14 August 2011

beer prices in oslo

yes, oslo is one of the most expensive cities in the world, and people often complain about measure it using the price of beer. the alternative newspaper natt&dag has a weekly “beer barometer” (ølbarometer) which lists oslo’s cheapest beer places, but unfortunately not online. fear not, I can share with you oslopuls’ recent survey of 55 bars around the city, with prices ranging from 29 kroner (if you buy before 1 PM) up to 92.5 kroner (at the touristy place by the sea)–all for a half-litre of beer.

(1 USD = 5.5 kroner)

8 August 2011

ingvild & thomas

this is my street.

on the blue building there’s this inscription:

Here Ingvild and Thomas met on March 21, 1998.

Now they are married.

“In 2004 they divorced, but they are happy nonetheless.”

5 August 2011

lust & last

there are lots of ads around Stockholm consisting of pixelated 18th-century oil paintings—a marketing ploy by the national museum for their lust & last (“lust & vice”) exhibit.

according to the museum:

The exhibition Lust & Vice shows examples of how sexuality, virtue and sin have been depicted in art since the 16th century – from an age when the Church preached that sexual contact was only permitted within wedlock to today’s questioning of who erotic art is created for. A total of 200 works are on show from the museum’s own collections, a mix of paintings, drawings, sculptures and applied art. You can also see a genuine chastity belt!

the exhibit was not bad. the most amusing piece was a two-sided painting by Martin van Meytens called “The Kneeling Nun”…

front side

back side

(painting images from albherto’s blog)

Nasjonalmuséet i Stockholm
Södra Blasieholmshamnen 2
111 48 Stockholm, Sverige

Opening hours:
Tuesday, Thursday 11 am – 8 pm.
Wednesday, Friday –Sunday 11 am – 5 pm.
Monday closed.

Admission: 120 kroner

4 August 2011

food lessons from paris

had a nice visit to Paris with my parents, and was surprised to learn a few things about food in France:

  • as expected, the food at most of the random French restaurants we tried was delicious. unexpected: the portions were huge.
  • any dessert that even mentions chocolate is swimming in it. and chocolate shops are everywhere.
  • moules frites: our waitress was so distressed to see me eating mussels with a fork, that she insisted on teaching me the correct method (“it’s so ugly to see you eating it that way, and your mussels are getting cold!”) and literally hand-fed me to show me how (yes, she was manic and more than a bit embarrassing). FYI: you’re supposed to use a mussel as pincers to pull out the flesh from another. and then you’re supposed to nestle the empty shells within each other into an orderly pile on the side of your plate.
  • foie gras: not a big fan.
  • pâtisseries: big fan, and happily you can find plenty of bakeries on every street.
  • can’t decide what to have for dessert? no problem: café gourmand includes a mini-portion of 3-4 of the restaurant’s desserts, accompanied by a cup of espresso.
  • macarons are expensive.

5-kg containers of nutella (I saw a woman buying two)

fancy chocolates at galeries lafayette

our successful search for tarte tatin (flambée & à la mode)

looking forward to our next visit!

2 August 2011

self-service... cash

typical norwegian holidays involve going to a “hytte” (cabin) to get as far away from civilization as possible (unless you’re of retiree age, in which case your holidays consist of living in Spain for several months of the year). from what I’ve gathered, there are two types of hytte: (1) the mountain hytte, where you isolate yourself in the wilderness, with nothing to do but (ironically, cross-country) ski in the winter; (2) the sea hytte, where you isolate yourself in a fjord, going boating in the summer or pretending that you’ll actually go for a swim in the freezing water.

this summer we went to G’s parents’ newly renovated sea hytte at Finnøy, spending our time eating, doing yardwork, eating, feeding stray kittens, and eating. but one day we decided to take a drive to the neighbouring island of Talgje:
View larger map

our main purpose was to buy some plants at a nursery there, but then the nursery turned out to be a nearly empty greenhouse with only a few dozen potted flowers. and no one around but a sign with prices and a money jar.

so after buying a couple of pots, we continued down the road until we passed a tomato stand (this region being the source of most of Norway’s hothouse tomatoes). again, no one around but a price list and a money jar. oh, the trustfulness of Norwegians!

I thought these money jars were funny, but self-critical norwegians complain about their society being too trusting / naïve… (a debate which has resurfaced since the massacre, in relation to questions of security.) and yet the stranger question to me, while we drove around Talgje, was how a 10-square-kilometre island with fewer than 300 people managed to get the government to construct an underwater tunnel to the island?