Friday, September 14, 2007

Sushi & Whisky


Our last meal with Dutch friends this year: sushi & tuna-steak at Marco's. On top of a great meal, we finally got to meet Marco's girlfriend Maaike.
Guess who does the photo shopping? Right, Bram, that's why you don't see Marco, but two Maaike's. It might be a visualization of how Marco's single malt doubles the good things in life.

Neighbours


This post is dedicated to the best neighbours one can have: Winny & Dancker. Seeing our chaotic state they insisted to cook us a decent meal. Thanks to Winny's Indonesian roots we got finger-licking food. On top of that they'll hop over to be the buffer when our stress-levels get too high, which is a very brave thing to do.
We have this vague plan for a renovation of our houses to cater for us when we are really old. When this materializes, our communal nurse should do everything except for the cooking. We'll just convert the kitchen into a wheelchair-friendly environment.

Saturday, September 08, 2007

Wedlock

Our bi-annual boot camp 'prepare for take-off' has started. Our stress-levels soar, notwithstanding Tlo & Tau showing us the best way to spend your day.

All in one: we're no fun at the moment. Our 'prepare for boot camp' party weekend on the other hand was absolutely fabulous.
To start with we had our by now traditional commemoration of our wedding day with Maud's foster-parents Janny & Cees (last year). We stay in their Zeeland farmhouse, and have our pick of shows during the Zeeland Autumn Festival. They just finished renovating the house, and the result is stunning!



Maud by the way managed to totally forget 'it' on the big day itself, because she was too busy revamping Bram's study. Is it an excuse she forgot her own birthday also? Anyway, Bram was not amused, but because he's a darling he took her out for Mexican food anyway to celebrate our first date.
It's a pity we forgot to take pictures of the Zeeuwse mussels and oysters we had for dinner, cause there's another traditional Dutch dish for you: cooked mussels and chips. Delicious!!! Also delicious is the famous Dutch raw herring, which you have to eat like shown in this poster Bram designed for a 'megweregwere integration project' (the bearded man is Bram's dad Ivan sr).

Lezzetli Turk yemekleri

Sunday we had our all time favourite 'food with friends'. We missed about three trains because the company was too nice to leave, and still had to do a world-record biking to the station. And the food was a - awesome, b - beautiful, c - cool, d - delicious etcetera.



Mehmet & Astrid definitely made it difficult for the rest of us to match up when it is our turn to cook! Later today Maud will try to make mercimek corbasi (lentil soup) for our neighbours. That experiment might be successful, but it will take some exercise before she can proudly show pictures of her mercimek koftesi; maybe when the next couple-to-cook, Hans & Inge, make it to Botswana coming European spring... By the way, we just have to get a Turkish restaurant in Joburg, Potch and Gabs!



Patlican and filled mushrooms (recipes).

Friday, September 07, 2007

Medelanders


Today our aunt Maria Isabel Dilrosun - Perez Quiroga got her Dutch citizenship.
The village of Oegstgeest isn't that big, so this month there were only three new Dutchies (the one with the big chain is the burgomaster).
The other two are obviously integrated in real responsible Dutch families with work and school going kids. One came alone; the other one brought his wife. Poor Marisabel had to drag along six people, proving us Surinam Indians don't send the kids to school, hossel for a living, and will appear everywhere where there's free food & drinks (we got of course the traditional Dutch coffee with cake).



It's a pity we are in Botswana when the girls, Karen & Daniela, get their citizenship coming December!



The Godfather Haroen: "I'll make you an offer you can't refuse..."
Thank you burgomaster! Your performance is most appreciated.

Saturday, August 25, 2007

Comments

How to: leave comments on our blog.
Underneath each post you first see the labels, and than:
'posted by maudenbram at [time] [X] comments', followed by a small picture of an envelope.
If you click on 'comments', you get a new webpage where you can enter a comment. Just follow the instructions and your comment will be posted and publicly accessible.
If you click on the little envelope, you get a webpage that enables you to send a link to the post to someone else.

Labels

Our faithful readers (here's to you, Paul and Bavo) might wonder what this labels are we suddenly add to posts. It works like this: we can add labels, like 'food', 'family', 'Botswana', 'wildlife', to posts. If you click on a label, you'll get a webpage with all our posts that have the same label.
We just started this, so you don't get the older posts about the same subject. Yet - maybe one day when Maud gets bored (fat chance, sometimes I long for this feeling of boredom instead of the long list of things I feel I need to do), she'll label the older posts.

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Harddravers


End of June Paul, Jacinta and Lilly hopped over from their Scottish house to the Netherlands because their daughter & sister Rachel graduated from the Eindhoven Design Academy. Actually we want to meet in their Maputo or our Morwa house, but somehow Rachel keeps luring all of us to Holland (pictures, check page 4 also). Maybe we'll make it to Maputo in December, or they'll manage to come to Botswana next February, when the third guy of the triplets (Peter, Paul, Bram) plans to visit us.



That same weekend Marjan commemorated her 60th Birthday, so all of us went to Rotterdam to party. It's a pity we hadn't started 'what we eat' yet. Everyone was asked to contribute a dish, and the variety of nationalities among the guests was reflected in the food. And in the languages; Paul was happy he bumped into some fellow Irishmen, and Maud could speak Afrikaans.



Another contribution asked for was a performance, so Kofi excelled once again on his djembé drums. His red red (bean stew with fish and fried banana) by the way is excellent also. As is the superb Bengalese food Marjan's husband Rubel cooks. Maud will long for you when she's surrounded again by men who think cooking equals loitering around the barbie with a drink in your hand.

(Grand) Parents

In June Tineke & Ivan rented a big holiday-house in Assen to have their '(grand)pa and (grand)ma day'. Next to making the yearly family-portrait we adults tried to keep up with the kids. Soccer, biking, swimming - their energy is incredible. To keep our engines going grandma brought a truckload of great food.

Monday, August 20, 2007

No Knead Bread

Sunday suddenly Carel came. Having Mister C over is always fun, and not only because his belly is bigger than Bram's, which makes Mister B worry less about his good life.
This time he entered bubbling with joy, saying I've got something for you, we're going to do something, and I know you'll love it. Here's the result of our deeds:



Maud's first No Knead Bread (check youtube.com for baking instructions, I wrote down a recipe, so mail me if you need it). Incredibly easy to make, it only takes time but hardly any labour, and de taste is fabulous!
As one thing always leads to another this event led to Maud collecting everything you need to know for building a mud oven - a new Botswana-project... And than she found other interesting outside-kitchen stuff (youtube offers a fascinating collection of Indian and Pakistani village cooking video's), so she'll ask Bashi to collect cow dung, mud and straw for construction works.

WWE


Here's the official start of 'What We Eat', part one of many.
We're afraid there's little chance we'll show you a traditional Dutch meal (potatoes, meat, vegetables), because nobody we know cooks that way (anymore). Okay, we might bump into pancakes, snert (soup made from dried peas), or kapiteinsrijsttafel (big bowl of brownish beans accompanied by a lot of small bowls with goodies).
Here's what we ate at Charmian's last Saturday: an experiment for starters (eggplant sandwich) and a proven recipe as a main (spinach pie). Good food!!!

Saturday, August 18, 2007

Clearing & Cleaning

The tornado came and went in a couple of minutes. Cleaning up the debris is a different story. The plot looks as if a migrating elephant herd decided to have a jolly great pick-nick party right there.



After the woodworkers came with their machines, it's more like the Chinese roadmen started their preparations, or, for the Dutchies, the hsl-people passed by.



There's still a lot of rubbish to clear, and while clearing we also try to start rebuilding. Maud's friend (since 1973!) Kristien came over with her two boys Koen & Pieter to join the forces.



What is it with men that they immediately fall in love with machines, the bigger & noisier, the better? Kristien's lastborn Pieter got Bram's brother Ivan junior to teach him how to be a chainsaw-guy.



Except for Junior all of us are not used to manual labour, so he's the one who is just hungry, while the rest of us also is exhausted. Luckily Maud's mom organizes mountains of food and drinks to keep us going. Exhausted or not, nice food and actually attacking the ruins brings back happy faces. The wine Kristien brought might have something to do with that also...



This picture also introduces our new series 'What We Eat'. We're fed up with 'Where We Sleep', and everywhere people keep asking us 'what do you eat over there'.

Monday, August 13, 2007

Time flies

After weeks of only 'cooking' ice cause we're too busy with our zillion projects, Maud had a heavy attack of being a kitchen-princess this weekend. Using our Sunday-dinner-guests as an excuse she transformed the kitchen into a battlefield, matching the living room, where poor Bram feverishly worked on his part of 'Project Chair Redecoration'.



Redoing most of the furniture hampers dolling up Bram's study. His room was the first to be finished when we bought this house, so it's the first in need of repainting. Meanwhile there're some garden-projects to be finished, the stairs still are half-painted and so on.



But who has time for building when there's so much socializing to do? Sunday-loitering at our place, Monday we pack the leftovers and hop over to Bram's great-aunt Loes for dinner - and suddenly another week has gone by.



The most important happening of this week is of course meeting our newborn nephew Tui (although we have to give his big brother Jack the impression he's the main attraction).


Ketelmeer of minder

Mum (in law) Tineke & dad (in law) Ivan invited old friends Bavo & Dineke and us for a lunch. Cause Bavo & Dineke kind of live on their yacht all summer we met in one of Holland's zillion harbours. After a nice fishy lunch we tested the beautiful new boat - it sails like a dream!

Saturday, July 28, 2007

Tornado II


This poor blog is being neglected because we don't find our Dutch life very interesting, but now something happened. Thursday evening, just when Maud finished cooking a really nice dinner (as opposed to throwing something together that is filling, healthy and most of all not time-consuming), Marijke (Maud's mum) phoned. They (Dick & Marijke) had been hit by a tornado. A tornado, in Vierhouten, the Netherlands?!
Of course we had to go there immediately, but travelling by train to a village nearby and bike through the woods to Vierhouten, like we normally do, didn't seem a sensible option, so Bram's uncle Haroen gave us his car to try reach the disaster area.
Driving there we almost cannot believe anything has happened, seeing blue skies with a few white clouds. Turning of the highway we subsequently encounter a drizzle, rain, heavy rain. A police roadblock closes the turn-of to the village, but Maud manages to talk her way through. After a couple of k's we run into a fire-brigade-roadblock. By than we know the road to the village is blocked by fallen trees, but Maud's mom lives outside in the woods, and we want to get as close as we can through the forest and than walk. Again Maud manages to get permission to pass and go on, into the forest, promising we'll drive slowly and leave the car well off the road so the rescue-people can get through.
In the end we manage to get quite close; we can drive on to the beginning of the plot. There we run into a couple of big fire-brigade-vehicles. In front of them the road is totally blocked by fallen trees. We get out of the car, and start to walk. After explaining we have to check on the elderly people living somewhere behind the mountain of fall-out, we get permission to climb over and crawl under the tree-trunks and try to reach them. Leaving the house a bit hasty, Bram jumped into his white Colombian tailor-made pants, and Maud is wearing a t-shirt and slippers. The flip-flops have to go after a couple of meters because they get stuck in mud and rubbish. The many firemen we encounter look surprised at this strange couple, but let us pass, so it must have been obvious we're on an urgent mission.
Than we hear someone shouting in the dark, it's Marijke's voice, telling us to walk towards the signals of her flashlight. She's right in the middle of the tree-roadblock. Left and right we see vague lights - fire-brigade-people trying to cut through from the two sides of the roadblock. The entrance to the yard is gone, disappeared under tree-trunks. We get over the fence, and climb and crawl to the house.
By miracle the house still stands, and Marijke & Dick are not hurt, neither are the dogs, but apart from that it's disaster all around. We spent the rest of the evening trying to see if any damaged but still standing trees threaten the house, looking for a safe place to sleep, and checking the progress of the firemen. They also check on us, and help us look for danger.
In the morning we finally can see how disastrous the tornado has been. The house is still standing, and some of the garden-projects survived - the stuff that can be rebuild in a day, a week, a couple of month's. But the century-old trees are wiped out. What used to be a beautiful wood is reduced to some spidery pines.
Armed with a chainsaw to cut our way through Bram and Maud set out to check the whole plot. We meet policemen with dogs looking for victims. After a couple of hours we cleared a path. Meanwhile we get visits from more policemen, asking if we have missing people to report, from fire-brigade-men, checking out dangerous situations, and even the major and the head of police climb en crawl to the house. That last visit proves to be very worthwhile. Normally the Dutch fire brigade only clears public spaces like roads. But seeing the disaster, and the trees threatening to topple over, the major allows the brigade to clear the plot of anything risky. Two groups of firemen, most of them well-trained volunteers from two nearby villages, and some municipality-workers arrive. They sweat for hours to clear the plot from danger. They're really, truly amazing, and incredibly nice; we're very grateful guys! The car for instance was invisible before the arrived...

Tornado


Maud's mom's yard after the tornado. I'll write the story later this weekend, and add more pictures.
The red spot on the picture below right used to be Marijke's car.
Anyone who is looking for a bit of exercise this summer: please hop over and help with the clearing!

Sunday, July 15, 2007

Monday, May 14, 2007

The Flood


Our first Dutch days we had nice, dry, hot weather. As is to be expected, by now Maud has a cold and we wear two sets of clothes: it rains as if The Flood has started, and Botswana’s winter for sure is warmer than this Dutch spring.

Cell numbers

We’re back on our Dutch cell numbers:
Bram +31 6 29377358
Maud +31 6 21684427

WWS Dutch 2


Being used to all these South-African mansions we’re lucky we can spend our first Dutch weeks in equal surroundings. Because our Leiden-house is still rented, we stay with Marijke, Maud’s mom, who has a very spacious garden, compared to most Dutch BBQ-patches. We sleep in the cottage on the right.