Wednesday, November 25, 2009

I Love Biology Lab


I love teaching my students about the stuff that we do in the lab. It is just much more fun to see them get excited about seeing things through a microscope lens. My students just love being in the lab and being able to see things really up close. One of the students took photos in the lab the other day and I thought they were pretty great looking.

Yay for microscopes and biology lab!







Monday, November 23, 2009

ACS Faculty Thanksgiving... a.k.a. The Great Pie Making Odyssey

Lindsay and I decided that for Thanksgiving dinner, we would prepare pumpkin and apple pie for everyone. I just could not think of having Thanksgiving dinner with the people who are like a family to me, without pumpkin and apple pie. Some people do pecan and perhaps other harvest-y type pies, but I have always grown up with pumpkin and apple.

Now, here in Bulgaria, pumpkin pie does not come easy. There really is no "quick" way to a delish pumpkin pie, since there is no canned pumpkin or pre-made pie crust. Lindsay really wanted pumpkin, so she found a recipe online that told us how to make the filling from fresh pumpkin, tiikveniik as it is fondly referred to in these parts. Roast or boil the pumpkin, mash, add ingredients and spices, pour into pie crust. No problem. We sent our requests in and our recipes so the school could purchase the ingredients for us to start prepping on Friday.

We showed up on Friday afternoon, around 4 to already find some ambitious souls in the cafeteria preparing their ingredients for the feast that was to follow the next day. I was snooping around the back of the cafeteria (which is a sketchy place on its own... circa 1955... pure communist design) and I walked around to corner to find....

... the LARGEST three pumpkins I had EVER seen before. I am kicking myself that I did not run home to fetch my camera because the next three hours were filled with the HILARITY that ensued as Lindsay attempted to get the pumpkins washed, cut into reasonable baking chunks, and then smashed up into puree... I will just describe the situation as best I can using as few sentences as possible...

Image #1: The utter jaw dropping shock in Lindsay's face as I showed her the size of the pumpkins. I am not sure how much they weighed, but they were heavy and around the size of a smallish medium sized exercise ball... like, way larger than your typical jack-o-latern. Plus they are white-ish... the orange pumpkins are not that great to eat.

Image #2: Lindsay wrestling with the pumpkins in the
industrial sized sink to get them cleaned. Turns out pumpkins are slippery when wet.

Image #3: SOmehow the pumpkins made it in one piece from the back room, to the sink, and then onto the table, where they slowly met their end. First a butcher knife... too small and whimpy. We then found a kitchen axe (not sure what the kitchen axe traditionally is used for. for that night, it was for hacking at the pumpkins).

Image #4: Beads of sweat slowly forming on Lindsay and Carmine's foreheads as they take turns with the axe to battle the pumpkins into smaller, more manageable pieces.

Image #5: The hysterical laughter coming from the school cafeteria lady who was there to help us in the kitchen. She was just standing off to the side and laughed as Carmine and Lindsay took turns with the axe. By now there were bits of pumpkin and chunks of the stuff flying all over the place... and the lunch lady just kept laughing.

FINALLY after some time has passed, the three giant pumpkins are into smaller hunks, and are spread out among about 6-8 platters to be put in the over to bake. Pumpkin needs to soften.

Image #6: Lindsay's slow anger and frustration as she realizes some of them are burning in these Communist era ovens but are still remaining uncooked and hard. Didn't quiet realize how hard it was to burn something and yet it still remain undercooked.

Eventually the pumpkin came out of the oven, there were several hands there to help pull the pumpkin apart and into a GIANT stove top pan. There would be pumpkin forever.... soooooo much.

All the while I had been making the pie crusts/dough with the ingredients and tools I was not totally familiar with. It was turning out okay, and we made a few preliminary pies to work out our timing and to familiarize ourselves with the ovens. They came out pretty well so I was happy.

Saturday though, was showtime. We had to make pies enough to feed about 150 people. We decided to make as many pies as we could, and that people would eat them or take home the extra. I think we ended up with something absurd, like 15 LARGE pies.... sooo much. There was still left over pumpkin.

The remainder of the pumpkin has been portioned off into bags.
Some people have already come to pick up some of it to use for their own cooking, but right now we have enough in our freezers to last for quite the long time!






Sunday, November 22, 2009

More Adventures

...include Thanksgiving for the entire faculty which was a fantastic time on Saturday afternoon. I think I can confidently claim that I will never again attempt to make homemade apple pie and pumpkin pie (from whole pumpkin to pie) for a large group ever again. haha. It was not so bad, but without certain conveniences like pastry cutters and canned pumpkin, and tools in the circa 1950's kitchen of our school cafeteria, this made for quite the undertaking. THANKFULLY the 14 or so pies we made came out mostly beautifully, with a few exceptions, but it all tasted delicious! Pictures, I promise, will be up soon once I have finished the grades I need to submit for tomorrow... oops!

Another ongoing event in the adventures of the ladies of Pink house: our battle with the washing machine... Here is another follow-up email that was sent by my roommate, which I found particularly amusing:

Hi ---,

Do you have any update or ETA on the replacement washing machine at Pink House? I tried to do laundry today and it didn't go well - it ended with me saying some very harsh words to the machine after it nearly crushed a few of my fingers while trying to run away. It would be nice to have laundry be a non-event again, so anything that you can do to hurry the new machine along to our house would be much appreciated.

Thanks!
A

I certainly hope that our washing machine can be fixed soon... but it does make for some amusing stories! I have not tried using it recently, especially with Abby's stories, however my laundry sitch is getting a bit dire!

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Flu Vacation Adventure


Last week we were given the week off from school as mandated by the BG Ministry of Education to help end the spread of the flu epidemic through our schools... Now, this would have been a great idea and a great way to spread germs however, all other public areas of business and entertainment remained open, so I am not sure how well their epidemic control worked, but it certainly made for some excited teachers here. Unfortunately some people had to remain because they were considered to be "administrative staff", so not all parties were included in this time of unexpected adventures. This did not stop a few of us from taking advantage of this time to explore a few previously unknown territories. Some went off to Italy (Cinque Terre and the Lakes Region to the north), others to Greece, Rome, Romania... I went with a few friends in a rent-a-car to visit the oft-disputed region of Macedonia.

Partially I was interested in going because of the beautiful pictures and accounts of travel in the country enticed me. Another part (and the part with the stronger interest) wanted to visit Macedonia to try to figure out what all the hub-bub has been over with this tiny, little country! Bulgarians claim the region and its' people to be Bulgarian; Greece lays some of the same claims. I am not sure which or if either are correct (doubtful) but I feel like this little place has something special to offer if there are so many people upset. I wanted to find out for myself about the country and to try to see what it all was about.

Wednesday morning, we rented a car and were off to the BG-MK border. The night before, I had received an email from the Warden of the US Embassy in Sofia, Bulgaria warning travellers that a bridge on the BG side of the border zone had collapsed the previous day .... "due to bad weather"... Now, I am not sure what kinds of bridges you all have travelled on, but I am pretty sure that the bridge is not supposed to collapse DUE TO WEATHER. We luckily received this email and decided to take an alternate, longer, but also more beautiful route. We certainly had a hard time figuring out where we were supposed to go-- there apparently is NO MAP INFO available on Google Maps feature! It was SO WEIRD.... So, because we did not have a map, we just kind of took off driving in the right direction, hoping there would be better signage on the other side of the board. There was not.



We actually believed this was the customs border patrol of Macedonia. For a brief man...


Lindsay in front of the Aleksandar of Makedonia memorial/public fountain/giant war symbolism

Mosque in central Bitola, Macedonia

(there will be more uploaded soon!!!!)

Monday, November 16, 2009

Adventures of Pink House

Recently, our washing machine and dryer have been giving us a run for our money.... While I ws out of town for the "flu vacation" which was given to us last week, thus prompting an impromptu trip to Macedonia, my roommate who works in the college counseling office, who was required to stay and work for the week, had an encounter with our washer... This is her letter to the school president... It was too hysterical not to share... :) perhaps we will receive a new washer and dryer?? Who knows...

Hi ___,

The washing machine here at Pink House is a sad little machine these days. A part of it broke off a few weeks ago and it was leaking water, so I put in a work request and they sort of fixed it. I mean, it wasn't perfect - Vinka (our house cleaner) said that it was "Bulgarski rabota," Bulgarian work, since it was still leaking some water. Anyway, this past weekend it got worse. The part that had broken off broke off again and the machine started walking. More like shimeying, really. I came home one day and it had shimeyed out a good six feet or so away from the wall. It even turned a corner - impressive!

All this to say that our machine is in rough shape. It shakes loudly during the spin cycle, it still leaks some water down the front, and it shimeys all over the place. I'll leave it up to you to decide the best course of action, I'm not sure if there's an appliance repair place that could be called or if this sad little machine has just met its end.

Thanks for your attention to this matter.

-"A"

Tuesday, November 03, 2009

Zombie Remnants of Halloween Eve







I look like a crazed demon (or I guess, a zombie) in this one... 

Happy Halloween kids!!! hahahahhaaa...

First Snow!!


IT'S SNOWING!!!!

Today was the first snow that has any sort of accumulation on the ground. I will take pictures tomorrow to post :-D

(UPDATE! Here is a photo I took this morning before heading to school :-) Hooray for snow!)


I love snow! It tells of the coming winter....

My students were not as excited for snow as I was... They also were campaigning to get 50 more students absent from school so that the admin would possibly cancel it for a "flu vacation". I told them to stay healthy, drink lots of water and get lots of sleep... what a good Biology teacher I am.

okay, so I admit that since looking at these photos, it is not a whole lot of snow. However, it was still nice to see yesterday :)