Saturday, March 24, 2012

La Calma



Falling apart
I forget about reactions,
Desperate search
For someone's hand
Time's fractions
Dig into me
Stay deep within
I wonder how I clean
The mirror that shows the path
Towards the start
I grasp, I gasp
And drown in Emotion's rivers
In my built-up reality,
There-s no road called heart.
The hunt for sunrises
Lasted for years
The hunt for warmth
Oh, even more.
In the lost & found
If you ever happen to find me
Don't squint, don't blink,
Pass by.

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Calçotada - about onions, tradition & smart ideas

When you hear the word ‘Spain’, I’m almost sure that if you don’t imagine a woman dancing flamenco, you will definitely think of the sun and the beach.
It’s somehow frustrating that such a versatile, multifaceted country is basically known for a stripe of the Mediterranean coast.
Get away from the seaside deeper inside the peninsula and you’ll be amazed by the variety of traditions, landscapes, lifestyles, accents and, naturally, typical dishes!
However, you don’t have to go too far from the coast to get a richer taste of true Catalonia, famous for its unique culture. In the list of Catalonian traditions, “calçotada” should undoubtedly be awarded first prize! This simple, originally peasant feast is a true hymn to Catalan ingenuity.


What is all the fuss about, you’d ask. Well, in fact it’s all about onions. Calçots is a variety of a mild green onion, which were originally cultivated in Valls, in the province of Tarragona. The first time I was invited to eat calçots, I was as puzzled. After looking at the way they look like, I was totally bewildered: a dirty dish of leeks black with ash was quite the opposite of mouthwatering!


However, this gastronomical event got so popular over the last decades, that now one can even try some calçots directly in Barcelona in late winter & early spring. Still, if you have a chance to take part in the real open-air calçotada in the countryside, the experience is promised to be unforgettable.
What can unite people better that good food, indeed? Calçots are grown especially for this purpose, they are roasted directly in the open fire, leaving the core part soft and creamy, and eaten with your hands, and yes, you can get as dirty as you wish! If not, you are always provided with a huge bib! Meanwhile, the coals are used for roasting meat, sausages or artichokes for the main course.

Calçots served on a roof tile with romesco sauce in wine served in a porrón
Delightful smoky smell spreads all around the place and calçots are finally served on a clay roof tile, accompanied by excellent local wines or Catalan cava. Another indispensable uniting element is the typical drinking vessel for wine, called ‘porrón’: it has a long nose, which allows everyone to drink from the same one just by pouring wine in a thin stream right into your mouth.
Last but not the least, the credit should be given to the romesco sauce, in which roasted calçots are dipped, delicious mixture of grated nuts, peppers, tomatoes & olive oil, no calçotada would be good without!


Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Thailand: Good Luck for You. - Pondering about luck.

Already after coming back home from Thailand I started asking myself about the reason why I heard the wishes of luck from the Thais so often. “Koot luck for you” was what a tuk-tuk driver, street vendors, a temple guardian, a monk and hotel receptionists wished me.
So “How come?”, I thought, if in Buddhism there is no such notion as luck but rather karma. In Buddhism, everything follows the cause-effect principle. Striving to possess makes a person suffer, so one has to overcome their egocentric wishes by controlling mind and body. Doing good helps to build up positive karma and and brings about positive effect. On the other hand, a good luck charm is often misinterpreted since, as I see it, one keeps one as a sign of a promise to oneself that he or she will follow the right path of living.
My idea was confirmed when I read this, “Buddhism teaches that the one, who is deeply learned and skilled, well-trained using well-spoken words with his father and mother, cherishes his wife and child and leads an honest, humble and simple life should be no less than “good luck”. This gets us to the conclusion that, apparently in the Asian tradition luck is rather interpreted as good karma created by motivated action, rather than simple chance. As someone said, “luck is when opportunity knocks and you answer”.



I suddenly realized that whenever they wish you luck they are rather wishing you to choose the right path of living.