02 December 2008

Thanksgiving and Paris


Liebe Leute,

Another weekend gone, another slew of adventures...
Thanksgiving was fantastic. I enjoyed three Thanksgiving dinners: a pot luck with all my favorites, an extremely expensive 4-course meal (wine and sekt included) courtesy of IES, and a home-cooked Thanksgiving dinner cooked by yours truly with much help from my Mitbewohner and friends.

The first dinner was brief, since I had to run off to my program's dinner...but I'm always shocked by how well people my age can cook. I hope to get there one day.
The IES dinner was phenomenal. It began with large quantities of sekt (or orange juice) and social interaction. After a good hour or so of socializing and drinking, we were seated and promplty served our first course: creamy pumpkin soup. Delectable. Between each course there was much time for socializing, and--you guessed it--drinking. I would have to say that the best part of this situation, which I have yet to mention, is that this event was not only thrown for the students, but for the teachers and program administrators as well... Let's just say that the stars of the party were not the drunken students. Note Klaus, my German Professor on the left of me. Not only are his drunken antics and hilarity captured on camera, but also on video. On the right is my Film Professor, Franz Leithold. Although a bit tamer than Klaus, he had a good time.
The next picture illustrates yet another drunken professor: Peter, our drama professor. He's also one of my favorites, and will be treating our class on Tuesday to a home-cooked, traditionally Badisch meal...as well as a short tutorial in wine types, as per usual.

Friday morning, I dragged myself out of bed in order to catch an 8 o'clock train to Paris to visit Sharon! Paris was fantastic...although a better shoe choice may have been in order. In two days we managed to hit the biggest tourist spots and see the sights of Paris. We also managed to see some of the most fantastic museums including the Rodin Museum (sculptures including "The Thinker" and "Balzac") as well as an exquisite Picasso museum that is temporary and included two (elaborate) levels of works from "Picasso and his Masters". Just a side note, his masters included Velazquez, Goya, El Greco, Rembrandt, Titian, Van Gogh, Gauguin, Renoir, Cezanne. The Picasso exhibit had pieces that were truly awe-inspiring, but the exhibit itself was perhaps a bit overdone--a bit too much. Although a glamorized version of art, about which we all know at least enough to appreciate, it was hard to be anything but impressed and humbled by the amount of vision in one place.
Overall, Paris was fantastic. We saw the touristy sights and did the Parisian things to do...and as usual, I enjoyed my time away, but was ecstatic to return to Germany, where people obey traffic laws and speak a language I understand.
I returned Sunday afternoon and was immediately in the kitchen helping with the Thanksgiving dinner Heather, my other American roommate, and I had planned. We cooked a turkey, stuffing, mashed potatoes, green bean casserole, oatmeal bread, made gravy and cut up some American cranberry sauce, compliments of the American Commissary in Stuttgart. All but one of my Mitbewohners was there, and Jay, another American, saved the day with his turkey carving abilities (we were resorting to youtube-ing the proper way to carve a turkey online)...
In the end, the dinner was a success, and we stayed up eating and drinking until after 3am. Class the next day wasn't exactly fun, but it was well worth it.

In the end, I can honestly say I had one of my most memorable Thanksgivings ever. It certainly wasn't the same as gathering around a table with my sometimes strange, but loving family and the food was just a little off (it doesn't help that Germany doesn't have turkeys or stuffing...or most of the things we needed, for that matter). But! It was my first time planning and executing Thanksgiving, and I think if I can do that extraordinarily difficult task, I am probably capable of a lot.

Next weekend I'm not flying to London in favor of sanity (4 papers and 3 presentations looming) and having enough money to more comfortably finish the semester. It also turns out that I like it here, so staying is not as disappointing as it might seem.

As of 44 minutes ago, I return in 17 days.
Bis Dann-

Deine,

Sara

No comments: