Thursday, 28 October 2010

Nos

She and I are going into Portland to see Never Let Me Go this evening, for once permitting an intravenous dosage of the algia for the nos. I don't allow nostalgia, as a rule, but sometimes a little slippage is manageable isn't it? At least, I reckon so. Never Let Me Go is a movie adaptation of a book I've never read (one of the idiot's favourites), but I'm told a pleasing amount of screentime is devoted to the English countryside and boarding-school politics. The idiot burst into tears during the trailer. I thought about cricket bats and matron. I think both our needs will be satisfied.

She hasn't been too homesick yet; we both think of England in a wistful, happy sort of way, rather than with the agony of a gut-wrench loss. She keeps in touch by Skype once a week - midnight chats in the laundry room, every Wednesday after Henry James - and she has that revolting Possum puppet thing from home to keep her company. Like she needs another figment of her imagination. Sometimes she makes-believe that Possum can talk. There's also Masterchef USA on youtube to compensate for the lack of BBC iPlayer and 4OD: Gordon Ramsay with high-fives and hissy-fits. We've barely watched a television since arriving, apart from Nancy Grace or The Daily Show in the gym.

With regard to Englishness, the accent hasn't got me as far as I would have liked. In fact, it is rarely mentioned. Back at home everyone assured me (with different and prettier metaphors) that an English accent in America is like a small, precise fish hook in a pond full of easily-led salmon. The idiot even thought it might compensate for a certain lack of bosom. Alas, there has been little salmon - and none of it smoking. Even so, we make great efforts to maintain the Englishness. I deride any hint of an American inflection, creeping into her classroom chat from time to time, and am so far keeping on top of things. The other day I caught her pronouncing Chopin like show-pah instead of shop-ah. Pretty embarrassing. In writing, a proliferation of zs has become an issue, but I forgive her on this count because it pleases the professors to be correct.

Two additional revelations about Americans:
- They don't know about bacon sandwiches, oh so different from the BLT, and seemed genuinely appalled at the notion of ketchup with white bread.
- They don't put x kisses at the end of their messages, unless you are the other half and they would actually kiss you in real life.

I can assure you that, in spite of my habitual 'x' sign-off, I would kiss none of you in real life.

Consette x

Monday, 18 October 2010

Gorge

It's ever so cold in the room now: a quilt has been purchased, a heater is being considered. And do we have a kettle? No we do not have a kettle. The idiot remembered some English Breakfast Twinings she'd brought from home, and so we moseyed downstairs to make a cup, only to encounter the absence of the kettle in the kitchen.

But surely? No kitchen comes without a kettle.

Anyway, now we're sitting in front of the fake log fire in the common room, and I am writing and she is drinking hot milk (microwavable compromise). Last time I promised to talk of Portland food, and as it's fall break at the moment we have been doing more eating than usual. The idiot has composed a list of all the food carts she wants to visit in the year, as 'cartopia' is quite the Portland craze (see book entitled 'CARTopia' for more details). Today we went to The Whole Bowl in the 9th and Alder parking lot, which was delicious. I ate more than she did in the end, but left all the rice at the bottom for her (am on a non-imaginary low carb diet). It was almost identical to the bowl of chili we had at Chili Pie Palace on Hawthorne, except not nearly as generous and a little bit greener. Avocado was of better quality this time. In Chili Pie Palace they spelt it like 'avacado', like: 'go on love, have a CADO for the road.' This all makes a welcome change from the habitual Pad Thai at Sawasdee Thai, or falafal from Aybla Grill, which seem to be the only options available to us on Saturday afternoons. A Monday at the 9th and Alder parking lot, on the other hand, sees every cart open for business, and being the pathological commitment-aphobe that she is, it took us about an hour to decide, finally, on The Whole Bowl.

Here's some other things about food. And let' try to stay in chronological order, or the idiot will get upset:

GREASE: She notes in her diary, the very first thing: 'Grease smells different on this side of the world.' It really does, though. The grease in Vancouver airport was still, undeniably, grease, suspended above the food hall, and getting into my coffee and my apple. But it was that particular flavour of grease, which immediately took the idiot and me back to our first American experience in 2008, and all those Greyhound waiting rooms.

SUGARY BREAD: You will not find bread without sugar. Full stop. Period.

VOODOO DOUGHNUTS: Not Krispy or Dunkin or any of that rubbish, but pagan and bloody, with a pretzel twig sticking out of its stomach. As I mentioned a few posts back, we bought a big pink box of 20 for Vicky's birthday. The apple 'fritter' is, for future reference, gargantuan, and the 'Captain my Captain' one has stale Captain Crunch cereal all over the top. Just look at some of these.

SNOW CONES: Probably the most exciting aspect of a baseball game is sucking your way through a snow cone.

JEWISH NEW YEAR: Thanks to Holly and her amazing host family, the idiot was invited to a Rosh Hashanah feast in early September. I couldn't go because the idiot said they were trying to keep numbers down and, she said, my presence is awkward sometimes, like no one's really sure what to do with me or whether to talk to me at all. Charming. Anyhow, host daddy picked them up at 9 from Eliot Circle, straight after Henry James, and the idiot told me later that what followed was one of the best meals she's ever eaten. Apples and honey for good luck, with eggplant puree and fruity bread, then the clearest broth with delicate little matzah balls, then brisket and glazed chicken (I think she said marmalade) and green beans and almonds and tiny fried potatos like tiny flying saucers, and then honey cake and fruit salad and biscotti.

OTTO'S: A 'sausage kitchen and meat market' on Woodstock, where we ate such a good sandwhich one bleary Sunday lunchtime. It had apples in it, and any sandwhich with apples in it knows what it's about.

BLUEHOUR: Not to say that the burger outlets are undeserving of blogspace (and we've frequented one or two), but...actually, yes, I do and shall say that. Because I'm Consette and I've tasted the finer end of Portland now. Hm. After seeing 'Howl' on a Gray Fund trip, we were taken out for dinner at Bluehour, where the idiot ate her first oyster and then had figs and pound cake for pudding. Thanks and bowing to Betty Gray.

PRETZEL M&Ms: America dares. Inspirational.

PORTLAND NURSERY APPLE TASTING: Two weekends in October, an inflatable apple in the sky, cider (non-alcoholic wtf), strudel, honey, and over fifty varieties to sample, down a long long table with a cocktail stick and a checklist. The idiot, as you can imagine, was in an embarrassing state of bliss. There was a period in her life when she could eat up to four or five apples a day, but mummy had to put a stop to all that for fear of tooth-rot. Inevitably, though, she had a minor relapse at the Apple Festival and bought far too many apples, and then made excuses about eating them within 24 hours in case they spoiled.

AMERICANS: Quite a long way back now, after the Korean feast night, the idiot and I witnessed an argument between, what appeared to be, five Americans. It lasted over an hour and centred on the supremity of different countries in different fields; their cultural prestige in philosophy, music, food, or what-have-you, with each American defending a country of their choice. It didn't take me long to realise that this wasn't just five Americans arguing hypothetically on behalf of other nations, but five Americans who claimed the cultural lineage of their chosen nation, and claimed it with quite an unnerving sincerity.
One thing I've learnt so far is that you'll never get an American-American. No one would ever profess to being that. Instead there's German-Americans or Italian-Americans or Irish-Italian-Thai-Americans. Interestingly, or perhaps not, the argument began and ended with food, the category everyone wanted to win.

Consette x

Sunday, 10 October 2010

Sustenance

I just sat on the desk and watched her eat a slow and solitary bowl of porridge. 8.30 in the evening, Come Dine With Me on youtube, Sunday - some things are too ingrained, what’s a shift in continent going to do about it? But even though it’s my role as imaginary friend to chastise, really and honestly I’m with her on this one. Nothing like porridge.

PORRIDGE, mind, NOT oatmeal.

Thing is, Commons closes at 7 on a Sunday, which means that everyone eats dinner at about 5 or 6. This is bizarre. The idiot is taking a stand and has decided to boycott the dining hall on Saturday and Sunday evenings, flying the Quaker Oats flag instead. Lunch can also legitimately be eaten as early as 11.30am in America. Since when, seriously, has this been normal human behaviour? Where does breakfast feature? And don’t they get hungry at night, after their super early suppertime? My only conclusion is that there are numerous covert meals scattered in between the regular ones. If they ate their dinner any later than 7, then there would be no room left-over for post-dinner or neo-dinner or dirty dinner (don’t ask what dirty dinner is; the idiot has been thinking a lot about dirty realism recently, and things rub off.)

The food in Commons is good and edible, for the most part. The idiot brazenly chose the paella during Spanish week, which was a real low point of coagulated rice and dried, earlobey muscles. And garlic features in almost everything. The fruit is HUGE, the apple pips are WHITE, and the juice is like pure syrup. Some days I’m pretty sure they smash up Hobnobs and call it granola. Ranch dressing is double cream isn’t it, really? As I said, though, it’s okay for the most part. We’re surviving. The idiot and Holly have developed an addiction to marinated tofu, and I’m getting fat off the grill food (one of the guys who works there said something nice about my accent once, but now it’s like I’m not even there). Hot turkey sandwiches are pure hype, with queues on Thursday lunchtime bisecting the cafeteria. But they taste of hype, and hype tastes good.

In terms of cultural differences, it took a while to get used to tomaytos and not tomartoes, and the idea that pudding cannot be used as a superordinate category which covers all desserts. Gianmarco is determined that pudding is something you pronounce as ‘puddin’, referring unequivocally to a little pot of chocolate. Mad.

She misses cooking though. She misses getting steamy with her ladies in Magdalen St kitchen, Norwich, UK, where there wasn’t enough room for 3. She misses Rachel’s soups. Having pre-purchased board points here means that she has to eat them up in Commons, and she can’t really afford a new set of pots and pans and spoons and bowls and cheese graters anyway. Reed students (I refuse to call them ‘Reedies’) don’t have time for cooking. This is le fact. Although, having said that, one of the best meals we’ve had here so far has been courtesy of John Bang and his Korean friends, who cooked up a Korean feast in the Sequoia kitchen one Saturday. The idiot went bright, bright pink from the kimchee.

Next time: food venturing into Portland and surrounds. Now: Ella and Louis and bedtime.

Consette x

Sunday, 3 October 2010

Sober

Some coherence is required after last night, I think. Little cat-foot steps towards a more wholesome one-ness, to which the follower (3 followers!) is subjected. Blog as therapy, blog. The theme of the 'Hotbox' post was meant to be partying at a liberal arts college; the whys and wherefores, the where-tos, and, most of the time, the HOWs? Clearly the idiot (and I) managed it yesterday, but that was the culmination of many disconsolate amblings around campus not knowing what to do or where to go. But yes, I'll outline some of the successes, the achieved parties alluded to last night, with a slightly more adult approach to things:

PARTY 1 - VICKY'S BIRTHDAY PARTY: This was the first party wangled without having been organised by the International Society (who are keen on ice-cream parties above all else). Vicky bravely turning 22 only a few weeks into termtime. Everyone's exposure to The Red Cup. Two hours queueing for Voodoo Doughnuts on SW 3rd Avenue in the rain. Big pink box doughnut treasure. Vodka in plastic bottles.

ANNIE SUI'S BREAKFAST PARTIES: On 34th and Holgate in Annie's real house - mauve with a porch, and a swing on the porch, and a basement. Attended my second of these this morning. Be careful which mug you drink from, as Annie can be particular about mugs just getting bandied around, even by imaginary friends. The first party on 19th September involved potatoes, scrambled eggs, ham, cheese, mangoes. As Annie wisely considers: breakfast is just an invention of Kellog's, so we can pretty much eat what we want and not worry that it isn't cereal or something breakfasty. Today's breakfast involved pancakes (sorry, crepes), mushrooms, onions, pumpkin butter, bananas, and drug-specific placenames on the table.

RKSK: Reed Kommunal Sh*t Kollective. Not really a party as such. Just a Thursday night, voyeuring on the 'Kommunist' induction. Born in the USA playing in the quad. The idiot getting quite caught up in that, tearing apart the Springsteen irony web with dumb grin glee. Everyone lining up to be part of the revolution. Lots and lots of naked people in the library. Burning of soft toys. Community Safety Man circling on his segway, which I will never ever be capable of taking seriously.

HIPSTER PARTY: How on earth did they get to this? Verily an accident.

GIANMARCO'S BIRTHDAY AND HOTBOX: The idiot is giving up alcohol on account of this night (last night). She has been high on the scale of rubbishness today, moping around and looking MIZ, doing all her reading for class just too slowly to watch, not letting me go outside in case I go awol again. I went a bit awol at Hotbox.
NB. Hotbox is a house about a minute or so off campus, owned by Reed students and proffered up for parties every other weekend. Frequently closed down by the police (I know, right?) The idiot drank beer out of tupperware. I got to being social, which was nice, and was very skilled in keeping down the burger cake from Gianmarco's surprise birthday cake event. Burger, chips and ketchup, mostly composed of icing (exhibit A). Nom.

Consette x

Hotbox

I love you gusy so mush.

She attempted cynism in our poetry class today. Not adivisabel. Advisabel. Advisabel. Advisable. I left and drank thing.s. This is the product of such things. She is so embarrasingg. Wait - addin man on facebooh. FRacebook. Facebook. |'ll get there in the end.

I love youu giusy so mush.

Parties at Reed. Welcome.

Consette is not acquainted with spiris. Tonight it was Gianmaroc's Birthday thingymajiggy. Gianmarco's. W drank, we ate, we conquered. Holly and Vicky and Rachel bought a hambuger cake, no kiddin. Gianomarco doesn't do Birhtdyas Birthdays so welll bless hime. Him. He didn't know when to cut, and when he did know when to cut, he didn't know who to cut for. Consette was confused. Me. I am XConsetee. Consette. Yar.

What other experience of parties have I had? Please excuse my drunk.

There was Vicyy's party back in the day, back when it all begaaaan. By the way: Vicky - so impressed with you going through with that. I would have pretended an alternative birthdate. Voodooo doughnuts though, it nwas a beautous party.

Then last weekend, that arbitraru=yhipster party we managed to crash. What happened there. Cos=nette. Consette got with no-one that night. But there was this house like a barn., like people had accidentally turned up there (even though everything was so clealry clearly not accident), and there was this big red box, and this basement where people smooked, smoked, and there werre clever people from conferences who had protracted arms and such and who were really bye the bye.

Bye bye friends.

And RKSK. What was that.Kommunist irony? I'm notsure. Nude freshman just showing they had genitals. Bless. Parties at Reeed. Welcome. B=ut they pkayed played Bron In The USA (springsteen) at the start and I (Consette) got all squiggly inside like: What could I with myself right now? I could be quite an embarrassing and shameful human being right now. I could get violent on Bruce Springsteen (maybe even naked), and then it would be bad. All the freshman got naked. And it WAS bad.

And the CSOs on Segways. Silly. Zooming around like Daft Vaders.

Sorry loves. I'm just overage here, and drunk. Happy Birhday Gianmarco,

Consette x