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Germany and beyond
UA
Ch9 = y on IAD-MUC, not on FRA-IAD salt and pepper shakers = y Airshow = y Empower = n (haven't had it all year) LH short-hauls none of the above: no audio or video or food at all UA 962 IAD MUC 1730 0730 9J 777. Really nice cabin crew. Purser was an energetic little Greek (I presume; his family had a place in the Greek islands) guy named Tony; the rest of the staff were pretty senior, Germanic women: as I said, very nice, and one of them was a pretty blonde. The one I liked best was a Hausfrau type who kept making sure I had enough to eat and chided me when I didn't take a chocolate (I relented). We chatted later, just before landing, and she and other FAs showed a strong interest in and real knowledge of French wines. To begin Asian soba noodles with citrus-cured smoked salmon Ginger soy hijiki sauce My choice. United does well with smoked things, especially trout and salmon. This was moist and good. (or) Fresh mozzarella and Roma tomatoes Aged balsamic vinegar and rosemary oil Seasonal salad leaves Javanese or classic Caesar dressing Javanese apparently means sweetened soy vinaigrette with ginger. The staff on this flight seemed to think the name was "Japanese," which would be more plausible anyway. The FA serving this gave me about 5 tablespoons of it, which was okay, but I had to shake each forkful to get dressing off it. Main course Roasted pork loin with bourbon whipped sweet potatoes Haricots verts with shallots and spicy pecans I've had this before; it had been decent but not so good that I needed to order it again. Veal loin steak with Marsala cream and red peppercorns Rhubarb saute and butternut squash Delicious. A smallish portion done medium-well, the Marsala cream being really a brown sauce (good for me), lots of red peppercorns. Rhubarb saute was very very sour but interesting. The main problem was that the "veal loin steak" was really a pork chop. Perhaps the roasted pork was really veal, I didn't see. I had a decent Chablis with the meal. The other white choice was a California (Geyser Peak, I think) Chard. Also available were some bourgeois-cru Medoc and the oaky but tasty Eshcol Cabernet. Wild mushroom, ginger and garlic wontons Ocean seaweed salad and miso egg drop broth My seatmate, a roving manager of a multinational, very interesting to talk to, had this and (in contrast to what I'd seen on other flights) ate every bit. We talked a bit about Munich, his home, and his plan for my stay was to spend one week at the Old Art Gallery and two weeks at the New Art Gallery. He takes (I think he said) 4 international trips a month and hates flying (but enjoys visiting cultural attractions in China, India, wherever). Dessert Regional cheese plate Maytag Blue and Wisconsin Gouda Eli's Caramel Brownie Fudge tart I had this latter, eating around the cheesecake heart. It was extraordinarily sweet but otherwise okay. One thing I enjoyed was that it was topped with bits of toffee (the kind I used to love in Butter Brickle ice cream, back when I could eat ice cream, and would save out all the little "brickles" for last). Godiva chocolates I said no, but the attendant made a moue, so I said okay, just one, and she brightened up. I had a chocolate cream that was somewhat better than I remembered. Prior to arrival Seasonal fresh fruit appetizer, your choice of fruit yogurt, cold cereal and breakfast breads Bistro eggs with bacon and tomatoes Smoked Gouda cream sauce Slept through this. I would like to have tried the eggs again just to see if they were as horrible as I recall. Woke up after the breakfast service and was served a glass of Dom as a consolation prize (was offered seconds but didn't take more). LH 2447 MUC TXL 1945 2055 18A 735. The Business Lounge was empty, but I was invited to the crowded noisy Senator Lounge, where there was a pretty generous buffet and tons of soberly-dressed Bavarians (and not a few Americans). There were Tucher Hefeweizen and Lowenbrau Pilsener on draft; it's not self-service here, you call over one of the staff, who does a better job of pulling a beer than I would. On the board were egg and tuna and something unidentifiable salads, fresh fruit (excellent kiwis), fruit yogurt, leberwurst (ok), hamburger patties (very oniony), curried tuna patties (good with beer), tomato salad (very popular and so I missed out). All sorts of baked goods. All sorts of candies, including chocolate bars and gummis - I saw more than one macroscopically mature businessman putting big scoopsful of gummis and jelly berries on his plate! Somehow United Connection didn't successfully talk to the Lufthansa one, so my confirmed paid biz class seat evaporated and I was relegated to the middle of the plane, no great tragedy, as it was that fake biz class that you get in Europe, and the flight was only an hour, and I'd eaten all sorts of bad-for-you things at the lounge anyway. So there I was in Row 18, the farthest back I've ever been on a 737. Had an empty next to me, one of the few on the aircraft. Snoozed the whole way. There was a beverage service; nothing else, I think. Interesting things. On the wing where on domestic planes is stenciled "NO STEP" there reads "Do not walk outside this area." Are German mechanics more literate in English than their US counterparts? Also, on both LH legs, the announcement was made in English only: "Cabin attendants prepare for landing." |
LH 1765 TXL FRA 1120 1235 36A
Headed to the lounge area (on a mezzanine a few steps above and opposite the mezzanine that has the BA lounge) where the concierge pointed me to the FTL lounge. I pulled out the white card and was thereupon invited to the other lounge, which as it was midday was not grossly overcrowded. Had just time to look it over approvingly and go off to the gate. TXL is a circular terminal, which is interesting. Service to Frankfurt goes out from 8 and 9, as far from the club area as possible. A very officious agent helped me; he noted rather rudely that I'd changed my itinerary, which should incur a fee: I pointed out that the flight I'd originally been booked on didn't exist, and anyhow it was United that had made the change. So he reluctantly called the ticketing office and after receiving whatever information he needed was quite a bit more polite (though never warm). A300-600. A fat, ungainly-looking plane. Got me there in one piece, albeit in the wayback just before the thing narrows, and as usual I slept most of the flight. Woke up as the plane picked up the Main and followed it into town. I'd been scheduled on a later trip, but LH changed its schedule a couple weeks earlier, so I had the choice between a later or an earlier flight. Figured that I'd maybe go into town and hit a Bierstube or two, but ended up lounge-hopping and duty-freeing instead. Went first to the Business Lounge in A, where the concierge said, you're welcome here, but your flight is in B and the lounge there is bigger and nicer. I had a Henninger Pils on tap (hoppier than the offers in the other lounges) and a small glass of a 1999 Ortenberger Spaetburgunder; it disappointed me as it was as sweet as soda pop, and the night before my friends Hans-Erich and Christiane had served me the 1997 Meyer Nakel Blaueschiefer Spaetburgunder, which made me completely rethink my attitude toward German red wines. Checked my e-mail and read a little Flyertalk on the terminal (first minute free, then 7 something DM for 6 min; but it doesn't cut you off until 7 minutes have passed) and moseyed around the rest of the terminal. Snacks at the Business lounge both here and in B were about on a par with Red Carpet Clubs'. Moseyed to the RCC, which is in a part of the terminal for which the word "godforsaken" was coined. Nice little spot, pretty quiet as it's in C, and neither UA nor LH was running anything out of that wing. Snacks were slightly subpar for an international club - pretzels and very greasy peanuts; also bread and butter and jam and croissants. After a while they put out a tray of chocolate-chip-orange cake (dry but tasty) and these smore-like things (a marshmallow atop a wafer cookie, all covered in chocolate). The red wine was Ch. Ardolot (Corbieres) 1999, a revoltingly grassy, somewhat too sweet Bordeaux- style wine; the sparkler was Henkel Trocken, but it was flat; the white was Mussbacher Eselhaut Riesling Kabinett Trocken - very fresh, amazing floral nose with ripe tropical fruits and good acid, a surprisingly decent wine. In addition to the usual liquors, there was the Moskovskaya Osobaya vodka, which was somewhat sweet but otherwise pretty normal. The beer today was Krombacher Pils (reasonable), with Warsteiner and Lowenbrau available in bottle. Oddity: the flight magazine they offered was neither United's nor Lufthansa's: it was Skylife, from Turkish Air. After a pleasant short stay, off to the post to post postcards and off to do a bit of shopping. The booze places had some amazingly good and amazingly bad prices on brand-name things; the selection of German wines, however, especially the BAs, TBAs, and Eisweins, included mostly estates and even grapes! that I didn't know anything about, so I passed. I bought mostly a selection of chocolates by Neuhaus, Leysieffer, and Niederegger (whose marzipans are similar to the famous Mozartkugeln but are fresher and I think somewhat better). Wasn't tempted by most of the merchandise (the caviar prices were absolutely unconscionable: maybe a lot of sheiks come by). Senator Lounge in B follows the model I saw in Munich: overcrowded and unattractive but with food. The wines were better than the Business ones - a choice of Chilean Cab or Merlot; the sparkler was Oppmann Chardonnay Brut nv, which I kind of like as it is very clean, moderately fruity, and goes well with a variety of foods. I had a bacon-mayonnaise-tomato sandwich, which was good if you like cold fatty bacon (I don't mind it) and are not worried for your heart. Likewise they served little pork sausages that were cold, fatty, and soft: reminded me of partially uncured salami. I had a few of these and made up for my sins with a rather mushy overripe kiwi. Didn't try the salmon and cream cheese sandwiches or the cheesecake, but both these items seemed reasonably popular. It was getting on toward boarding time, so I headed to B46 and noticed few people there, so one more lounge, another Business one, this one huge (the concierge at A was right about that at least) but rather crowded and very smoky. Had a Radeberger Pils (mild, no great character) and then headed back to the gate for boarding. UA 977 FRA IAD 1700 2010 9J 777. Not a notable flight. The crew was merely ok. The movies and things were the same as on the outbound; I asked for Ch 9 and was told that they never have Ch 9 in Europe. I pointed out that both into and out of CDG and LHR I often get it, so the FA said, well, maybe it's just Germany. I wasn't getting anywhere with this but did note that it had been available the whole flight into Munich. It was good that Flashbacks had a whole segment on the Supremes; Grand Performance featured a piece that I'd learned by having been hired to play in the back of the second violin section when the Moscow Ballet was here in the US, during one of the thaws in the Cold War (great nostalgia value); the Jazz channel had derangements of Broadway hits; and the feature movie was Bedazzled (Elizabeth Hurley has the most incredibly sexy voice, and she's no hardship to look at either). My seatmate was a cultured and thoughtful Tuebinginer who was heading to Germantown to consult with, I think, some kind of hardware company. So I had a pleasant enough time until naptime, which was about halfway through the flight, after supper: To begin Salad Nicoise with sea bass filet Anchovy dressing This was one of the ugliest things I've ever had the misfortune of putting in my mouth. The fish was stiff and hard and covered in congealed grease. The salad was ancient. There was another film of congealed fat on the dressing. I had a bite of each thing just to see if it was as bad as it looked (answer: affirmative) and sent it back. The FA didn't ask why or ask if I wanted to try the alternative, which actually looked pretty good. C was probably full, so maybe no alternative was easily available. At any rate, it wasn't the most responsive cabin crew I've seen in my life. (or) Sliced Parma prosciutto with cantaloupe melon Mustard fruits Seasonal salad leaves French vinaigrette or blue cheese dressing I asked for vinaigrette and got the blue cheese. Main course Marinated loin of lamb with natural jus Mushroom artichoke ragout and basil mashed potatoes A huge portion, half a pound or more. Gray on the outside but miraculously pinkish within. The accompaniments were tasty, but the artichoke stuff warred with the wine (the Eshcol Cabernet) and the basil warred with everything. Herb and pine nut crusted salmon with red bell pepper sauce Linguine, carrots with tourne zucchini and turnips This was also a big portion and looked quite nice. Chilled deli plate with cream of mushroom soup Smoked ham, turkey breast, peppered salami, pastrami and Gouda cheese Dessert The world's finest cheeses with fresh fruit and Sandeman's Porto German apple cake with strawberry sauce Surprisingly, as I usually am frugal with my lactase pills, I had the cheeses. "World's finest" is a bit of an overstatement. There were two cheeses: a very underripe Tomme de Savoie (the FA when asked what they were said he didn't know but thought they were "Emmenthaler and Swiss") and another thing that I didn't recognize: it has the appearance of a young Munster but was flecked with fragments of green things which turned out to be minced green onions. The flavor and texture were of butter. Lindt chocolates Big blue paper packages with one medium-sized candy - a crunchy nougaty sort of thing. Prior to arrival Philly cheese steak sandwich with caramelized onions Parslied potato wedges Cheese plate with seasonal fresh fruit Goat, Cheddar and Port-Salut I'd had enough cheese so had the sandwich when offered. It was rather fatty beef, a good portion of it, in a brown gravy with maybe a touch of process cheese food. A brown wholegrain roll with sunflower, flax, and other seeds. The potatoes were mushy but tasted okay. On the side was another roll (white) and a big pat of butter. [Postscriptum:] Today's menu features beef imported from Argentina and Brazil Arrived at Dulles in the evening, right on time. |
The only real meal I had in Munich. Also street food
- inexpensive and tasty although not at all notable. Nuernberger Bratwurstgloeckl am Dom, opposite the SE corner of the Frauenkirche. About a block north of the Marienplatz subway stop. No credit cards. A traditional but not ancient beer-and-snacky place, with a huge menu of munchies (mostly meat and potatoes) at 10-12 DM and a huge menu of meals at maybe twice that. Beers are 5.80 for a half liter. I discovered to my chagrin that a half liter isn't what it used to be. The waitress was reasonably patient with my horrible German but took pity on me with a multilingual menu (German-English-French-Italian-Japanese): after perusing it carefully and wondering about the glories of the whole pork knuckle and the Bavarian beef sirloin steak (the menu was a little old, or maybe the Americans and Italians and Japanese haven't heard about the BSE flap), I chose the house mixed platter. Nuernberger-wurst is a beefy sausage, coarsely ground, rather burgerish, with onions chopped into it. It's good. Knockwurst is exactly as it is in the US. Is this gratifying or disappointing? I'm not sure. The big treat, which my friend who couldn't accompany me told me I absolutely had to try, was the Bratwurst, which is little and shriveled and charcoaly-meaty tasting and in fact altogether delicious (you get, thankfully, 4 on the platter). As I was flying out in the evening, I decided to have potato salad (yellow and eggy and quite tart) instead of sauerkraut. I figured even Lufthansa passengers might not appreciate second-hand cabbage. I drank a bunch of Koenig Ludwig Dunkel, which goes down mighty easy, and had a pretzel (very pretzel- like) from the bread basket on the table. - - - What I did in Munich. Walked around town looking at the old buildings and the sausages. Bought a couple (sausages, not buildings). Spent about 4 hours in the Alte Pinakotek, which is really amazing. Rows of Rembrandts, rooms of Rubenses. Tons of Titians, Tintorettos, and Tiepolos. Plus: a Fra Angelico tryptich I'd never even seen pictures of before (Cosmas and Damian), the original Breughel Land of Cocaigne (many Breughels, mostly Jan the Elder), a haunting horrid Bosch Hell scene (and many other Hell scenes - there's something dark in the religion of Bavaria), ... . A good Durer collection, again including several I've never seen before. I could easily spend 4 more hours there. Next time I go to Munich I'll get one of those 2-day tickets and spend all day both days here; then I'll get another one and spend all day both days in the Neue Pinakotek. And I'm told there are a dozen other museums. Disappointments here. 1. The building itself is gross. 2. During all my time there, the ground floor Old German galleries were polluted with a pizza-like smell that emanated from the restaurant. 3. The museum guides, well, the photos of the huge Titians and Rubenses don't do justice to the paintings, but a lot of the bigger works (the less interesting ones are hung way high) can't really be seen properly, especially with the lighting being so funny. 4. I was told there would be a Venus exhibition there. Nah, it starts on February 1. |
Dining in Berlin
Vinum, Danckelmannstrasse 29, near the Sophie-Charlotte subway stop. A pleasant, simple meal: a dozen exceedingly fresh, briny Fines Claires with aromatic brown bread and excellent butter, 2.50 the piece. The wines: Ch. Doisy-Daene Sec 1996 and 1998 (17 DM each per 8 oz glass, which I rectified by taking some empty glasses from the tasting table and making 4 4-oz glasses instead). This is the dry sister of one of the top Barsacs. The 1996 is muted, with nice mild citrus flavors, medium acidity, and what I think might be a bit of a Semillon character coming out. The 1998, on the other hand, is unabashedly Sauvignon Blanc, huge citrus and that characteristic that is often likened to feline urine. Big acidity, big flavor, long (not all pleasant) finish. The kid at Vinum said that Andreas the boss had said that the 1996 had been equally aggressive on release two years ago but had mellowed nicely. I agree. With my oysters the flavor of the 1996 went well but I'd have preferred the acidity of the 1998. The wines are available at the store for 29 DM a bottle. - - - Hardtke, Hubertusallee 48, corner of Warmbrunner Strasse, about 1 km south of the western end of the Ku'damm. Bus 110, 129, 210. My friend Paul had said, meet me at Hardtke on Meineckestrasse, so I went there a little early and discovered an empty building. Oops. Called him up, and he was appropriately contrite. I'll be over and pick you up, and we'll go to the other Hardtke, which is in one of the nice older suburbs. It was the regular Sunday dinner place of the Friedrich family and so it was kind of appropriate. It's just what you'd expect of an old German restaurant, beery and sauerkrauty smelling with dark wood all over the place. The ancient wood chairs do have cushions, though. Paul had the "deftige Kohlroulade" (17.50), a big cabbage leaf stuffed generously with a meatloaf mixture, baked, many slices of bacon draped over, served with salt potatoes and a dark brown gravy: tasty but not my style, as I prefer the sweet-sour cabbage rolls of German-Jewish cuisine or Hungarian cuisine. I chose the mixed platter (24.50), big leber- and blutwursts sided by a little eisbein, a tiny leberknoedel, sauerkraut, and salt potatoes. The leberwurst was appropriately livery, more like a boudin blanc, though, than the solid red-brown thing that I've grown to know as liverwurst; the blutwurst was just like a boudin noir, not a big surprise. The eisbein was mild, small, and fatty: just the thing to go with the kraut and potatoes. I had the Schultheiss regular Pils (not the Berliner Weisse) for an extremely calorific but satisfying meal. Paul had "Rote Gruetze" (10.50) for dessert - redcurrants cooked in sugar and made into a sort of trifle with a big dose of cream: I tried a bite, and it was just as advertised. I don't know why Paul was as enthusiastic as a small child about it, though. Oh, yes, I almost forgot, my own infantile indulgence came included in my Grosse Schlachteplatte: a sizable dollop of mashed peas, with a tablespoon each of bacon bits and bacon fat on top. I could live on that stuff. I'd also weigh 400 lbs if I did. - - - Vau, Jaegerstrasse 54/55, between the Stadtmitte, Franzoesische Strasse, and Mohrenstrasse subway stops, near the Gendarmen-Markt and the French and German Cathedrals This is one of the fashionable restaurants in town, open late, decorated in the glass and chrome modern international style, with multilingual French-German- English staff and French-inflected food. Paul had said that this was his favorite restaurant (the deal was he paid for music, I paid for food - the advantage for him was that I spent more than he did; the advantage for me was I got to sit in the best seats in the house at sold-out events). Started out with freebies. House-made baguette and multigrain with butter, of course, chickpea puree with calamari (exsquidsite, as one might say), and "tuna rillettes," which were okay. Paul started with Jerusalem artichoke and lobster soup, which tasted like lobster bisque with a vegetable coloration that was very subtle and almost impossible to decipher; I had the risotto alla Milanese (not called that on the menu) - a delicious but recherche version with thin strips of the veal shank draped over a perfectly cooked yellow risotto, giant shavings of well-aged Parmesan on top. Then came a dish of veal loin, very tasty, with an imaginative pairing of artichokes and fennel; my main course was half a pigeon with celeriac julienne and truffles. I hadn't ordered this. I'd wanted the quail, but Paul spoke rapidly to the waiter in German when I wasn't paying attention, and I didn't catch his misprision of my wishes. Not a problem, except that the truffles elevated the price of the dish to over twice what my choice would have cost (this tidbit came to 78 DM by itself), and I have a horror of truffles except within shouting distance of the Perigord. Be that as it may, I found myself savoring the best piece of bird I've ever tasted - the breast meat of the pigeon done medium-rare and arranged over a most savory celery-root preparation. The leg of the bird was there too, but nice though it was, it was a real anticlimax. The truffles added nothing; they never do. Except near their origin: they lose their charm when they leave home more quickly than an ice-cream cone out in the summer sun. Had the Lagrange (Pomerol) 1996 with this. Dessert: well, Paul had this lime tart thing that was perfectly okay, but I didn't see anything I wanted on the carte: so I had a bowl of that lobster soup, which really did me well, as it was 0C out and rather raw. Afterwards, in honor of our spending $200, they gave us a petit-fours tray: bread with citron (interesting), beechnut cake (very interesting), plain cheesecake (well done but not interesting at all), and a refined version of a Quetch-dumpling, a pastry about the size of your thumb, filled with a smear of very wonderful plum puree. - - - Ganymed, corner of Schiffbauerdamm and Bertolt-Brecht Platz, next to the Berliner Ensemble, across the canal from the Friedrichstrasse subway and train station. Appetizer: a mixed platter that contained a delicious carpaccio of red deer, oversalty but fresh magret fume de canard, a Liptauer spread wrapped in a crepe, some pates - one standard one en croute, one standard one with pistachios, a liver one whipped with cream cheese. Main: One of those giant Wienerschnitzels that is bigger than the plate, with a golden crust that almost self- destructs when you put your fork into it. The obligatory lemon (artistically cut and without rind, which made it hard to squeeze onto the meat) and the obligatory anchovy and the obligatory caper (half a caperberry; okay, as the caperberries are as good as the real thing, and with this kind of accent, less is more). Delicious potatoes fried in bacon fat with slivers of bacon and onion. A small salad dressed with a sweet-sour dressing. For drink: Koestritzer Schwartzbier. Tasted just like Prior Double Dark, which used to be made in Philadelphia. For dessert: pignoli ice cream (absolutely delicious) on a bed of sliced kiwi and strawberries. A glass of the Etter Himbeergeist, which was smooth and one of the better fruit eaux-de-vie I've had. |
A few wines tasted in Germany
Ch. d'Oupia (Minervois) 1999 - one of the best $6 wines I've found. Smooth and soft (a touch too much so) but with good structure, balanced, good fruit, longish finish. I'd consider buying it for 50% more here in the US. Tasted at Vinum, often noted as Berlin's best wine store/cafe. Meyer Nakel Blaueschiefer Spatburgunder 1997 - my friends Hans-Erich and Christiane have been to this vineyard, which is notable for the slate on which the terroir is based. There is in fact a mineralliness to the wine, but Hans-Erich's claim that it reminds him of writing on the blackboard in elementary school might be taken with a grain of salt. It is an impressive wine, though, uncompromising in dryness but with an almost French level of oak. Long, long finish. Ready to drink but would benefit from several years. Domaine St.-Andrieu L'Yeuse Noir (Coteaux de Languedoc) 1996 - a likable, not too complex wine. I'd asked the young man minding the store about what Hans-Erich would like, and so he called the owner on his cellphone at the wine expo and got this as one of several suggestions (most of them being wines from the Sud-Ouest as Hans-Erich vacations there). Asked the young fellow what he knew about it, and he admitted he didn't have much experience with the "higher priced" wines (this one was all of 29 or 39 DM!); I said that the experience would come, and I trusted his boss. Turns out to be a softish but stemmy wine with almost overripe fruit (not offensively so). Medium finish. Also ready to drink but close to peak now. Chateau Lagrange (Pomerol) 1996. Had this at Vau, a Michelin- starred restaurant in East Berlin near the Gendarmen-Markt. Velvety texture, deep purple, ripe grapes, stone fruit, some mineralliness, no vegetality. Good example of Merlot, quite ready to drink (had a 1/2 bottle; 70 DM), longish fruit finish. |
Asian delights in DC area: Thai (Chinese), Chinese,
and Viet (Chinese). So I find myself back for a brief visit to the area. What's there to do but eat? Rabieng, Leesburg Pike right near Duangrat, Arlington. Present: sister, brother-in-law, Carol and Jon Fisher This is the sister restaurant to Duangrat, which Naxos and her husband had said was better and more authentic (but not so festive). My own sister had not been thrilled when she'd gone many years ago, but that was back in the days that people smoked in restaurants, and here had been very smoky. My friend B likes it; I tried calling her on the pay phone outside the door; the phone didn't work but ate all my change. I gave it a good hard kick, which dislodged a dime, nothing more. Turns out B would have been able to go. Wild boar - chunks of boar rather than the thin slices you get at Duangrat in the moo pah. Also no green peppercorns. Quite salty, pleasantly spiced. I'd asked for it to be quite hot, and it wasn't quite hot. Some bamboo shoot flavor, good basil flavor. Northeast spicy chicken - this was a green curry type affair, and they made it quite hot. This was the good part. A very strong bamboo shoot flavor and a lot of weedy, stemmy pieces of basil made it a bit peculiar for me. Pork in Kaffir lime sauce - well, it turns out that this was a typical coconut-peanut concoction with a pleasant but too-mild Kaffir lime flavor. Esan chicken - marinated in a sweet soy dressing and then cooked so the meat was just done through and the skin was flabby. Nobody else ate the skin. So I got the whole thing. A very Chinese preparation. Crispy cod on bed of watercress - a universally liked dish, the fish in a hot-sweet soy sauce and served on sauteed cress so delicious my sister and I fought over the last scraps. Another one. The food was better spiced than next door, but some of my favorite dishes there aren't available here; however, a lot of dishes are found here that aren't found there. I find it marginally better; I think my sister now agrees. Desserts are limited here. Our table had a dish or two of mung bean mousse. Beer: Singha - - - Meiwah, right near Blackie's House of Beef in NW, I think someone said New Hampshire Avenue? Present: sister, brother-in-law, Ellis Rubenstein Snow peas in ginger sauce - exactly as expected, only there was a touch of sweetness in the ginger sauce that was beyond that exuded by the vegetable. The sauce was light brown: soy, broth, ginger, sugar. Duck in garlic sauce - slivered bits in a salty slightly sweet brown soy-based sauce. Bits of mushroom and water chestnut chopped into the same size and shape, pretty amusing. Not a generous amount of duck. Crispy beef - the classic as originally served at City Lights of China (this restaurant was founded by the guy who founded City Lights after he sold it). I am not super fond of the dish, but it's universally popular among wei guo ren. Very crispy, very sweet. Pretty garlicky. Not enormously hot; in fact, not hot at all at either place, despite the presence of handfuls of dried red peppers. Szechwan green beans - ordinary stir-fried beans, a little fat and tough, topped with minced pickled vegetable (you know, the one that looks like a green brain lobe). I enjoyed it; nobody else did, including the one who suggested it. Spinach tofu - as advertised; everyone except maybe Ellis liked it. Beer: Double Diamond - - - Huong Que (Four Sisters), Eden Center, Arlington. Present: sister, brother-in-law, B In the southwest corner, almost, I think it is, of a big Asian marketplace that looks like a shopping mall: sis and b-i-l found it better than the pho place next door (which they liked pretty well). There are an assortment of restaurants and stores in this complex. South of this place there's a Chinese restaurant that serves all kinds of innards and fatty stuff: very authentic, think I; got to try it sometime, but who can be convinced to go? Also, on the north side of the center is a cool well-stocked Asian grocery with about nine zillion kinds of fish, many meats (pig uteri turned even me off a bit, although if someone else prepared them I'd try them) and several kinds of produce that are hard to come by elsewhere, including durian. My sister gets her rice here in 25-lb bags. We went on a short field trip before eating Mussels in garlic sauce - big green-lips inviting in their iridescent shells, a bit of oyster sauce and garlic and scallions topping each. Delicious. A very Chinese-style dish. A dish of minced tiny very hot hot peppers came for this; I didn't see anyone use it but me; the rest of the peppers came in handy in spicing up the rest of the meal. Clams with black bean sauce - very much the usual thing, the black bean sauce pretty mild and a little sweet. Nice little clams. Seafood combination soup - squid, shrimp, white fish in a tasty broth with lots of vegetables (carrot, broccoli, pea pods, mushrooms, whatnot). Others found it spicy. I didn't and so added some hot stuff, which made it a little salty. Caramel catfish in clay pot - the only really unchinese dish of the lot. Usually this dish is way sweet, but this version was delicate and tasty, the caramel being really caramelly but the sweetness mostly burned off. Squid with mixed vegetables - all the vegetables in the seafood soup, plus a couple more, bok choys and stuff like that. Nice, tender squid, perfect veggies. Salt-pepper shrimp - quick-fried whole in oil after having been dredged in cornstarch. This is a great dish if the oil is almost dangerously hot when the shrimp are thrown in: in such a case, the shell becomes very crispy and easy to eat. Here, a little timidity with the heat kept this from being a truly exceptional dish. Instead, it was just very good. I ate the heads off my two shrimp as well as any others proffered. You're supposed to dip the shrimp in this dish of salt and pepper, but it wasn't a significant improvement - the beauty of the dish lies in its simplicity. Banana tapioca - the house dessert. A bit of cooked banana, a cup of watery sweetened tapioca. Real Asian desserts, many of them including this one will turn off non-Asians. I found it inconsequential but soothing. Beer: Michelob |
Unfancy but good food south of Seattle
The Keg, Burien. I was sort of hungry for beef, as in Europe the Mad Cow thing has made restaurants take beef off the menu or at least make it harder to find. So I corraled a bunch of my friends and we headed here for a steak. It's a nice family restaurant that seems to have grown out of a tavern. Steaks were tasty: my baseball sirloin (a cut I'd never heard of before but which seems to be a round piece hewn out of the rear end of the sirloin) was nicely rare and juicy, fairly beefy, with a good crust. Others (the guys) liked their steaks or (the gals) halibut in cheese sauce or chicken penne or (the kids) ribs, which I tasted and found too sweet. Notes: the sirloin strip is too small; the regular sirloin appears to be just like the baseball sirloin only not quite as big. Red Robin, Southcenter Blvd., near SEA. One of my buddies had been a regular customer and pal of the owner of the first Red Robin, down near League Bush, I mean You Dub; in homage to the memory of those good old days, we went to a Red Robin for some burgers. Pretty good, at least the meat was real. Unlimited fries come with. Everyone had burgers (an assortment of cheese ones, BBQ ones, and bacon ones) except for Hap Hap Quite Contrary, who had a Cobb salad, which he pronounced good. East-West Cafe, Tacoma. Near the Tacoma Mall, this little converted house has some of the best food in Tacoma. We went shortly before noon, and the place was already packed. We had a 15-minute wait for a table for three; while waiting, we ordered our meals (good for us, good for the restaurant). Fresh spring rolls were a nice example of the genre: rice vermicelli rolled inside soft rice wraps, flavored with roast pork, shrimp, and mint: a hoisin-peanut dipping sauce was served on the side. Hap had the pho, a big bowl of broth with ample servings of beef, noodles, and vegetables, flavored with basil. He doctored this delicate dish shamelessly with large doses of nuoc mam, hoisin, and sriracha. Speaking of which, do you know why you should brush your teeth with fish sauce? "Nuoc mam, no cavities." That's a joke. George had a nice serving of bulgogi with a side of spiced cabbage (he pronounced it good). I had the Malaysian noodles extra hot: stir-fried rice noodles with soy and scallions and hot oil and Chinese sausage, topped with beef. I needed to ladle on a bit of hot sauce, but otherwise I was well satisfied. |
The ostensible justification for my being there.
A memorial service for Prof. Goetz Friedrich at the Deutsche Oper. Performers: Michaela Kaune, Wolfgang Brendel, Matti Salminen, Dame Gwyneth Jones, Peter Seiffert, Hildegard Behrens, Daniel Barenboim, the chorus, soloists, and orchestra of the Deutsche Oper conducted by Jiri Kout. Friedrich was a major cultural presence with many productions at the Komische Oper and then the Deutsche Oper, where he was Intendant and chief stage director for twenty years. His most famous productions included the Ring at Covent Garden and later at the Deutsche Oper and a number of Wagner works at Bayreuth. His death at age 70 on December 12 was considered premature and a great loss. As my friends had wanted me to breakfast with them, I got to the Oper at about 10:55; no time even to check my wrap - I'd no sooner scrambled into my seat and dropped my Bean jacket on the floor (I later discovered this is a major nono, and I had just sullied an august occasion with my faux pas) than the orchestra began to tune up. The backdrop was Friedrich's Time Tunnel that was the trademark of his 1984-1986 Ring (I saw it in one of the newsmagazines back then; it looked silly there but was remarkable close up). The occasion began with the harrowing last scene of Janacek's Katya Kabanova, rather anticlimactically followed by a greeting by the company director Andre Schmitz. Then Michaela Kaune gave a luminous, memorable rendition of Richard Strauss's September - I thought this the musical gem of the day; but Wolfgang Brendel's performance of the Evening Star song got the most applause (well, not applause, which was forbidden by the occasion: people coughed instead). I thought that Brendel was not as impressive as Kaune; but I guess tenors get more than their share of adulation! There were other speeches and tributes, including one by the head mayor of Berlin, but most notably by Friedrich's widow Karan Armstrong, who gave what was represented to me as a strong and literate speech (in real life she speaks not a significant amount of German, apparently); there was big trouble recently when Christian Thielemann, the music director, sensing Friedrich's waning of power, refused to let Armstrong sing Sieglinde for him, saying "there is no room for THAT WOMAN in MY opera house." Friedrich is said to have told a friend, "he is attacking me in my most vulnerable place - my wife." Thielemann was noticeable by his absence from the proceedings; he was not even in the audience, and a subconductor (a celebrated one, but still) did the honors of directing the orchestra. Interspersed were these musical selections: O Isis und Osiris, from Mozart's Magic Flute, sung with great power by Matti Salminen. Beim Schlafengehen of Richard Strauss, sung by one of my great favorites from when I was growing up, Gwyneth Jones. Unfortunately, she's older than I am, and her voice has lost much of its luster, but the depth of musicality continues to impress. The Almighty Father song from Rienzi, sung by Peter Seiffert, another local favorite but one whom I can't warm to. Mild und leise from Tristan und Isolde, done by Hildegard Behrens, until recently a great diva (right word for a Wagnerian soprano?) but who has lost tone, control, and intonation, although her high notes are still there, a little screechy. She also wore an eccentric outfit and looked not a little dotty. The slow movement of the Schubert Sonata in Bb, played by Daniel Barenboim, who had been given his first conducting job by Friedrich in the 1960s (I think). Much pathos, and he's finally learned to achieve clarity with the left hand. The New York Steinway piano helped. And the final fugue from Verdi's Falstaff, another work with which Friedrich had been long associated (he directed the first Dutch performance in 1972 followed by a film in 1980). - - - After the memorial, there was a reception at which I met Karan Armstrong's mother and various other people who spoke English, including a refugee from Chelsea (the town just south of the one I nominally live in). |
Lunch after the memorial was catered by the Hotel
Inter-Continental and consisted of luxurious buffet things (I had several salmon sandwiches) and lots of beer (Berliner-Kindl Jubilaums-Pilsner - a decent brew but not the most appropriate, I think, given its name, for the occasion). After that all I wandered off to look at the sights. Went to the Brandenburg Gate and discovered that it had been enscaffolded and wrapped for renovation and now looks like a Christo construction but with big ads for t-online.de - I could hardly believe my eyes when I saw it; walked around the Reichstag (lots of tourists, most French or American) and the huge construction projects nearby (bear in mind that it's a new capital as well as an old one, and it's only recently had to absorb Bonn's governmental functions, and bureaucrats need their space). - - Public transportation is excellent, with S- and U-bahn trains, trams (in former East Berlin), and buses offering a comprehensive network. A car isn't needed at all in the city, and the system is clean, safe, and works like clockwork. There are several kinds of tickets including the timed 2-hour ticket, which costs 2 or 3 bucks and is good for unlimited travel within the time period and zones designated, or the zoned day passes, which cost $4-5 depending on whether travel includes just the city proper, just the suburbs, or both. Two of the most tourist-friendly buses are the 100 and 200 (both enclosed double deckers, as are most buses; the upper deck is a little short (short enough for me to bump my head, so probably 5' 8" or less) but provides nice views. (Looking at the Berlin in Fahrt brochures) The 100 begins near the zoo and passes numerous sightseeing destinations: the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church; the Zoo; the Bauhaus Archive; the Victory Column; Schloss Bellevue, the German White House; the World Culture Center; the Reichstag and the Platz der Republik; the Brandenburg Gate; Humboldt University; the Staatsoper; the Cathedral; the Lustgarten; the TV tower; Alexanderplatz. The 200 also passes many of these landmarks (not the Bauhaus Archive, Victory Column, or Schloss Bellevue) and also circles the Potsdamer Platz, the symbol of the city's renaissance and in my opinion one of the ugliest things I've ever seen. - - Another feature of this city is the ease and cheapness with which one can go between the various airports and the city proper. The Schoenefeld Airport is right at the end of one of the S-bahn lines; Tempelhof is on the U6; and Tegel is a 1 1/2 mile express bus ride from the Jakob-Kaiser-Platz station on the U7. |
The Komische Oper production of Rimsky's whimsical
Legend of the Tsar Saltan is one of the most amusing theatrical productions I've ever seen. The singing and the orchestra playing are generally good, but the singing is tremendous; also the sets, lighting, costumes, dancing, direction, all the production values, are wonderful. Even in the old days, this and the Staatsoper were two of the crown jewels in East Germany's cultural life, and both of their productions were renowned throughout the world. And now, with western-level funding, you can guess as to the lavishness and professionalism of the performances. The story of Saltan goes like this. There are these 3 sisters living with their aunt. The two older ones are ugly; the third is beautiful. Sound familiar? So the king goes looking for the most beautiful girl in the land and falls for, guess who. Sound familiar? OK, so they hold the wedding, and the rest of the family, instead of being happy for the great good fortune of one of its members, engages in a plot to discredit the Cinderella sister, which has something to do with questioning the legitimacy of the royal firstborn. Anyway, the son and the queen get nailed up into a barrel that is then dumped into the ocean. Somehow, they manage to survive living in this barrel for a number of years, until the son comes of age. The barrel gets washed up on the shore of some magical kingdom, where the son is greeted as the new ruler and an enchanted swan helps the son get revenge by transforming him into a bee (the famous Flight of the Bumblebee comes from here, and believe me, the orchestra has to be pretty good to play the piece) who then flies to Saltan's land and stings the bejabbers out of the three villainesses. Then by some deus ex machina, Saltan ends up traveling to the kingdom ruled by his son, whereupon the son reveals himself, the old queen makes her appearance (joyous reunion - sort of "gee, I guess I made a mistake nailing you into a barrel and trying to drown you"), and the swan turns out to be a princess in disguise, then marrying the son and making everyone live happily ever after. At the end, even the ugly sisters and the wicked aunt seem happy. A lavish spectacle, suitable for children of all ages. The best thing is that it's in repertory at the Komische Oper and is revived periodically. - - - There's currently a Walter Felsenstein festival at the Urania. Every Sunday for 5 weeks the theater is showing a film of Felsenstein's Komische Oper productions. The one I saw was Verdi's Otello: the term "comic" is kind of stretchable, it seems - the next Komische Oper production coming up is Strauss's Elektra, a dark and despondent piece indeed. This film is considered a classic, and many celebrated musicians appear in it (a young Kurt Masur is the music director). I found it a bit overacted - of course, this is operatic acting and not camera acting, and the camera can be a bit unkind at times, but the singing was first rate, and the film gives a taste of the creativity of the stage production. Its screening was a felicitous dovetailing with the ongoing Verdi festival (I missed all of it, despite my promises to the contrary, including a performance of Nabucco that I could have seen). - - Gisela May is the grande dame of Berlin cabaret. She has been likened to Lotte Lenya, but I found her halfway between Lenya and Carol Channing, with a voice as bad as either of them but musicianship superior to either of them. On January 14 (to be repeated January 26) she gave a reprise of the 100th birthday Weill-Abend, singing most of the famous Weill tunes including Alabama-Song (made famous by the Doors to a completely crossover audience) and Moritat. As her voice is pretty shot, she interspersed this with lengthy disquisitions on the history of the Brecht-Weill collaboration and readings from their letters. All in German, which means that I understood at most 20 percent. The Germans do like their lectures (after Otello some official of the Komische Oper gave a talk, which I walked out on after about fifteen uncomprehending minutes). It was a fine thing to be sitting in the house where Brecht and Weill had written many works and had their premieres, listening to a woman who - although she didn't know the creators personally - was well known by and approved of by their widows. Afterwards: encores, standing ovations, smitten elderly Prussians of all sexes striding or waddling up to her with bouquets. Quite fascinating indeed. |
The Berggruen Collection, recently acquired by
the Prussian State Museums, is one of the finer compendia of early 20th century art. The art dealer Heinz Berggruen had a good eye; an early friendship with Picasso didn't hurt either. In a funny circular building at 1 Schlossstrasse, right near the Charlottenburg castle, can be found some of the greatest pieces not only by Picasso (good and not-quite- so-good works of all periods), but Klee and Cezanne as well. I'd allow an hour and half unless you're a real devotee (I took two). - - Right near the Philharmonie, off Herbert von Karajan Strasse, is the Kulturforum, a complex of buildings I can't stand but whose contents are world-important. I had time only for the Gemaeldegalerie, the museum of old European paintings, but there is also a musical instrument museum, the National Gallery (modern art), and the Arts and Crafts museum. Actually, I had time for about 4 rooms of the Gemaeldegalerie. You could spend an hour in each room, but I spent less than half that. Most of my time I spent with the Rembrandts (some atypical examples, such as the Moses, as well as some perfect specimens, including Samson and His Father-in-Law (which I think is a self-portrait)). Also looked with amazement at the proto-realism of some of the early Renaissance Italians, whose use of perspective and shading far predates what is described in all the art history books. - - Monday is relache for most museums, so I went to Potsdam (about 1/2 hr from the Zoo by S-bahn). Walked much of the day through the Sans Souci Park. Of course the palaces were closed, but I did walk around the Schloss and the Neu Schloss and took a quick look at the Orangerie. Saw a white-tailed deer running through the park and reflected on that it really was a charmed location after all. The buildings are in various stages of disrepair - not just because it's low season, but there are signs of real deterioration. The two very impressive buildings and their joining covered walkway just to the west of the Neu Schloss are totally crumbling: pretty depressing to see. Walking through the town itself one sees that the entire neighborhood is in decay. There's a lot of history there, and I could see that a good sprucing up might make the place once again as prestigious as it was in the days of Frederick the Great. The Dutch Quarter, part of the old town, isn't quite so wretched; it's at least a bit prosperous-looking, but not particularly clean or tidy. I tried to go to Juliette for lunch, but it was closed. Walked back through some kind of ugly projects cheek by jowl with eighteenth-century buildings, then past the town offices (notable by the relative absence of graffiti) and then across the bridge to the train station. Not going to visit there again soon. |
After a pleasant first meeting with Punki (every bit
as charming in person as on the board) and her employee Brendan or Brandon, whom she had come to the airport to fetch, I was off to Spokane. As with Oakland, "there's no there there" in the words of Gertrude Stein. Nonetheless, it might be a good location for a FT gathering: it really is a pretty little city; the natives are friendly (and inordinately proud of their home), and the lack of distraction might focus things and make it a very cohesive party. There is a Spokane wine tour, which people might be interested in - I went to Caterina, which is right near Riverfront Park and easily accessible by foot or 25c shuttle trolley. The Chardonnay I'd tried before: quite fruity and rather gently oaked. Concentrated on their three reds: the 1997 Cab, which despite a touch of that cedar austerity was a quite accessible drink. Surprisingly the Merlot of that year was a big wine, not yet ready to drink: good fruit and a lot of acid promised a few years' good aging potential, though. The Rosso (about half and half Cab and Merlot) is a really big, rather dumb wine, nowhere near ready but with a lot of potential - ready in three to five, I'd say. The late-harvest Riesling was a disappointment - flowery and with that pineapple-Rieslingy taste but not very high in concentration and with only 7.something percent residual sugar. I told the young woman behind the counter that I thought it borderline for a dessert wine, and she allowed that most customers bought it as a sweet table wine (cf. Rhine Garten, for those of you above forty or so). The tasting room doubles as a foodie boutique, so you can get high-end specialty foods and stuff at fairly high-end prices: some good merchandise - Sharon O'Connor's cookbook-classical CD combos and the excellent Stonewall Kitchens jams and preserves among them. A report on the front-runners in Spokane. Clinkerdagger's, 621 W Mallon, in the Flour Mill complex. A pleasant restaurant in the yuppie trough vein - wood and plants and a solarium overlooking the falls. Good staff, friendly, efficient, not too hard on the sell. I had the applewood-smoked coriander crusted pork loin - two sizable chops, one on the bone, not very smoky, thoroughly cooked but still juicy. They came with flavorful creamy redskin smashed potatoes and a molasses-currant sauce (I think that the menu mentioned a game demi-glaze, but that was undetectable). A tangle of slivers of lemon zest complicated the flavors a bit much, I thought, but it was pretty good food nonetheless. The Jacob's Creek Merlot (1998 I think) accompanied unobtrusively. For afters: the special pecan pie, which was good but not in any way special ($5.95 a moderate-size slice); perhaps the signature "burnt cream" would have been a better choice. Longhorn Barbecue, 7611 W Sunset Hwy. Good staff, friendly, fairly efficient, not too hard on the sell. Setting is your stereotypical good ole chow hall, hard chairs, lighting that manages to be harsh and somehow not quite adequate at the same time. Beers the usual dreck with a few ringers (Alaska Amber, Northern Lights Amber), 10 oz $1.75, 23 oz $3, 34 oz $4.50, and so on. Go for a couple 23 ozers. The food is wholesome but not on the whole exceptional. German sausage was fatty and a bit pasty, the texture more bangerlike than I would have hoped. Ribs although with a smoked taste reminded me of Chinese restaurant ribs with their sweet glaze. The BBQ sauce here, by the way, is way sweet. The chili, described on the menu with the oxymoronic juxtaposition "Texas recipe" and "beans," was surprisingly Texas-like, the beans not mushily cooked into the stew but folded in later in the cooking. Mostly chuck beef (some gristly bits, which I like) and decent chili powder with some heat. I'd have gone for cooking onions in, but at least they offer the option of chopped onions for on top. Odd things: the men's room has old Sunday comics tacked up on the wall; the sign out front reads "barbecue," but when the neon lights up, the neon reads "barbeque." [My colleague C. reported vaguely that she'd had an exceptional kung pao chicken at a restaurant in Airways Heights "called La La or Lu Lu or something." A quick check of the phone directory yielded "Lai Lai, 13008 W Sunset Hwy" ... I didn't have the time or inclination to verify her report, though.] |
Excellent. Now that was one thorough trip report http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/eek.gif
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Originally posted by violist: UA Ch9 = y on IAD-MUC, not on FRA-IAD salt and pepper shakers = y Airshow = y Empower = n (haven't had it all year) LH short-hauls none of the above: no audio or video or food at all UA 962 IAD MUC 1730 0730 9J 777. Really nice cabin crew. Purser was an energetic little Greek (I presume; his family had a place in the Greek islands) guy named Tony; the rest of the staff were pretty senior, Germanic women: as I said, very nice, and one of them was a pretty blonde. The one I liked best was a Hausfrau type who kept making sure I had enough to eat and chided me when I didn't take a chocolate (I relented). We chatted later, just before landing, and she and other FAs showed a strong interest in and real knowledge of French wines. To begin Asian soba noodles with citrus-cured smoked salmon Ginger soy hijiki sauce My choice. United does well with smoked things, especially trout and salmon. This was moist and good. (or) Fresh mozzarella and Roma tomatoes Aged balsamic vinegar and rosemary oil Seasonal salad leaves Javanese or classic Caesar dressing Javanese apparently means sweetened soy vinaigrette with ginger. The staff on this flight seemed to think the name was "Japanese," which would be more plausible anyway. The FA serving this gave me about 5 tablespoons of it, which was okay, but I had to shake each forkful to get dressing off it. Main course Roasted pork loin with bourbon whipped sweet potatoes Haricots verts with shallots and spicy pecans I've had this before; it had been decent but not so good that I needed to order it again. Veal loin steak with Marsala cream and red peppercorns Rhubarb saute and butternut squash Delicious. A smallish portion done medium-well, the Marsala cream being really a brown sauce (good for me), lots of red peppercorns. Rhubarb saute was very very sour but interesting. The main problem was that the "veal loin steak" was really a pork chop. Perhaps the roasted pork was really veal, I didn't see. I had a decent Chablis with the meal. The other white choice was a California (Geyser Peak, I think) Chard. Also available were some bourgeois-cru Medoc and the oaky but tasty Eshcol Cabernet. Wild mushroom, ginger and garlic wontons Ocean seaweed salad and miso egg drop broth My seatmate, a roving manager of a multinational, very interesting to talk to, had this and (in contrast to what I'd seen on other flights) ate every bit. We talked a bit about Munich, his home, and his plan for my stay was to spend one week at the Old Art Gallery and two weeks at the New Art Gallery. He takes (I think he said) 4 international trips a month and hates flying (but enjoys visiting cultural attractions in China, India, wherever). Dessert Regional cheese plate Maytag Blue and Wisconsin Gouda Eli's Caramel Brownie Fudge tart I had this latter, eating around the cheesecake heart. It was extraordinarily sweet but otherwise okay. One thing I enjoyed was that it was topped with bits of toffee (the kind I used to love in Butter Brickle ice cream, back when I could eat ice cream, and would save out all the little "brickles" for last). Godiva chocolates I said no, but the attendant made a moue, so I said okay, just one, and she brightened up. I had a chocolate cream that was somewhat better than I remembered. Prior to arrival Seasonal fresh fruit appetizer, your choice of fruit yogurt, cold cereal and breakfast breads Bistro eggs with bacon and tomatoes Smoked Gouda cream sauce Slept through this. I would like to have tried the eggs again just to see if they were as horrible as I recall. Woke up after the breakfast service and was served a glass of Dom as a consolation prize (was offered seconds but didn't take more). LH 2447 MUC TXL 1945 2055 18A 735. The Business Lounge was empty, but I was invited to the crowded noisy Senator Lounge, where there was a pretty generous buffet and tons of soberly-dressed Bavarians (and not a few Americans). There were Tucher Hefeweizen and Lowenbrau Pilsener on draft; it's not self-service here, you call over one of the staff, who does a better job of pulling a beer than I would. On the board were egg and tuna and something unidentifiable salads, fresh fruit (excellent kiwis), fruit yogurt, leberwurst (ok), hamburger patties (very oniony), curried tuna patties (good with beer), tomato salad (very popular and so I missed out). All sorts of baked goods. All sorts of candies, including chocolate bars and gummis - I saw more than one macroscopically mature businessman putting big scoopsful of gummis and jelly berries on his plate! Somehow United Connection didn't successfully talk to the Lufthansa one, so my confirmed paid biz class seat evaporated and I was relegated to the middle of the plane, no great tragedy, as it was that fake biz class that you get in Europe, and the flight was only an hour, and I'd eaten all sorts of bad-for-you things at the lounge anyway. So there I was in Row 18, the farthest back I've ever been on a 737. Had an empty next to me, one of the few on the aircraft. Snoozed the whole way. There was a beverage service; nothing else, I think. Interesting things. On the wing where on domestic planes is stenciled "NO STEP" there reads "Do not walk outside this area." Are German mechanics more literate in English than their US counterparts? Also, on both LH legs, the announcement was made in English only: "Cabin attendants prepare for landing." the people 2 and 2 in the 3 and 3 rows. English is the official air traffic language, that is why the wing is painted in english (the planes fly in Europe too anyhow) and why the annoucements for the FAs was made in English too. |
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