Buena Gente Social Club. It's a group of folks, both native spanish speakers and gringos who enjoy speaking the language, who get together several times a month to converse in Spanish. I enjoy organizing the evening events at the pub. It's a great way to bring folks together from all backgrounds to share experiences through the spanish language.


Carne para que asar
Nancy, my mom, has recently retired from her job at the Tuck Business school at Dartmouth, a post she has held for 27 years, and I decided a celebration dinner would be the best opportunity to test out the new parrilla. Regrettably I should probably admit to myself that I rushed the job a bit. Doing the entire thing in one week meant that I had to devote almost every day to working on it in some way, for at least two hours and up to five hours on a few days, after I got home from my full time work which I begin every day at 6:00 in the morning.

To anyone with plans of building a brick barbecue, BE WARNED, it is worth it, but it's best to know what you are getting yourself into.

The process itself is straightforward enough. First, you should map out a basic outline of the dimensions you want for the grill. I chose to have the grill 54 inches by 36 inches, though I only used 26x26 for the actual grilling portion.
L Parrilla a la Kyle, es una obra en construccion
Do not build a grill just to cook hot dogs and hamburgers. You can cook hot dogs and hamburgers in much easier ways. Build a brick parrilla for the big stuff. Sirloin, brisket, ribs, chorizo. This is what a big grill is meant to cook. Save the dogs and burgers for the frying pan. 

You should make a mental map in your head of how you want the parrilla to look. Do you want it low to the ground or at chest level? Do you need added working space or just the grill itself will suffice?

Furthermore, once you have the dimensions, get the dimensions of the bricks and do the calculations of how many you will need, and always get a few extra.

When you are working NEVER RUSH! We rushed a bit and one of the sidewalls was slightly skewed, which I could successfully hide a bit by chipping off around some of the bricks with a hammer and chisel to make the side look straight. But if you really want it to look good take breaks to survey the progress, keeping an eye out for any misalignment or aesthetic eyesores. Because once the mortar sets you won't want to take the sledghammer to it just because you severely misaligned an entire row of bricks.

Also, don't be afraid to improvise. I was stuck the day before the asado with an unfinished grill and not enough brick to complete the job. After thinking things through I discovered that we could complete all the fundamental stuff so the grill could function without actually completing it.

The grill worked excellently for the first asado. Though I suggest if you plan to show off your new grill and have a grand opening asado with it, secretly do a pre-asado a week or so before so you can get to know the grill, how it works and what temperature it cooks at. The photos here are from the second time using it and the meat was infinitely more tender and cooked more slowly.

The grill I made isn't fancy, and doesn't raise or lower to keep the meat at a specific temperature. So I will need to learn how to maneuver the coals to get the optimal temperature for each cut of meat. This will come with time. But as I recently learned from experience, you probably don't want to cook for people on a grill you've never used before. Master the parrilla first, then invite the guests.

Now you're probably wondering how the party went. You probably are thinking I burnt the ribs, or charred the sausages, or dried out the brisket. Well, all of that pretty much happened. Fortunately though the damage was moderate to minimal, and the guests enjoyed the warm hospitality and the food regardless. A great chimichurri (Argentine barbecue sauce) helped cover the dry and tough brisket, while American style barbecue sauce covered the charred flavor of ribs.

To end this section on a bright note, building a brick barbecue/parrilla is a big task, but it's worth it. There's nothing like grilling meat over embering coals on a grill you made with your very hands. Furthermore, the more you use the grill, the better you will get to know it, and the better your barbecue will be.

Below are a few more photos as well as some from the garden.

Cheers
Tomato plant with one little tomato
Peas almost ready!
La primera cosecha

Tuesday, June 9, 2015

Gaucho Gardening II, Parrilla building basics 101

Hi folks,

Radishes and carrots growing well!
Spring is turning to summer and the weather has begun to cycle between hot dry days shot through with seemingly spontaneous inundating thunder showers. I am enjoying life campesino style but do experience moments of longing, pining perhaps, for el estilo porteño. This is why I have decided to build a parrilla porteño style and have an awesome barbecue for the 4th of July celebrations. 


Now that I've got the garden under control and things are growing I've found a little extra time to devote to the construction of the parrilla. I've already shoveled out the area I'll use--disrupting a large ant colony and transplanting a blueberry bush in the process. The ants attacked me vigorously, scuttling up my shovel and chomping my fingers and toes--yes, I wore chanclas digging : )--with their little pincers. I felt a wave of sadness as I destroyed their little home, removing all the dirt and disrupting their little underground roads, but then I thought of all the meat, yes, todo el carne, that I would cook over that parrilla. How grand it would be. I decided the ants were a small sacrifice to pay for such a succulent reward. 

The herb garden: Mint, cilantro, and basil
Tomato plants!


You can see the area where I'll build the parrilla below. 

Parrilla foundation



Cholao: Postre con anana, banana, kiwi, mango y mas!


I have also found a local area spanish conversation group called Upper Valley Buena Gente. They hold weekly coffee chats and monthly book clubs where the members read a book a month in Spanish and discuss it. We met last Sunday for the first time and I have been asked to help organize a spanish language get-together once a week in the afternoons. The time and date have yet to be hashed out but hopefully we can start the conversations soon. 

In the meantime, the garden is growing, the parrilla is being built, and I'm having cravings for chorizos and El Cuartito's fuggazetta relleno! Ah, que rico! 

Y mira! Which is to say look. I dug up this photo, taken a month ago, of my attempt at making Cholao! That Colombian postre riquisimo!


Cheers y un gran abrazo

Kyle
Mate con vista del jardin!




Monday, May 11, 2015

Gaucho Gardening

The little seedlings ready for planting
Apparently spring has begun, at least that's what the weather folks say. Though after going from a week of freezing temperatures to a week of 80 degrees, it seems more like we skipped spring and jumped right into summer. That being said, I don't think I have much to fear from any late frosts this year so I have no qualms about planting in early May.

Moving the cow patties!
The soil for the garden arrived last friday and I started planting that very day. It is customary in Vermont to buy the soil from a local farmer who delivers it right into the garden from the bed of his pickup truck. The farmer arrived with his truck bed full of the darkest, richest-looking soil and deposited it in the middle of the garden. After I had leveled out the soil I planted the early spring vegetables: mesclun, carrots, and peas. Later, over the weekend when I could find a little extra time, I was able to plant parsley, swiss chard, and radishes and am beginning preparation for tomatoes, peppers, and the other vegetables.

Mapping out the garden
Gardening is tough work. But hopefully it will pay off with fresh, homegrown veggies.

Perhaps some fresh chimichurri will be in order with my parsley and cilantro plants!

There is a bit of exercise involved in gardening--digging, planting, general full body movement. There is patience involved--tending to the plants and the daily tasks of maintaining a healthy garden--and there is a hint of love.

A little care now will give plenty to enjoy throughout the summer.

Cheers,

Kyle


Wednesday, April 22, 2015

Vermont Spring

Hi folks,

Having left Buenos Aires a month ago I am quite surprised with how quickly I've settled into the Vermont culture once more. Dinners at 6PM, driving everywhere, silence. Some days I see more turkeys than I do people, but this is what I grew up with so I suppose I'm just a little hardwired for this environment.
Getting the newspaper cups ready!
It is springtime in Vermont, and that means garden season. Though planting doesn't begin until May, I've been hard at work with my brother Aiden getting the garden boundaries laid and putting the wood barriers up.


I've made starter cups out of newspaper. I prefer newspaper cups because, when the plants are ready, you can easily unwrap the cup from around the plant and stick it right in the soil in May. I've started mesclin (lettuce), as it is an early spring crop with a long germination and harvesting time (a little more than two months).


Gardening is a meditative activity. When you first start out the task can seem overwhelming, your mind tells you that the task you're looking to do is too big, there's too much commitment involved, that it's easier to buy the veggies from the supermarket. But soon, if you're dedicated at it, you get to a state of focus, of concentrated energy. The mind calms, until SPLAT! You get hit with a shot of mud. That's my brother Aiden. He doesn't see gardening as meditative. He enjoys the process, the little activities that require hands-on work. He loves the textures and the sensory stuff, the way the earth feels in your hands as you remove it, or turning the soil and getting it ready for planting.

Hammering!

As I work hard, finding inner calm at hammering in the wood barriers around the garden border, he flings mud at me that he's mixed together into a soupy broth in the wheelbarrow. We're an odd gardening duo, and a terribly inefficient one at that, but we get the job done eventually.

Whether you are at work, exercising, gardening, or doing any number of countless hobbies, it's good to remember that the same activity can be accomplished in a myriad number of ways. We all hold opinions about how others perform activities. I think the way my brother gardens is terribly inefficient, but he's also nine years old so I can't hold him to it. I can't force him, or anyone else for that matter, to see my way as the best and truest way of accomplishing the task.

Aiden finds my way of gardening to be boring. We hold to our own ways of doing things, I tell him he can do things more efficiently, but he just shrugs and carries on. I demonstrate to him the effectiveness of my method, but for his own nine-year-old reasons he continues in his own independent way. I can't force him to change his point of view, all I can do is show him that multiple viewpoints exist, and that perhaps another viewpoint is faster, cleaner, more efficient. In the end though he must decide for himself the way he wants to proceed with our shared project, and I must work also to keep our gardening relationship functioning, so come mid-May, little green shoots can start to jump out of the soil.

Cheers,

Kyle


An unlikely team


Sunday, March 29, 2015

Farewell Argentina

The time has come for a big change. The chilly Patagonian winds are bearing up from the south and the sunny faces of summer have given way to fall. The sun arcs lower now and the skyline has begun its annual burning of bright autumn colors above the palos borrachos, drunken trees, with their swollen trunks and wide branching limbs now covered with pink and white blossoms, signaling winter. The smell of asado is strong, the taste of mate bitter. The wind bites cold and I must leave Buenos Aires, my home for over two years.

Photo of the Obelisco by Aldo Sessa
For my farewell I would like to write on my memories, what I carry with me now, the lessons I have learned and the impressions I have kept close. 

I love mate in the morning. The mate I drink is strong: Nobleza Gaucha. One sip fills you with the power to get through all the morning's activities. It is the healthiest energy drink, the strongest, and the only one I will ever touch. 

There are many peculiarities and incongruities. Eating dinner at 10:30 at night is normal as well as arriving an hour late to a party. Last night I ate dinner at midnight. Long live the friendly camaraderie in this city that doesn't sleep.  

Political parties bus people by the thousands into the city center for rallies or demonstrations. Strength in numbers perhaps. My street, 9 de Julio, is often the center of such events. The marchers wave flags and banners in support of the communist left, photos of Che Guevara, Chavez and other firebrand anti-yanquis and anti-colonial mantras. It is such a grand show of popular support, yet government orchestrated and funded. What happened to the silent majority? I wonder how much of this is driven by popular will or by the lining of people's pockets.

I will miss you El Cuartito. The fuggazetta rellena will live long in my memory. It's a thick pizza, filled with cheese and topped with a layer of onion. I have never tasted a pizza quite like it before. It is distinctly Porteño, and one of the ultimate comfort foods.

I cannot forget the asado. Of course I must mention that. I say one has not tried meat until they have tried Argentine asado. We can do good barbecue in the states, but the sheer size of the cuts of meat, the variety--costillas, lomo, cuadril, vacio, chorizo, morcilla, chinchulines, molleja--I've never seen a barbecue with all of those in the states. In Argentina, to have all types of meat at an asado, is a commonplace affair. There is a tradition of cooking meat slow, a patient, day-long affair in which people enjoy each other's company. I have found the asado to be more exciting than the traditional American barbecue. It is slower and has greater variety. People mingle and socialize, and the anticipation grows as the meat cooks. Just when you think you can't wait any longer the first course finishes and you devour a delicious chorizo or morcilla sausage, before mingling some more. Time allows for the experience to develop, to become richer and more mature. Asado satisfies both the gut and the soul.
Jardin Botanico
I will miss the autumn and the spring, and the way the cool winds blow and toss the leaves which dance and spin above the pavement in San Telmo, Recoleta, Palermo, or quiet Colegiales. Buenos Aires has the perfect climate in the autumn and spring.

I will miss the many wonderful relationships I have developed. Buenos Aires feels like a second home, and I know that, though I am leaving for the moment, this place, these memories, the people all remain with me. I'll carry it all with me for as long as I gain in wisdom from such remembrances.

But there are also the difficult memories, the ones not mentioned in light conversation. They are heavy and people don't want to hear them unless they are comfortable with topics most people find indigestible. These are the memories that tend to stick the longest. They are the most difficult to understand, and often take the longest to let go.

This city can be cruel. It threatens the senses with images and actions that give rise to the hysteria and fury Porteños know so well. 

I have seen two dogs run over on the widest avenue in the world. The dogs marched across as the wide line of heavy machinery vroomed down upon them. All one could do was watch, as the dogs faced down the firing squad of cars careening forward. Both lived, but wimpered and limped away helplessly. Both stray.

You know you're hardened when you no longer feel guilty about seeing the homeless in the street, or the kids begging for food and change. You accept they have no right to food, no right to your money, though once you felt guilty when the faced you with their sob story and asked for change.


The world is not fair. It doesn't have to be fair. The homeless sleep in the streets. The beggars, always aggressive, with their brisk young walk--they are always young--approaching you, shaking your hand, pretending your friends, but you're nothing to them but what you can give. They only want you for what they deserve, your money.

The circumstances of others, their decisions, their needs, cannot and should not concern you. In this city idealism easily gives way to the realities of the situation. There are too many asking for help. There are too many trying to swindle. There are too many who will betray your trust at a moment's notice if they see an advantage in doing so.

You begin to look at people and circumstances coldly. You feel no compassion for those you don't know, those who are not your friends, you do not look at them, you ignore their pleas for money, that they have a baby to feed, that they haven't eaten in days, that they cannot work. You ignore all of that because people are capable of anything, and any sign of weakness, of guilt, of compassion, and you throw yourself to the sharks.

When those young bucks with their brisk walks see a weakness they do not let you go until they've gotten something. They stick to you like a leach, speaking and speaking, justifying their circumstances. They tell you it's not their fault. They cannot work. They are forced to beg in the street. They say everything they want you to hear, buttering you up for the picking, wearing you down with words and complaints and friendly gestures until the only way to get rid of them is to give them what they want. You must pay them to leave you in peace, and when you pay them you feel more guilty. They shake your hand, they pat you on the back, and they leave you thinking to themselves what a sucker.
Asado in Peruti Village - Misiones, Argentina.

Meanwhile you go home, knowing you were taken advantage of, and hating yourself for it. The more this happens the harder you become, until you're like the rock of Gibraltar. They can see when you're a rock. Your eyes, deadpan when they begin their usual speal, and they don't even finish. They know from looking at you that you're not shark bait, and they move on to give their speal to the next poor sod with a weakness for Christian guilt and compassion.

But then there are the late nights. The blur and rush of people mingling and connecting, all gathering at the asado, the joda, or the despedida, forming new connections, developing new networks, and becoming a part of new crowds. Friendships form through mutual connections, which come and go so quickly here. This is a city of transition, of constant change. It is vast, it is growing, and it is moving forward, sweeping the people along with it.

I am no longer swept along by the progress. I'm returning to slower waters, Vermont, my country home. I will miss you Buenos Aires, but this is not the end. I still drink mate, love asado, will build a parrilla, and will look forward to coming back, reconnecting, seeing those so close to my heart, and experiencing this wonderful city again.

All best until next time,

Kyle







Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Felix Felicis

As I have alluded to in previous posts, Buenos Aires is not necessarily the best place for getting a fine cup of coffee. Yes the city is full of quaint, Parisian cafes and yes the cafes have nobly dressed waiters, and yes the environment is vintage... but is the coffee any good? In general no. For me the measure of good coffee is the amount of sugar I have to add. If sugar is necessary, the coffee is no good. If I drink the coffee straight, then it's a sign they are doing something right.



They make a killer Americano!

In most neighborhoods in the city the cafes are very traditional. They serve tostadas and medialunas for breakfast, a filet with papas for lunch, and a merienda of common tea and toast with cheese and jelly. However, in Palermo one can find a number of high quality, artesanal cafes, all within a 10 block radius. That's a heavy concentration given the size of the city and the relative lack of good-tasting coffee anywhere else.





The large picture windows offer a wonderful view onto the street
In my last post I talked about Lattente. Aside from Lattente, there are a few other cafes in the vicinity that offer trendy, new ways to drink coffee that really highlight the flavors of the beans, allowing for a more artistic, interactive experience. These include Full City Coffee, Coffee Lab, and recently opened Felix Felicis. In these local cafes you're not just drinking cafe con leche sweetened with sugar, in these cafes you get to experience the soil, the climate, and the altitude of coffee-growing regions around the world. Forget leche, lets drink coffee the real way.

Creative postcards make a
wonderful and inexpensive gift.
Recently opened Felix Felicis, located on Cabrera and Serrano, offers yet another wonderful excuse for enjoying a hot cup of artesanal coffee. The baristas are well-trained, having worked and trained in cafes such as Lattente. The location lacks decoration as of yet, but the white walls and expansive sidewalk offer great potential, and the large glass windows allow in lots of light and provide an excellent view for those who wish to sip their coffee at one of the window seats and watch the city pass by.


I went for opening day and tried an Americano which was quite good, and which had the strong, sweetly acidic flavor of the Colombian beans they use. They don't serve much in terms of food, as Felix Felicis is more about sharing quality coffee and conversation than it is about offering as much as possible for the clientele, and in a neighborhood of expats, students and tourists, this often makes for a winning combination.

Cheers,

Kyle

A view from the entrance!