Friday, October 26, 2012

Canonizations!

On Sunday, Oct. 21st - the Pope canonized 7 new saints in St. Peter's Square in the Vatican! I was lucky enough to get a ticket through the school and early that morning (6am) we arrived to ever-so packed streets of Catholics waiting to get in. It was hectic, it was cold, and it was awesome. We got seats among thousands of others to watch the POPE (WE.SAW.HIM) canonize:

Kateri Tekakwitha - first Native American Saint!
Marianne Cope - born in Germany, but ministered to those in Hawaii, Franciscan Sister of Syracuse
Anna Schaffer - German lay woman
Maria del Carmen - foundress of the Missionary Sisters of the Immaculate Conception in Spain
Giovanni Battista Piamarta - Italian priest, founded the Congregation of the Holy Family of Nazareth
Pedro Calungsod - second Filipino saint
Jacques Berthieu - French Jesuit and martyr

6am - standing in line

7:30 - still standing in line, but I loved the sunrise

just grabbed our seats - this is a pretty small fraction of the people there - the entire square is still behind me

WE SAW THE POPE!!!!! After mass he came around on his pope-mobile and I got this pic!

That's it for now - the 10 day break starts tomorrow and we are off to Paris! Wednesday I return and await the arrival of my daddy on Thursday :)

Ciao!

Cooking Class/Opera

Cooking Class

Last Saturday (10/20) we got the chance to cook a full 3-course Italian meal from scratch! ..Then eat it :)


1. Appetizer: Bruschetta al Pomodoro e Basilico & Bruschetta con Rughetta e Stracchino (Bruschetta with tomato and basil topping & Bruschetta with arugola and smooth cheese topping)

2. First course: Fettuccine alla Norma (Fresh homemade Fettuccine with fried eggplant and tomato)
3. Second Course: Scaloppine di Vitellone con Funghi (beef scaloppine with mushrooms)
4. Side dish: Broccoli Romaneschi (Roman Style Broccoli)

5. Dessert: Tiramisù

Chef Andrea emailed all of the recipes to us, so yes I can reproduce when I get back! Wasn't terribly difficult, the longest part of each was preparing the ingredients (as I said, everything was from scratch). If anyone reading this wants the recipes just email me/facebook message me and I can send them along!


The tiramisu on my own little plate :)


Opera

Tuesday night, we got to go see the Italian Opera La Gioconda -  from wikipedia: "The story revolves around a woman, Gioconda, who so loves her mother that when Laura, her rival in love for the heart of Enzo, saves her mother’s life, Gioconda puts aside her own romantic love to repay her. The villain Barnaba, tries to seduce Gioconda, but she prefers death."  Everything was in Italian, and with Italian subtitles over the stage, so be assured I quickly lost the plot (despite having read through a full synopsis before going). But the singing was beyond amazing as was the ballad (easily the best part of the show), the Dance of the Hours - which you guys might know from Fantasia when the ostriches and elephants with the tutus dance, or just from hearing it on tv etc (it's pretty famous - you'd recognize the melody). Oh, and there were no microphones used throughout the entire performance...they just belt it.

cue music from the "phantom of the opera"


Retrospective - Venice!

Midterms all done!! It was much more stressful than I would have liked but I'm definitely happy with the way everything went. It's time to do some catching up - Venice, a combined post on the cooking class and opera, and Canonizations 2012 :)

Venice is up first! This was the class-wide weekend trip we took from the morning of Oct. 6th - 7th. One of the best things about this particular trip, besides the city itself, was the fact that we got a TON of free time to walk around and explore by ourselves, as well as a few suggestions for things to do. More on that in a sec, but as for the city itself - Venice is on the Northeast side of Italy and is made up of over 100 small islands connected by bridges. There are no cars to be found, and all the streets are only just wide enough for pedestrians. Boats serve as their cars/taxis/ambulances (no joke), and their public transportation is a system of barges that work just as our metro/subways do - just as crowded as well. But it was effective - we quickly got to the Basilica of San Marco then we were released until dinner. My little group went around to do as much window shopping as we could in the time we had.

two taxis - pic taken from the back of the metro barge

an ambulance...i wasn't kidding :)
a typical window
The second day we visited the Doge's Palace to witness some cool Gothic style apartments, then spent the day in Murano - one of the islands close by Venice which is VERY famous for it's glasswork. We got to see glass being made from molten stage to a vase, then a horse, a process which took all of 5 minutes if not less. Soo cool :)



Looking out of Murano





Monday, October 15, 2012

Greece!!!!

Hi Everyone!

Sorry for the delay in posting; we've now entered into my first week of midterms and things have been getting steadily more hectic. Sometime soon I'm going to have to do a recap of last weekend's excursion to Venice, but for this post I'm sticking to the past few days - when nine of us flew over the Mediterranean Sea to visit the home of the gyro, the ground in which some of the most amazing architecture has been found, the birthplace of the greatest minds in history (no bias intended), and the origin of the Olympics...GREECE.

After a quick-ish plane ride Saturday morning and a brief stop at the hotel to dump our belongings, we wasted no time in running ourselves up to the Acropolis of Athens - an high, steep outcrop above the city that holds the Parthenon, the Erechtheon, the Theatre of Dionysus, and much more. Getting up there involved a bit of a climb, but we were instantly met with a gorgeous view of the city and, more importantly, a safe haven of archaeological sites that made the classics majors hyperventilate.

Theatre of Dionysus

The Classics Majors in front of the Parthenon

overlooking the Agora
That night was a lamb dinner at a nearby restaurant in the district of Plaka (very touristy - shops and lots of food) and early bedtime. The next morning 3 of our number split off to go explore another Greek island (which I hear was fantastic), while the rest of us went to mass and the National Archaeological Museum for some more ancient greek fun. Needless to say - there was another bout of hyperventilation as we walked around the statues, pottery, figurines, jewelry, and paintings that a few of us had studied only last semester in Greek Art and Architecture. We are such nerds. But we loved it :)

Later in the afternoon, all nine of us regrouped to conquer Mount Lykabettos, the highest point in the city (900 ft above sea level). We are all very proud to say that we made it to the top without too many difficulties - it was only about a 25 minute climb, but it was steep and with many, many stairs. But we made it! And at the top was a view of the entire city and beyond:



The final day - earlier this morning in fact, on Monday - we had just enough time to check out the Athenian Agora (marketplace) and shop a little more in the streets of Plaka before our flight back. Of the most interest still standing in the Agora are the Stoa (which had a whole collection of vases and statues) and the Temple of Hephaestus. There were also many other small things such as a water clock and the great drain that were hidden in what is now a woodsy area making up the Agora. All of it very cool.

Stoa of Attalos

Temple of Hephaestus

this area in the Agora used to be the state prison of Athens - it would have been here that Socrates died

And that brings me to the end of this awesome weekend!! A couple extra little points that I learned about Greece over this weekend:

1. More people speak English in Athens than in Rome. Almost everyone we met was straight-up fluent, but they seriously appreciated it if we said even "thank-you" (efkaristo) to them in their language - their eyes practically lit up with joy
2. Greeks collectively are much nicer than the Italians around here, although the shop keepers and restaurant workers were EVEN MORE aggressive than the Italian men. It was quite impressive.
3. American gyros and frozen yogurt got nothing on the real stuff in Greece.
4. Most of the metros were impressively clean - to this day I firmly believe NYC's subway system is the grossest of them all
5. American students get amazing discounts. Everywhere. We all got 1/2 off on metro and museum tickets by flashing our International Student Identity Card (who knew ISIC would come in handy?), 10% off an entire dinner, and even store keepers would say "This shirt..normally 10 euro, but for you? 4 euro." It was kind of awesome.
6. It's true. No toilet paper goes into the toilets because the plumbing in Greece can't handle it. All T.P. goes to the garbage. Very strange.

That's it for now! Again I will put up a post on Venice when I get a chance and meanwhile wish us all luck on these midterms! Ironically, my first test is for my Greek class...

Vale!