Friday, December 17, 2010

Külföldileves or Sunday Night Fail Soup

Note to self....when shopping for gulyasleves ingredients on the weekend, earlier is always better.  The early bird truly does get the worm in the world of Hungarian grocery shopping.  As with all of my trials here in Budapest, I learned this lesson the hard way, by doing, or rather, not doing.
  Last Sunday was a bright and sunny day...I slept in nonetheless, read the third installment in the Millenium series obsessively while submerged in a tub full of bubbles, and was then moved to hop the HEV to Filatorigát to snap photos of the amazing grafitti at that particular megallo (train stop).


It was damn cold.  A special kind of Hungarian cold, northwesterly, drifting down from the North Sea, a cold through which the strangest plants survive, but which blows through to my very bones to the point of stress.  Walking around for a couple of hours in this kind of cold makes me feel as if I have been hiking for days.  But I enjoy it nonetheless...Christmastime here in Budapest is a gorgeous, cinnamon scented season played in the stringed notes of a minor key.  A very special feeling I will never forget.
  After the photo shoot at Filatorigát my boys and I hopped back on the HEV and met Debra at Arpad Hid.  The Arpad bisects Óbuda in an invasive and unsubtle way, splitting the district with all the care of a back alley cesarean.  Charming little pockets can be found, however, without too much trouble and we did find such a pocket just off the Hid.  A little Christmas bazaar was set up around the tiny skating rink just west of the HEV line.  We followed our noses, led by the smell of smoked meats, grilled pastries (yes, grilled), and mingling spices.
  We ate, we drank, we remarked time and again how very, very cold it was.  We walked to the church on the other side of the bridge in an effort to warm up. I complained that all of the steeples in Budapest look the same. Alas, the cold winter sun was not up to the task.  I declared that  I had to get home....my feet were cold and sore, my body tense from shivering.  We invited Debra to come over later for some gulyasleves, the perfect meal for a frigid winter's evening.
  After we arrived home, I told myself (and Boone) that I would go to the store to grab some gulyasleves ingredients after a small nap.  The cold had sapped my energy.  Well, there is not such thing as a short nap on my little planet so two hours later, around four thirty just as the sun had completed its bedtime ritual, I woke with a start, right in the middle of a dream about mountain castles, bundled up and headed to the TescoExpressz across the street in the blocks, my heart beating fast, my eyes still unfocused and bleary.
  Shopping is just not done on Sunday, here in Budapest.  This city is somewhat like a dry county with the Sunday or holiday lack of shopping options, except it ain't booze that is absent, it's food, or rather, a colorful selection of such.  

this is NOT the sight that greeted me at Tesco on Sunday




I walked into the now very familiar Tesco Expressz in the blocks. The cashiers have been very patient with my lack of fluent Hungarian skills. Only one other customer was perusing the aisles, or aisle, rather,  and that was the booze aisle.  I must digress, for humor's sake, and mention that Tesco, the British Walmart, offers its own brand of vodka, as well as its own line of gravestone cleaner. You just never know when either will come in handy so it's a relief to know that you can rely on Tesco to supply you wth these necessities should the occasion arise. Anyway, one lone cashier sat behind her till, filing her colorful and clawlike nails, peering up every now and again to scan for customers.  
  I was met with such disappointment...the produce bins held only rubbery parsnips and rutabagas, and wilted heads of butter lettuce.  The meat department yielded similar results offering only ground pork and a few chicken wings.  
  I was fairly crestfallen. I had promised my friend and family gulyasleves and that was clearly not going to be on the menu.  I sighed and resigned myself to my meager choices.  I grabbed a few more potatoes, an onion, and the ground pork.  I also settled for the least unappetizing head of lettuce. I rousted the cashier from her Sunday night  half-coma, bagged my purchases and headed home.

  I must say my efforts were well worth the trouble....I haphazardly invented a bastardized version of gulyasleves, which was initially met with skepticism but eventually warmed bellies and tempted taste buds.  The loose recipe is what follows:
  

KÜLFÖLDILEVES:  A recipe invented on the fly by Leslie Nicholson

I prefer to cook without recipes but this means measurements are approximate and not exact.  Season to taste, please!

MEATBALLS
pound and a half of ground pork
one egg, lightly whisked
half cup to three quarter cup bread crumbs (use whatever bread you have on hand)
thyme, sage, or any fairly strong herb 
salt and black pepper

1/4 cup olive, sunflower, or canola oil

1 TB sweet or spicy paprika, more to taste

four or five carrots, chopped into half discs
one medium onion, chopped
three or four medium sized potatoes, cut into chunks
two banana peppers or hungarian wax peppers, thinly sliced (anaheims would be good too)

five to six cups beef or veggie stock or boullion
cup of dark beer

Mix well together in a bowl the pork, egg, bread crumbs and herbs.  Form inch and a half sized meatballs out of the pork mixture. Heat oil in a stock pot or large skillet to a medium heat and fry meatballs, maybe, ten or more minutes (higher if need be, play with the heat on your stove.  The meatballs should cook through without burning on the outside first).  Place cooked meatballs on plate covered with  a paper towel to soak up the grease.  Set these aside when finished frying. Do not drain grease from pot or skillet.

Turn heat down a very little then add the onions to the hot grease...add more if need be.  Fry until the onions are translucent, then add paprika, carrots, peppers and potatoes.  Sauté for about five minutes, longer if necessary, to sear in veg flavors.

Add soup stock and beer to the mixture.  Bring to boil then turn down to gentle simmer.  Simmer for about fifteen minutes, covered, until veggies begin to get soft.  At this point, add the meatballs then continue to cook the soup, covered, until the are tender.

Adjust the seasonings and serve with dense German bread.  Tell your friends and share the joy of külföldileves.



  

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Sneaking up to the Castle


Gimnázium Utca


Of course you may take the foenicular up the incline to the Castle District.  Or you may take the well trod, fairly populated stairway that will lead you to the center of this part of Buda.  Or you could simply exit the HEV at Batthyany Ter and, after grabbing a cappucino or ginger bread latte at The Coyote, meander up the stairway at Gimnázium Utca and enjoy a leisurely hike up the hill and enter The Castle District in a more private manner.  
  As my friend Bill said, "I always feel like I'm getting away with something when I walk up this way."  Taking this route indeed imparts a feeling of sneaking up, trespassing,  treading upon an antiquated path of pilgrimage.  
  The neighborhood through which he stairway cuts is an aged, posh, yet comfortably worn sliver of Buda in which some of the most beautiful and inviting homes reside. The area reminds me of certain sections of San Francisco...I imagine thoughtful people within the homes, sipping small cups of strong Turkish coffee, reading books of poetry or the novels of Krudy Gyula.  It is more likely, however, that the denizens of these houses are watching the drama and hysterics of the televised Hungarian talent show, X-Factor.




The stairway eventually leads out of the neighborhood and into a sort of middle ground, a small meadow area.  The last time I was up there, I ran across yet another lonely, muttering, old philospher, shuffling precious papers, organizing life on his own personal planet.  At first I thought he was a statue, perched randomly along the path, until I came upon his solitude and saw that he actually moved.  He was completely unaware of me as he fussed and fiddled.




  The stealthy Castle stairway eventually leads you into the district behind the unattractive and completely out of place Hilton hotel.  Fortunately, you can avoid looking at it much since the view before you will be Austro-Hungarian era buildings and cobblestone streets, fairly free of traffic. If your destination is the Fisherman's Bastion, for panoramic views of the city, you will stroll past several tile roof churches like St. Mátyás' Cathedral, still wearing a bit of scaffolding due to the years and years of repair the church has undergone.




The Fisherman's bastion marks a sort of center in the Castle District, although it is not the only one.  A majestic statue of St. Stephen commands the small square and an intimate wine bar and restaurant is situated within the bastion itself, offering diners and drinkers a lovely perch from which to view Pest and the river flowing below.  As is common in Budapest, many people are moved to romantic extremes before such views...I caught this couple, entwined in one of the Bastion's recesses, giving in to their passion as the night fell and the moon rose. A fitting conclusion to a sexy walk above the city. x




Thursday, December 2, 2010

Lazy Post-Thanksgiving Post or Pulkya, Hair Straightening, and The Boomtown Rats

We enjoyed two lovely Thanksgiving dinners last week with dear friends, Hungarian, South African, British and American. Below is a list of highlights.

THURSDAY:
 
Cooking and baking for five hours straight and loving it.  The results were mouthwatering.

The family Pálinkás' delightful yogurt/cherry dessert.

Pálinkás Réka crawling back and forth between me and her mother, the lovely Julia, to receive bites of mashed potato.

Pálinkás Dani, clutching his little blue bear (kék mocsi), calling Aidan's stuffed alien dog "PULKYA"(turkey)

 Sweet Jáno, bearing lovely gifts, silent, but grinning his schoolboy grin the whole time.

Pálinkás Péter, declaring my pumpkin pie the only one he will ever eat and love.

FRIDAY

Meeting Jaci Török, Hungarian via South Africa.  Megawatt smile, soothing voice made for storytelling.

Andrew Hornett strumming his guitar.

Watching young CETP teachers straightening their hair with a contraption I've never seen.  Fascinating!

Singing "I Don't Like Mondays" by the Boomtown Rats with the whole crowd.

Pétér, declaring once again that my pumpkin pie is his favorite.

Receiving a jar of aromatic strawberry/kiwi tea from the dearest Bill Robb.

Watching my boy Aidan play DJ with Cassie's ( our delightful hostess) music collection

Talking with Anna Banhegyi about her doctorate thesis on East German western films...you had no idea, did you?

Running to the HEV stop with Boone, Aidan, and Pétér in the fresh, wet snow, barely making the last train.

Three helpings later....Bill, Andrew, an Scott