I think Andreas did really well with this photo of St. Mary's at night with no tripod. The photos below show, if you look really closely, a trumpeter calling the hour in the open window. And then the rest of the photos are of the Cloth Hall again with the statuary in front. There are some really odd parts of the base of that statue if you examine it.
Sunday, August 03, 2014
Saturday, August 02, 2014
Uzbek Goodness
While we were lodging our friend Nicole and her broken leg, she needed to go downtown to the candy store to get candy to take back to the States. We decided to do lunch downtown, too, at Caravan. We hadn't been there for a while, and the decor of little tents hadn't changed. All three of us ordered tea, and we were served tea and what I know as chruscki from my Polish American side and jam as sweetener. There were cherry and apricot jams, and both were excellent. We ended up going through two full pots of tea.
I had salad, a manty, and chuchvara soup. I love chuchvara! It's got a very good lamb broth with little tortellini type things filled with meat in it. The broth has a very rich texture to it.
Andreas and Nicole both had pilaf. The pilaf is fluffy and full of pine nuts, pomegranate, raisins, meat, and other good things.
Labels:
food,
Moldova,
non-stitching
Friday, August 01, 2014
Getting Some Greek On
El Greco is our go to Greek restaurant in Chisinau. We order from them regularly and they deliver to the embassy! On this night in May, we went to the restaurant to eat. Andreas had his usual salad, pita, and tzatziki thing. I had soup. We split a chicken gyro plate. The food was as tasty as usual, with the tzatziki having little bits of cucumber and the chicken being moist and herbed well.
Labels:
food,
Moldova,
non-stitching
Old City Architecture
Krakow's old town is partially enclosed by a city wall; there are three photos of it at the bottom of this post. All the rest of the buildings here are inside it. Most buildings look to be seventeenth to eighteenth century; the city is built on successive ruins of older versions. Some current buildings' ground floors are now below ground because of the raising of roads. Most of the roads are cobbled, and there are many sculptures and tiles to brighten the buildings.
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