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| Remembering our trip: a parrot in a coral tree. One of my favorite birds, one of my favorite trees, in the park near Janet's house where we stayed last week. |
Sunday, April 01, 2018
Back in Ann Arbor!
Saturday, March 31, 2018
Happy Passover
Kiryat Ono, Israel. Our Passover Seder with our cousins Janet, Ethan, and Avigail, and several others. Above: the Seder plate with all the traditional items that are part of the ritual readings, prayers, and songs. What a beautiful evening! I didn't photograph every single dish that we ate, but here are a few.
Preparations
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| A 5.3 kilo salmon, about to be poached in the large fish poacher. On the back of the stove: a pot of chicken soup. |
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| Hard boiled eggs, a standard part of the menu. One roasted egg appears on the Seder Plate. |
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| Ethan preparing the dishes. |
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| Special Passover rolls and at right, komish bread for dessert. |
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| Also for dessert: meringues. |
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| In the kitchen: preparing sauce for the fish. |
Chicken Soup with Matzoh Balls
A Whole Roast Salmon
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| Janet carves the salmon, our main course after the ritual foods, the eggs, chopped liver, nut spread, and soup. |
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| The salmon: to be served with lemon sauce and kumquat chutney. |
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| After all was carved, eaten, and put into a large dish for another day. |
Labels:
Israel,
Israel 2018,
Kitchens,
March-2018,
Passover
Thursday, March 29, 2018
Janet's Passover Kitchen
Last night there was a wonderful confluence of aromas here in Janet's house in Kiryat Ono, a suburb of Tel Aviv, where we are spending the week preparing for Passover. From her kitchen came the aroma of chicken fat -- the traditional schmaltz -- being rendered for one of the many dishes for the Seder tomorrow night. From the garden came the amazing perfume of a citrus tree, the pomelo, blooming in this mild climate. A very unexpected combination.
Right now, the aromas from the kitchen dominate: an enormous pot of chicken soup is bubbling on one burner, as you can see in the photo.
A pot of kumquat chutney is simmering on the other burner. Janet harvested the kumquats this morning from another tree in the garden, and I spent at least an hour cutting them up and taking out their seeds. We both worked on the other ingredients. Janet loves to make chutney from the produce of her own tree.
Who would have guessed that such tiny fruits nevertheless have seeds the same size as those in an orange or a tangerine!
Janet has lots more plans for our seder dinner tomorrow night. She's been shopping and cleaning for days. All the year-round dishes have been stored away, all the normal food is eaten up or will be discarded, and fresh Passover food and one-week-a-year dishes have replaced everything in the newly-cleaned shelves and drawers of her kitchen. As I said before, it's quite a production!
Now for some photos of the wonderful greengrocer where Janet bought many of the ingredients for the soup and many other planned dishes. She has other sources for meat, fish, and so on.
Years ago, she says, this small but amazingly stocked store sold fruit and vegetables grown nearby, but the city has overwhelmed the farms that used to occupy land in this area, and now the owners bring in produce from other places. Beautiful produce!
Right now, the aromas from the kitchen dominate: an enormous pot of chicken soup is bubbling on one burner, as you can see in the photo.A pot of kumquat chutney is simmering on the other burner. Janet harvested the kumquats this morning from another tree in the garden, and I spent at least an hour cutting them up and taking out their seeds. We both worked on the other ingredients. Janet loves to make chutney from the produce of her own tree.
Who would have guessed that such tiny fruits nevertheless have seeds the same size as those in an orange or a tangerine!
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| Kumquats, garlic, and ginger being prepped for chutney. |
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| Hot peppers for chutney -- other ingredients include onion, orange juice, sugar, vinegar, star anise, pepper, and salt. |
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| Chutney simmering in a big pot, which is used only for Passover food. |
Now for some photos of the wonderful greengrocer where Janet bought many of the ingredients for the soup and many other planned dishes. She has other sources for meat, fish, and so on.Years ago, she says, this small but amazingly stocked store sold fruit and vegetables grown nearby, but the city has overwhelmed the farms that used to occupy land in this area, and now the owners bring in produce from other places. Beautiful produce!
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| So many colors of little tomatoes! |
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| Quite a big selection of spices. I bought a few to take home. |
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| I was amused to see the same brand of olive oil that I buy at home at Whole Foods. |
Labels:
aromas and odors,
chutney,
Farmers Markets,
Israel,
Israel 2018,
Kitchens,
March-2018,
Passover
Wednesday, March 28, 2018
"Three Floors Up"
During our quiet time in Tel Aviv at our cousin Janet's house I have been doing two things. First, I'm helping Janet clean her house in preparation for Passover. This is an activity I've often heard and read about, but I have never participated in doing it. Quite a production!
When I have a bit of time, I've been reading a novel set in Israel titled Three Floors Up by Eshkol Nevo, published in Hebrew in 2015 and in English in 2017.
Three Floors Up takes place in a three-floor apartment building in Tel Aviv. I am surrounded by similar buildings of various heights, but full of people that I imagine to be similar to the families in the three stories in the novel: one for each floor of the building. Each story is told by one person, as a confession, because each character is experiencing a kind of personal (and maybe existential) crisis.
The first story, by a husband and father on the first floor, is told to a friend who is a novelist, as a desperate confession of some very irrational behavior towards a neighbor, triggered by fear of the well-being of his 9-year-old daughter. The second story, by the mother of two children on the second floor, is a letter calling for help from a long un-contacted friend who had supported her during an adolescent crisis. Finally, a retired woman court judge, who lives on the third floor, records messages on an answering machine where she finds a message from her late husband. Though he had died a year earlier, she speaks to him as if he were still alive and referring to their long life together.
A significant passage from the widow on the third floor to her late husband:
In the final story, the retired judge who is "talking" to her late husband agrees to go on a trip to the south of Israel, where she finds herself on an agricultural kibbutz near the Jordanian border. We went birdwatching on a kibbutz that is no doubt very similar. So I'll end with a few photos of the agriculture and kibbutz life that we saw as we looked for birds.
When I have a bit of time, I've been reading a novel set in Israel titled Three Floors Up by Eshkol Nevo, published in Hebrew in 2015 and in English in 2017.
Three Floors Up takes place in a three-floor apartment building in Tel Aviv. I am surrounded by similar buildings of various heights, but full of people that I imagine to be similar to the families in the three stories in the novel: one for each floor of the building. Each story is told by one person, as a confession, because each character is experiencing a kind of personal (and maybe existential) crisis.
The first story, by a husband and father on the first floor, is told to a friend who is a novelist, as a desperate confession of some very irrational behavior towards a neighbor, triggered by fear of the well-being of his 9-year-old daughter. The second story, by the mother of two children on the second floor, is a letter calling for help from a long un-contacted friend who had supported her during an adolescent crisis. Finally, a retired woman court judge, who lives on the third floor, records messages on an answering machine where she finds a message from her late husband. Though he had died a year earlier, she speaks to him as if he were still alive and referring to their long life together.
A significant passage from the widow on the third floor to her late husband:
"The Encyclopedia of Ideas helped me remember that the first floor, which he called the id, contains all our impulses and urges. The middle floor is the ego, which tries to mediate between our desires and reality. And the uppermost level, the third floor, is the domain of His Majesty, the superego, which calls us to order sternly and demands that we take into account the effects of our actions on society.
"I hear you asking in that tone of yours, which hints that you know the answer quite well: Is there any proof whatsoever of that theory? Has it been tested, proven scientifically?" (p. 211).You can read the three narrators' confessions as an allegory of the id, the ego, and the superego, but I prefer to see them as three stories of very troubled individuals, not as "types." The internal struggle of each one is emotionally vivid. But besides enjoying the human element of these stories, I found the book to be wonderfully connected to the travel experience I had last week and to my continued stay in Israel in a residential neighborhood like the one where the characters live.
In the final story, the retired judge who is "talking" to her late husband agrees to go on a trip to the south of Israel, where she finds herself on an agricultural kibbutz near the Jordanian border. We went birdwatching on a kibbutz that is no doubt very similar. So I'll end with a few photos of the agriculture and kibbutz life that we saw as we looked for birds.
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| A bird on the irrigation system above the fields at a kibbutz where we were birding. Surprisingly, the owners seem very friendly to birders. |
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| We birded in a pumpkin field... |
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| And birded in an onion field. A character in the novel was developing a new type of bell pepper to grow on her kibbutz. |
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| Looking across the fields towards the residences and agricultural buildings on the kibbutz. |
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| We stayed at guest houses on two kibbutzes. The woman under the tree is Krista, who was reading Three Floors Up and told me about it. |
Labels:
birding,
Food in Literature,
Israel,
Israel 2018,
March-2018,
Passover
Sunday, March 25, 2018
Images of Israel
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| An ibex under a tree in the Negev Desert. |
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| A bluethroat. Appropriately named! At the bird research center, Eilat. |
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| View from Isrotel Hotel, Tel Aviv. |
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| Just after the release of a banded bird at the Jerusalem bird refuge. Several children were watching, learning, and releasing the birds. Banding of course was done by an expert. |
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| One of many wheatears on a tree in the desert. |
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| View of Aqaba, Jordan, from the beach of Eilat, Israel. The palace in the photo belongs to the king of Jordan. We were watching for sea birds as the sun was setting. |
Saturday, March 24, 2018
Lunch in the town of Abu Gosh
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| Making coffee. |
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| Falafel. |
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| The Arab logo for Coca-Cola. I haven't noticed the Hebrew logo on the many diet Cokes I've had this week, but maybe I somehow missed it. |
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| Later we stopped at Park Canada where we saw this cyclamen and many other wild flowers in bloom. |
Labels:
birding,
falafel,
hummus,
Israel,
Israel 2018,
March-2018
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