Category: photography

July 4th holiday in CT and NYC – day 1, part 2

So not long after posting that last post there we’re a few new developments 😉 Jeremy and I were sitting in our room at the Library Hotel trying to decide what to do for the evening, I decided to look online to see if there were any Broadway shows that had tickets available and Jeremy was rummaging around in his bag. He says to me “I have a better idea.”, I turn around and he is holding a gorgeous platinum diamond ring! “Will you marry me?” he asked, and after a few stunned seconds I said “Yes!” and we kissed and smiled and did all that cute stuff and then both sat amazed on the bed for a few moments letting everything sink in.

Then of course the phone calls to all the parents and friends commenced, followed by a photo of the ring to put up on the various social media outlets with a caption of “I said yes!” to make the announcement, and of course the prerequisite relationship status change on Facebook to “engaged” (we are computer geeks after all).

At our friend Jim’s recommendation we went out to celebrate with champagne at a champagne bar called Flute. We each enjoyed a trio tasting of champagnes (mine were all roses, Jeremy’s were different varietals), truffle salted fries and a fruit and cheese plate, followed by another tasty glass of champagne each.

After finishing our champagne we headed to the rooftop bar of our hotel, which was closed since it was Sunday, but offered fun night views, especially since it was a bit foggy, and we both took some photos before heading back to the room for the evening.

P.S. Thanks for all the congrats via Facebook, Twitter and SMS 🙂 we are super excited, but have vowed to try and just enjoy the engagementness of it all for at least a month before going into wedding-planning mode. Seeing as both of us are uber planners we’ll see how well that works out 😉

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Brandon Plantation and Gardens

Brandon Plantation House

Brandon Plantation House

This past weekend we had a turn of nicer weather so Jeremy and I made a day trip on Saturday to visit Brandon Plantation on the James River. We started the day at the first Williamsburg Farmer’s Market of the season, had breakfast at the Trellis, then just started driving. We didn’t have a particular destination in mind, only that we wanted to take advantage of the sunny (most of the time) weather and get out of the house. We decided to go across the Jamestown-Scotland ferry and found (using a paper map, craziness!) a place called “Brandon Plantation“. After a bit of Googling on my Droid we found directions and I called to make sure they were open (they were, until 4pm).

As we came up the long drive the weather started looking a bit grumpy, but the clouds had been coming in and then dissipating all day so we decided to stick with the “being outside” plan. We pulled into the parking lot and were the only car there, there was no sign of anyone else at the plantation aside from a car next to one of the secondary buildings. The admission fee is $8 on an honor system so we decided to poke around quickly, see if there was more than just the immediate area to see (there definitely was), and then pay our fee. Just as we walked up to the house there was a random downpour for about 2 minutes but then after that we were given a break from the rain and Jeremy and I explored the freshly rained-on gardens and grounds (yielding a few fun “raindrops on plants” photos 😉 ).

The house (which is not open to the public) is a really cool bit of architecture and the gardens are broken up into little “rooms” with a single entrance to each. The daffodils were in full bloom as well as many of the trees. The plantation was built right along the James River so we stopped at the riverside and enjoyed the views, snapped some photos of the storm clouds go over the opposing shore and then headed home. The entire time we were there we only saw one other person, the gardener, but it was a great afternoon trip and definitely a spot to come back to as the flowers continue coming up (it’s also on the Garden Club of Virginia’s Historic Garden Week list of places to visit).

Brandon Plantation Flickr Set

Brandon Plantation Flickr Set

So those have been all of my photo trips as of late. Hopefully I can be a bit more diligent about posting as the weather gets nicer and we go out on more excursions.

Happy Spring!

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Botanical Gardens and PicPlz

Jeremy and I went to Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden at the end of January in the pursuit of flowers in the midst of the crazy winter we’ve been having, thankfully they have a great greenhouse with seasonal flowers on one side, tropical plants in the center, and orchids on the other side. It was great to get outside and walk around (and go inside the greenhouse and enjoy the warmth and lovely flower smells) so we decided to buy an annual membership since we usually go to the gardens two or three times a year, and with the admission price for two people it was worth it to buy the pass. The extra bonus with the membership is that it gets you into a whole slew of other botanical gardens around the country (including the gardens in Norfolk), so it’s a really great deal and is now in the rotation of default places to go take photos when we need some inspiration. Flickr sets linked below.

Lewis Ginter Botanical Gardens Flickr Set 1

Lewis Ginter Botanical Gardens Flickr Set - trip 1

Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden Flickr set - trip 2

Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden Flickr Set - trip 2

Norfolk Botanical Garden Flickr Set

Norfolk Botanical Garden Flickr Set

"Free Smells" PicPlz photo from Austin

I’ve joined in on the “use your smart phone to take pictures and then add filters to it” trend and have started using an app called PicPlz to try and practice taking more “random” photos of everyday stuff. So every once in a while either in my Twitter or my Flickr stream (or both) you’ll see a photo or two appear from something random I noticed during my day. My first PicPlz photo was taken at on our first trip to Lewis Ginter.

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chicago – day 2

Since our flight was not until 7pm Sunday night we had pretty much the entire day for exploring. We decided to go to the famed Field Museum of Chicago, but first we stopped for breakfast at a bagel place called NYC Bagel Deli (found courtesy of Yelp, again, yay for social media), New York-style bagels in Chicago, I know but they were really good (I got an everything bagel with garden veggie cream cheese, that’s my control case for bagel places, if they do that well, then they’re golden). After breakfast (and coffee for me) we made our way to the nearest El stop and hopped on, riding “the Loop” around downtown Chicago to the Field Museum. As we were walking to the museum we went past an interesting, and slightly creepy art installation called “Agora” that had the backdrop of the Chicago skyline, a very cool locale to be sure. Then we were off (after taking some panoramic shots of Chicago from the steps of the museum) to explore the Field Museum.

When you first enter the large atrium/lobby of the museum you are greeted by its most famous resident, Sue, the largest, most complete and best preserved T-Rex. We started on the top floor of the museum with the gemstones, and worked our way around the floor looking at the ancient Asian artifacts, meteorites and more, and realized we’d spent over 2 hours just on that floor…there was no way we were going to be able to get to any other museums that day. So we took our time strolling through the other areas of the museum, past the “Gold” exhibition, the menagerie of stuffed animal specimens from around the world and of course, the dinosaur fossils.

After we finished at the museum we went to a restaurant called Mercat a la Planxa, a restaurant owned by Iron Chef Jose Garces. We were there just in time to catch the brunch tasting menu, we had the option of picking four tapas courses and unlimited bloody marys, mimosas or 3 different flavored sangrias or five tapas courses, all for $25. Not being able to pass up such a good deal for food and drink we opted for the four course menu and I had the rosemary and grape sangria and Jeremy had the pomegranate peach sangria. The entire menu is (not surprisingly) Spanish-influenced and was very tasty, Jeremy and I made sure to order different items so that we were essentially getting an 8 course tasting menu.

Brandade

Brandade (this was very good)

Bacon-wrapped dates

Bacon-wrapped dates

Andouille potato hash

Andouille potato hash

Shrimp and grits

Shrimp and grits

Grilled chicken sandwich

Grilled chicken sandwich

Crab salad

Crab salad (yum)

Ham sandwich

Ham sandwich

Steak and scallop

Steak and scallop (one of my favorites of the meal)

Cream puff with berries

Cream puff with berries

Rice pudding

Rice pudding (and Jeremy trying to get into it before I was done taking photos)

Chocolate pudding

Chocolate pudding

Once the meal was over they were done serving brunch (it was 3pm) and they were gearing up for dinner, so when we asked to see a dessert menu they just brought us the three “demonstration” desserts for the day for free, a very nice gesture and they were quite tasty as well. I had my DSLR with me this time for photos (and my 50mm prime lens) and since the restaurant was pretty quiet it was much easier for me to take pictures (although the server did catch me doing it one time, saying “We see a lot of people doing that”, so I didn’t feel quite so guilty).

After lunch we checked out of the W, and hopped on the El back to O’Hare. Our flight left on time and we were back in the ‘burg by 10:30pm. Overall it was a great trip (and a lovely surprise), I was expecting Chicago to have more of that “big scary city” feel but it didn’t. There is some really cool architecture there, nice parks and walkways along the water and great restaurants, I’m definitely looking forward to the next time I can return.

All of my photos of the trip are up as a Flickr set.

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Chicago – day 0 and the first part of day 1

So every year in the fall Jeremy and I will take a mini-vacation. The past two years we have gone to Charlottesville, Va but this year Jeremy said he wanted to surprise me and so he made arrangements not telling me what they were, just that I was to pick him up from the airport after his business trip to PA. He managed to keep the destination secret for over two months…then I get an email from United Airlines the Friday before we were supposed to leave informing me of my “upcoming trip to Chicago”, busted! (And I informed Jeremy as such with a text message promptly after receiving the email). We had both talked about wanting to go to Chicago sometime as neither of us had ever gotten farther than the O’Hare airport so this was a great surprise.
So Friday afternoon I head to the airport and we fly out (first class! Yay upgrades!) around 5pm. The awesome thing about first class is the unlimited beverages…including wine, which we both took full advantage of on the flight 😉 We landed in Chicago at 6pm Central time, made our way to the subway and picked up a 3-day unlimited transit pass (definitely the best value for a weekend, $14 for unlimited rides vs $1.50 per ride otherwise, and since we were planning on using public transport as our primary transportation this worked well for us, no worries about running out of fare on your transit card). Our hotel, The W – City Center is on the blue line which comes straight out of the airport, so a 30ish minute ride and a bit of wandering later we made it to our hotel and checked into the room. The lounge/bar/lobby of the W was pretty busy with the cocktail crowd but we’d had enough wine on the plane so we headed up to our room.
This room is so cool, I *love* the decor, very modern and graphic, but cosy too. Instead of the bed being perpendicular to the door when you walk in it’s facing you and the first thing you see walking in, definitely a focal point with its dramatic under-bed lighting. There’s lots of cool mood lighting and the lampshades have screenprinted text of various words that start with “w” (wish…their main slogan word, welcome, wonderland, wordplay, etc.) and an art/light piece with the quote “life isn’t about finding yourself. Life is about creating yourself.” So overall a very swanky, very cool room.
This morning we woke up early (for this timezone, around 730) and went to breakfast at a local diner. They had all the classic diner breakfast items, Jeremy had pancakes and sausage, I had a spinach and feta omlette with flat-top hash brown potatoes (so good! crunchy golden brown deliciousness) and toast. After that filling breakfast we headed to the number 6 bus that took us on a scenic ride following the lakeshore down to the Museum of Science and Technology.
The museum was very busy and even though we got there right when they opened at 930 we still had to wait about 15 minutes in line to get in, but there were enough distractions of exhibit advertisements and people watching that it wasn’t too bad. They had just started their holiday exhibition so the main lobbies were decked out with dozens of Christmas trees (each themed as a different country), a nice way to start out the holiday season. There are dozens of interacive exhibits, from the human body and genomes to farming technology, trains, planes (including an entire 727 you can walk through) but my favorite area was the storm and weather area. There were cool simulated tornadoes, explanation of how lightning and static electricity works, and demos of a miniature tsunami showing how different types of coastlines affect the waves.
Around noon we left the museum in search of food and after a quick consultation on Yelp and Urbanspoon we decided on The Nile restaurant, a Middle Eastern place, about two blocks from the museum with a very well reviewed red lentil soup. So we take a quick walk to the restaurant and try to order a “lighter” lunch since we are going to a nice dinner this evening at L20. With that in mind, Jeremy and I split a bowl of the red lentil soup (which definitely lived up to its reputation, savory, earthy, hearty…although it was yellow not red, not sure how that works), a cucumber and yogurt salad with various herbs in it (also very tasty) then we both got pitas, mine with chicken, Jeremy’s with beef and lamb. Both pitas had yogurt, tomatoes, thin slices of pickle and red onion along with the marinated and seasoned meat, and the pita was grilled/pressed making the outside toasty and crunchy but the inside still soft, yum! And to top it off the whole meal was under $20, a very good deal for the amount of food they gave you.
After lunch we decided to take the 6 back uptown and we wandered along the river and lakefront, snapping some photos of the city and its cool and varied architecture along the way. We’ll relax at the hotel until 6 then we’re taking the complementary “Acura experience” chauferred car (you watch a marketing video apparently during your ride) to dinner at L20 (tasting menu here we come!) 🙂

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Istanbul – Day 5

Doug and Elif’s wedding wasn’t until 6:30 in the evening so the 7 of us had most of the day for exploring, so we decided to venture to the largest of the Princes’ Islands. The ferry ride was an hour and a half, leaving from the southernmost end of the European side of Istanbul and it stopped at each of the smaller islands before dropping us of at the main island a bit before lunchtime. I had been thinking this would be a light energy-expenditure day so I (and Jeremy) wore jeans, which we soon learned was not the best idea as the monastery, the main attraction on the island, is at the top of the mountain. When you stepped off the ferry there were bike rental shops and horse-drawn taxi carriages waiting for all the tourists coming off, we tried asking one of the drivers if they went to the monastery but I think we ended up annoying him or something and he said no he didn’t go there (we later found out that the base of the mountain where the monastery is was in fact exactly where he, and all the other carriages, were going…lost in translation, oh well) so we decided to walk.

We knew that we had to go up but we didn’t see a specific or marked path to take so we just took the first “up” we saw, which was a small side stairwell that ascended about 40 feet up the mountain, we followed that, then another path through the residential area and then ended up out on what appeared to be a park path that also ascended at a non-trivial grade. There was lots of dusty paths and scrubby pine trees, a few very nice views, but definitely far from the seaside residential area we had just came out of. As we arrived to the top of the hill/mountain (it seemed more mountainous the longer we climbed) we came upon one vista and to our chagrin, saw (what we thought was) the monastery two mountains/hills away, damn. So we continued on back down the mountain and came back into a residential area which soon turned into a regular paved road and we again encountered the horse-drawn carriages, at last we had reached the base of the mountain (turns out the tower we saw was a more modern structure). So we, along with many other tourists, began the trek up the mountain, it only took 15 or 20 minutes to get to the top, probably a 30% grade most of the way up, but seems a lot longer when you’re a bit out of shape 😉 We looked around the outside of the monastery, then headed to the restaurant to rehydrate and refuel while enjoying some pretty spectacular views of the sea and distant Istanbul. We ordered beer, melon (I think it was honeydew, some of the sweetest I’ve ever had), I ordered fried eggplant (no breading, just the vegetable fried) with a yogurt sauce, a few of the guys had sausages. Overall it was a very tasty meal, probably made even more tasty due to the fact that we were hot, tired and hungry.

We made the trek back down but opted to follow the carriages most of the way down, which kept us in the residential area the whole time rather than re-ascending the nearby mountain…essentially we had gone over when everyone else had gone around the base of the island. We hopped on the ferry and were back in just enough time to get cleaned up for the wedding, hopped in taxis at 5:30pm and headed down to a pier at the Bospherous to wait for the hotel water taxi to bring us across the water to the wedding/reception site, a beautiful old, white stone hotel right on the banks of the Asian side of the water.

The boat that picked us up was quite swank, all wood trim inside so as we climbed in and rode across in our suits and dresses it felt very James Bond-esque. When we got to the other side we were led through the hotel lobby to a covered open-air patio where cocktails were being served. Apparently the theme was green drinks (according to Doug they were the hotel’s specialties), mojitos, green apple martinis with cinnamon stick garnish, and a bright green vodka-based drink (no idea what the mixer was, something sweet and candy-like). There were also pistachios, hazelnuts and (oddly) corn nuts on the cocktail tables and small appetizers were passed around (a salmon and avocado on a cracker, eggplant in a pasty shell and a bruschetta). We stuck together for most of the cocktail hour but were separated into twos and threes for dinner which was on a lower open-air patio right on the water, it was truly a gorgeous setting. Jeremy and I sat with some of Elif’s cousins and their significant others (one, in fact, was getting married the next day). Doug and Elif came down the stairs around 7:30 and danced their first dance together (didn’t recognize the song), then dinner was served as the bride and groom went around greeting and visiting with each of the tables. The first course was a series of traditional mezes, followed by a seafood canelloni, then beef medallions with potatoes and green beans. Wine was freely being poured the entire time and after the main course everyone had worked up enough gumption to get up on the dance floor as the dance music started playing (during dinner they were playing a great mix of Harry Connick Jr. and jazz). Nearly everyone at the reception (about 150 all told) were dancing. There was a fun mix of both American pop music and Turkish traditional dance music. We were encouraged to join during the traditional music, all of us joining hands and going in big circles around the bride and groom, and generally just having a fun time, language was no barrier here. After a half hour or so of dancing they cut the cake (a chocolate cake with a cream/strawberry filling) and served Turkish tea or coffee. During this time the trays of vodka-based shots were also making their way around, emboldening those on the dance floor. Everyone danced until about midnight, when the party wrapped up and we headed back to the hotel water taxi (after a celebratory passing around of a bottle of raki before we boarded). We arrived back at the hotel, agreed to meet up at 10am for the next day’s touring adventures and headed to bed.

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Istanbul – Day 4

After a bit of a slow start in the morning everyone but Elif (went with her cousin to do pre-wedding stuff) and Ray (recovering from the night before) headed down to explore the boardwalk next to the Bospherous. It’s amazing the size of the two bridges that cross between the European and Asian continents, granted the ships that have to pass underneath them are ridiculously huge as well. We walked along the water for a while, stopped at a waffle shop for a sweet lunch of fresh thin waffles with (what I believe was) pudding and fruit, eaten like a big thick taco, very sweet but very tasty, everyone was on a sugar high for the next hour or so. We then took a taxi to the Spice Bazaar where we met up with Ray, Elif and Kay. We split up as we did at the Grand Bazaar and myself, Jeremy, Ray, Oliver, Erin and Mike headed into the bazaar, we emerged with a few of us carrying small vacuum-sealed bags of spices, and some Turkish delight. This was the first time I’d actually had Turkish delight and before this I had no idea what it actually was, I’d only ever heard of it as what Edmund was tempted with by the White Witch in C.S. Lewis’ The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe; turns out it is (granted with many, many possible variations) a chewy cross between gelatin and nougat, typically mixed with nuts and rolled in powdered sugar. We were given samples of one made with honey rather than sugar and I think that made the taste so much richer and less overpoweringly sweet. After reconvening in front of yet another (unnamed) beautiful mosque, grabbing a snack of grilled corn (there are vendors everywhere selling this) and splitting a sesame bagel-like bread, we made the trek to our next destination, the Turkish baths.

The Turkish Baths were quite an unusual experience, but definitely fun. We went to one of the oldest bath houses in Istanbul, Cemberlitas Hamami, built by Mimar Sinan in 1584. After selecting one of three options, either a “self-wash” for 35 TL, the traditional “bath” for 55 TL (this is what I, Elif and Kay, Doug’s mom, got), or the bath plus oil massage for 95 TL (Erin upgraded to this) the men and women were separated into different sections of the building (apparently the men went to the original section of the building, the women were in a more recently built part). We were escorted to a dressing room where we were shown lockers to store our belongings, given a thin towel and a disposable bathing suit bottom to put on (apparently the guys were just given the towel) and comfy rubber sandals. Once properly outfitted we were taken to the main bathing room which is a large, steamy, open room with a giant circular warmed marble slab in the center. The marble is higher in the center than on the outsides so the water can run off and we were instructed to lay along one outside edge on our towels. We laid there for 10 minutes or so and then each of us was given a marvelous massage/scrubbing by one of the women working at the bath, first with a rough cloth (it was crazy the amount of dead skin and city grime they managed to scrub off of you, and your skin is amazingly soft after it) then with a soft cloth and lots of lemongrass/balsam scented bubbles. You then were rinsed off with buckets of water, guided over to a nearby fountain where you sat and had your hair washed and then (at least the women) were shown to a warm pool to hang out and relax for as long as we wanted (the girls waited here while Erin had her massage). Then we returned to the ante-room of the main bathing area, were given fluffy warm towels to dry off and went upstairs to change back into our street clothes and then reconvened with all the guys.

Elif, Doug and Kay parted ways with us after the baths to go to dinner with Elif’s extended family while the rest of us wandered through the city for a bit back towards the Spice Bazaar where we had dinner at a kebab restaurant recommended to us by our tour guide the day before. We had a similar selection of mezes (only chose 4 this time) then we each had an entree (Jeremy and I split a larger version of the Turkish “pizza” we had the first night and a lamb kebab), wine (note to self, ask how much the wine is before ordering it, 60 TL per bottle was a bit steep), and ended the evening with Turkish tea (or coffee in Mike’s case, which is like other European-style coffees, very strong and served in very tiny cups) and a variety of baklava that was like angel-hair phyllo dough wrapped around honeyed pistachios. One more speedy cab ride (Mike, Erin, Jeremy and I in one cab, Ray, Randy and Oliver in the other…throughout all the cab rides today, 3 in total, ours always arrived at our destination first, we would totally win this leg on Amazing Race) and we were back to the hotel, checking email, and agreed to meet up at 9am for breakfast the next morning and afterwards we would take the ferry to visit the Prince’s Islands off the coast for the day before the wedding festivities in the evening.

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Istanbul – Day 3

The morning started off with everyone congregating downstairs and making use of the free wifi in the lobby to catch up on email etc. before our continental Turkish breakfast included with the price of our rooms. We en-masse headed into the dining room where there was a spread of tomatoes, cucumbers, and three kinds of breakfast breads, standard white and wheat slices, a tasty yeast roll and a phyllo-dough pastry. Not wanting to neglect any variety of carbohydrate I took one of each, along with fixing a cup of Turkish tea. So throughout the course of this trip I’ve learned I am a big fan of Turkish tea. It’s brewed very very strong and is served alongside a pot of hot water (frequently it is served in a special double-spout kettle). The idea is you dilute the tea with the hot water to your taste, then add sugar cubes if desired. Most folks didn’t know this was either a) tea and not coffee or b) supposed to be diluted so we all had some pretty strong first tastes of Turkish tea (although Jeremy, who does not like coffee or most American teas, enjoys the Turkish tea undiluted, saying it is the only tea he’s had that doesn’t taste too watered down), now we have learned “how to take tea” and many of us order it at every meal.

Following breakfast we reunited with Elif’s parents, Kay and Elif’s aunt, along with Elif’s uncle and cousin and headed onto our minibus for our tour. We visited:
-Hippodrome – No longer surrounded by stands, this has the feel of a small park sandwiched between the Blue Mosque and Haga Sophia, with the only remnants of the stadium being the three ancient monuments lined up in the center of the ring.
-Blue Mosque – Still an active mosque, everyone must remove their shoes and place them in a plastic bag before entering, gorgeous interior
-Haga Sophia – Now a museum, no longer an active place of worship, amazing tiling and mosaic work
-Underground Cisterns – Very cool (and dark) underground water resevoir with dozens of aligned Roman columns holding up the ceiling.
-Sultan’s Palace – A series of 3 courtyards with various administrative and support buildings, beautiful views of the water
-Grand Bazaar – The bazaars are very interesting places, think narrow (10 feet or so) halls with shops on either side and people *everywhere*. In general there are probably a few dozen or so types of items sold at the bazaars but there are hundreds of vendors for each thing. We’ve been told you are expected to haggle with the sellers as they price their items about twice what they are expecting to sell them for, I found a cool silver case to hold my business cards in with (what I’m told) is a traditional Turkish pattern on the front, haggled from 15 TL to 10 TL.

Before visiting the Sultan’s palace we had traditional kebabs at a local restaurant served along a white bean salad and the most excellent indescribable dessert, it was maybe bulgar (or something else resembling couscous in size and texture) mixed with honey and maybe some kind of nut, it was compacted enough you could cut small slices out of it but wow was it tasty.

The tour lasted from 9:30 until 6 and then we reconvened at 7 to meet up with Elif’s college friends and cousins at a restaurant in the Taksim area of Istanbul, which is a pedestrian high-end shopping and restaurant district and also one of the main nightlife hotspots. All told there were 20 of us sitting in the outside seating area of the restaurant, which served a fixed menu of dozens of meze as well as more “entree” style items like liver, flash fried small fish that’s indigenous to the Bospherous, and meat and rice served in rolled grape leaves. This meal was also accompanied by raki or beer or Turkish wine (had both a Cabernet and a Merlot, both quite good) and ended with watermelon, nectarines, grapes and fresh figs (this was the first time I’d ever had a fresh fig, so much better than a Fig Newton!). Afterwards we decided to split up into two groups, folks who wanted a quieter spot to talk (Elif wanted to catch up with her friends) and those who wanted to check out more of the night life, Jeremy and I went along with Elif, Doug and Elif’s friends to a coffee/tea bar on the top floor of an apartment building that had 270 degree views of the Bosphorous, quite an amazing sight at night. Jeremy discussed world politics with Elif and her friends while Doug and I caught up on what we’d been doing the past few months, it was a great, laid back time. We agreed at the beginning of the night to meet in the morning at 9:30 for breakfast, this was not the most awesome idea by the time the night ended around 2am but oh well.

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Istanbul – Days 1 and 2

Our flight left Dulles around 5:15pm, we arrived (courtesy of a 115mph tailwind) about half an hour early to Frankfurt where we headed to the Lufthansa lounge for a few hours before our flight to Istanbul. After a half hour delay, and a very odd musical chairs of checking our tickets and allowing us to sit in the gate waiting area, then having everyone file back out and rechecking our tickets before boarding, we got onto the 3? hour flight to Istanbul where both Jeremy and I fell asleep for a good portion of the flight after our second breakfast. We arrived in Istanbul around 1:30, acquired our $20 visas, went through customs, found our checked bags (in less than 5 minutes, was quite awesome) and located our shuttle driver by about 3pm.

We had about an hour ride to the hotel from the airport where we were first introduced to the driving experience in Istanbul…
1) lines on the pavement? more guidelines than rules
2) Honking is used to indicate frustration, location, gratitude and greetings or all of the above at the same time, if the guy behind, next to or in front of you honks, you should respond accordingly
3) Pedestrians take their life into their own hands crossing the street, the cars will not yield for you until you are standing in front of them
4) You must be thisclose to the car in front of you, any extra space is not allowed; accordingly, if there is a gap between you and the next car while you’re moving make sure to close that space in as little time as possible
5) (and this is according to our Turkish tourguide) Turks are colorblind, red, yellow, green…they are all the same
Overall the taxi and/or shuttle rides are very entertaining, a few folks have taken video of the cab rides, if I can find one I will link to it later.

When we got to the hotel Doug and Elif called up to our room once we had checked in and coordinated that we would meet up with everyone for dinner at 8pm at a restaurant within walking distance from the hotel. We had about 3 hours to kill, so there was definitive napping occurring pre-dinner then we met up with everyone in the lobby at 8 and got to meet the rest of the “USA” group staying at the hotel: Mike, Boston co-worker of Doug and his girlfriend Erin, Oliver, high school friend of Doug, Ray, co-worker from Williamsburg and Boston (and the next morning Randy, friend of Doug and co-worker with Ray). We walked a few blocks to an open-air restaurant where we met Elif’s parents, Doug’s mom Kay, Elif’s aunt and grandparents. Dinner was a smorgasboard of Turkish cuisine. We started with mezzes (appetizers/tapas) along with baskets of a flat bubbly bread topped with black sesame seeds which, according to Elif’s dad, you are supposed to tear open and fill with the goat’s milk cheese and butter, then roll up and enjoy. The bread is sort of like a thin empty brick-fired naan, the cheese is sort of like a mild feta in flavor and texture and between that and the creamy butter and the crispy and chewy bread, a very fun play on texture and tasty to boot. Next were the curry-spiced lamb and bulgur hand-formed meatballs which you ate wrapped in a lettuce leaf, “Turkish pizza” with a savory unknown meat topping, tomato salad with a vinagrette, fried meatballs with lamb and broccoli, sauteed eggplant with olive oil, and finally a cold cucumber quiche (keep in mind, this is just the starter course(s)). All of this is then followed by a toast with raki (pronounced rakoo), which is “Turkish uzo”, so a licorice-flavored 90 proof liquor mixed with water so it turns white. For the main course I had the traditional doner kebab (strips of lamb in a tasty brown sauce over cubes of bread and a yogurt dipping sauce. We ended the meal with slices of watermelon and nectarines. After all of this food and the travelling (and in the case of some folks, all the raki) everyone was ready to head to bed for the next morning was our grand tour of Istanbul.

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Long weekend in Connecticut – Day 3

Sunday morning we met with Jeremy’s mom at the Inn for breakfast (he had lemon ricotta hot cakes, his mom had the spinach, mushroom and goat cheese omelet and I had the eggs benedict) before heading out for a day of exploring. Our first stop was the Submarine Force Museum, home of the USS Nautilus. It was rather fun driving through Groton, since in so many ways it’s like driving through Norfolk with all of the military presence. The Nautilus is one cool vessel, and in addition to being able to tour about half of the vessel we also watched a video on the history of submarines in the US military (more interesting than it sounds 😉 ). For pics of the Nautilus check out the Flickr set.

After we finished our tour there we decided to stop for lunch, at Jeremy’s mom’s recommendation, at Abbott’s Lobster in the Rough. (All the photos from lunch are up on Flickr)

Our meal and view from our picnic table

Our meal and view from our picnic table

This place would be really hard to find without GPS (yay for the Droid and it’s excellent navigational skills 😉 ), but is well worth seeking out. They are only open between Memorial Day and Labor Day for lunch and dinner but even on a Sunday the parking lot was full, with cars from all over New England. There’s a walk up counter where you place your order after selecting what you’d like from the large wooden menu out front, then you take your order to “the long red counter” around the corner to get your drinks and soups then the rest of your order will be called over the loudspeaker when it’s ready. There is some seating inside a screened porch but the majority is outside at picnic tables either under a tent or next to the shore.

Hot Lobster Roll from Abbott's Lobster in the Rough

Hot Lobster Roll from Abbott's Lobster in the Rough

We opted for an open table near the water where we split clam chowder (broth based, no cream, just clams, potatoes, and broth, simple but good), lobster bisque, a “hot” lobster roll (pretty much consisting solely of lumps of lobster meat on a buttered and toasted hamburger roll) and a lobster salad roll (tasty chunks of lobster with mayo and celery on a buttered and toasted hot dog roll). I had never had a lobster roll of any sort and I think this was definitely a great introduction, both were amazingly tasty and the pieces of lobster were huge! Definitely a place to seek out if you are a lobster fan.

After lunch we headed to Mystic, home of the Mystic Aquarium (as well as some humorously named stores spinning off of the town’s name such as “Optimystic Eyewear”). The aquarium, though a bit pricey ($28 adult admission) was fun and full of people.

Clown fish at Mystic Aquarium

Clown fish at Mystic Aquarium

They had a cool jellyfish exhibit along with outdoor exhibits for seals, beluga whales, and penguins, and of course lots of fish (all the aquarium pics are up on Flickr). After we toured the Aquarium we decided to head back, via “the scenic way” to the Inn before our dinner at 7pm. Jeremy wanted to take the ferry so we made our way there along the beautiful back country roads and just barely made it onto the last ferry of the day, as we pulled onto the small 9-car ferry the ferryman shut the gate (the ferry closes at 5pm we got there at 4:59).

Next adventure is dinner at the Copper Beech Inn dining room where we’re planning on having the chef’s tasting menu, yum!

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