Friday, August 13, 2010

Notas sobre el pais

“How does an Argentine commit suicide?”
“He climbs to the top of his ego and jumps off – but he doesn’t die from the impact, he dies of starvation on the way down.”


Now please excuse me while I make some massive generalizations about the people of the country I’ve spent the last six months getting to know.

They’re friendly. They love to talk. They’re soccer-mad, too interested in psychoanalysis, and they take care of their appearance. I am incredibly impressed with how many women wear the spindliest of heels while taking public transportation. Both plastic surgery and eating disorder statistics are through the roof; they had to pass a law insisting that shops stock sizes larger than Famine Barbie because normal people couldn’t buy clothes.

They are, as stereotyped, infinitely arrogant. Examples of this include the Malvinas issue, the four pages one of my tango readings spent methodically discounting Montevideo’s influence on the formation of the dance, and the fact that I’ve heard several people say things like “Oh, Uruguay is really just an Argentine province, you know. They ended up splitting off for some reason, but really, they’re with us.” (Uruguay to Argentina is kind of like Canada is to us. Apparently).
It’s marginally terrifying to think about what this attitude could do if Argentina had much international power, but as it doesn’t it’s just amusing.
On a personal level, the only way to deal with the arrogance sometimes is to be incredibly arrogant right back.

They hate giving change. (No, I don’t have seventy centavos. ¡Dame las monedas!) As far as I can tell, this is mostly because the buses only take coins and not bills, but about ninety percent of the time you hand someone a hundred-peso note (which, of course, the ATMs prefer to give out) they’ll kick up a fuss, too.

They cross themselves as they pass churches. I once saw a woman nearly fall down because she let go of her handhold on the bus in order to do this.

As previously noted, they’re part of a self-admitted ‘cultura machista.’

They’re kind of racist. It’s hard to tell if this is just the lack of the P.C. blanket, or maybe lingual differences. But I have heard disconcerting things like “oh, you know, Chinese people smile all the time” or “the black race and their sexual dancing,” which seem accepted by the porteños without the least twitch.

Their greeting is a kiss on the cheek. When you enter a room of people you know, the polite thing to do is greet everyone individually. This custom does not vary with gender, and I was very amused in the first month to hear some of the extranjeros complaining about how weird it was to touch another man’s beard. I think they’re used to it by now, though.

People hawk things and beg on the Subtes; I’ve seen at least as many musicians actually playing in the cars as I have in the stations.

There are usually at least three cafes per block. This is wonderful. When I went to Montevideo, there were far more hamburger/pizza joints than cafes, and it felt deeply, deeply wrong.
The waiters don’t bother you if you keep your table for three hours, chatting or studying, either: in fact, they can be difficult to flag down for the check or more coffee. I am going to miss the cafés so, so much.

And finally, they like the Rolling Stones. Don’t ask my why; my host brother told me this. “Argentina es muy Stone.”

note: I wrote this while still in the country - only just typed it up. To explain my use of tenses and the word 'here.'

chau, queridos, les extraño!

Saturday, August 7, 2010

well, I'm back (aunque no voy a quedarme acá)

It's weird to be back in the U.S. I keep getting caught off guard by things like the NPR theme song, how terribly Americans dress, or the fact that stores are open on Sundays.
Also, this town is small. I know where the people whose names are on the town businesses or in the paper live and how many kids they have; I know the semi-secret swimming holes along the Blackfoot and my mother has already been to every doctor I can choose between to get my tonsils out.

This all isn't necessarily a bad thing - I know of no other town where your nose is full of the scent of ponderosa pine the minute you step off the plane, and there is something to be said for the predictable and orderly. But going from the highly-functional chaos of Buenos Aires to this is definitely a shock to the system.

So! I'm hideously behind on posts, having wandered off to explore the country (Argentina, not the US) with my family and without my computer for three weeks. It was a good trip - full of bickering, cake-hunting, and of course, that which no family vacation is complete without: the scattering of a dead relation's ashes.
I have pictures of toucans from Iguazú, cathedrals in Salta, and some spectacular rocks and waterfalls, which I will post once I've organized them. Until then, three photos (and some tango, for going along with):

Folclorico show en la Feria de Mataderos (Buenos Aires)

Guitar player in El Anfiteatro, a rock formation in la Quebrada de Cafayate (Northwest Argentina)

Live music in La Catedral, a tango club (slow night)

I'm going back one day. Not optional.

Chau amigos, de todos partes!

P.S. - you should be able to click on the photos to enlarge them. Which I'm sure you've already figured out. Enjoy!

Monday, July 12, 2010

comida -¿hay otra cosa?

Interesting as it is to see what a family from another culture eats like, I feel like there’s lard coming out of my pores.
We eat good food here, and there’s definitely always enough for me (at points I’ve literally had to defend my plate with my fork to prevent Lili from spooning more onto it) but I want my veggies, damnit! And I’m not exactly a vegan or a health food nut (although I suppose that depends on your definition of health food nut). There’s usually meat and potatoes in something in every dinner, and I’m pretty sure that when Lili lets her brain stop running the automatic filler is for her to say “Hay pollo, ¿sabes?” [There’s chicken, you know!] – because there is. Always.
This isn't just a complaint about my host family (I shouldn't complain at all, really: they buy me cake at random); this country in general does not value its greens.

¡Miravos el queso!

I’ve been noticing lately that people often ask each other what they ate. I feel like this would be Awkward Small Talk in the U.S., but my host mother or the random girls trying on clothes in the fitting room next to mine seem genuinely interested in whether it was spinach ravioli or cheese someone else had for dinner yesterday, and who cooked it, and what kind of sauce was on it. Good grief.

Parrilla en la Feria de Mataderos. I think the smell would have been much more expressive than this picture.

You can get nearly everything delivered, from ice cream to sushi to alcohol to a fresh cup of coffee in a ceramic cup, poured in front of you. This is probably the reason that I haven’t seen anyone eating while walking (unless you count mate – thermos and all – and the amount that Argentines carry mate around is nothing compared to the Uruguayans). It isn’t uncommon to see the occasional waiter with a covered tray popping out of a café, though, or to have to dodge the food delivery scooters when they decide the sidewalk is the faster route, pedestrians be damned. Food is not for ‘on the go,’ it’s to sit down and enjoy!

This is the chivito uruguayo. It contains: a hamburger patty, a slice of cheese, bacon, and an egg. (Plus bread, ketchup, mustard, and a single piece of lettuce… and corn or mayo if you want it). I can feel the cholesterol attack from here.

I’d be willing to bet Argentina’s cholesterol levels aren’t great, as a country. I’m not saying they eat unhealthily, despite their love of meat and their propensity to stuff dulce de leche into everything. I imagine the average American doesn’t eat that well either, and, well, we all survive without being ‘foodies’. One thing I’ve realized, being here, is that my family at home eats really, really well (and yes, I am unreasonably smug about it). But I suspect that Argentines enjoy their food more, in general, than Americans do.

Alfajorjito.

Damn. Now I’m hungry. I’ll have to fill up on empanadas and medialunas and alfajores before I leave; those are something I’ll really miss.

Friday, July 9, 2010

Personajes de Argentina: los mujeres

Mafalda



"Lo malo de la gran familia humana es que todos quieren ser el padre."

Someone described her to me as the “Argentine Charlie Brown, only more political.” She’s pretty cute, and shows up around town on kioskos or the Subte.
Her author is Quino, who stopped producing Mafalda comics in 1973 and moved to Milan (hmm, I wonder why?)


Evita

You could write a novel about just what happened to this woman’s corpse, so I’m not quite sure how to sum her up other than slapping on a big ‘Controversial!’ label. Born an illegitimate child in poverty, former showgirl and radio star, wife to the first and most influential dictator Perón, fought for women’s suffrage and worker’s rights, died young from cancer in 1952; her body ended up in the ritzy Cemeterio Recoleta (I went for a visit) and the leftists during/before the Guerra Sucia of the 70s used her image as a banner – instead of that of the still-living Perón’s second wife Isabel. Oh, dear.


One week until the program's over, most of my friends here have gone, and my family arrives; two more weeks in Buenos Aires; one month until I get back to Montana and all its American-ness; two months until I arrive at Wes once again. What a semester!

Sunday, July 4, 2010

(pero mi querida, todavia creo en vos)

Photos from yesterday afternoon:

("During the Argentina games, 30% off").

Folding up the flag.

Consolement (the best kind).

Me too.

Happy 4th!

Friday, July 2, 2010

Personajes de Argentina: los futbolistas

I've got some Argentina personalities for you to meet!
The list includes three Santas, two soccer players, one cartoon character, and one equivalent of Paris Hilton; it got a bit long so I'll start with one saint and two soccer players.

Diego Maradona

Here’s a general video of his futbol feats, with song by the marvelous Mano Negra (to whom you should listen even if sports bore you).



His biggest accomplishments: this spectacular goal against England in 1986 (Mundial, quarterfinal match). Side note: Malvinas war? 1983. (Also re-start of democracy). Of course Argentina would make a national hero of anyone who’d put the English down a little.

And then, what he later called the ‘Hand of God’ goal – made in the same game, the referee never caught it.

Named one of two ‘futbolistas del siglo,’ there seems to be nothing this man can do to bungle his own popularity. And oh boy has he tried – cocaine, alcohol, illegitimate children he refuses to acknowledge, relations with the mafia in Naples, relations with Fidel Castro, Hugo Chavez, and the military dictatorships here in the 70s. Swearing at journalists or running over their feet with his car (no, really), and now a relationship with a much younger woman who ‘spontaneously aborted’ when it was discovered she was pregnant…


Well, this year he’s coaching the Argentine team, and the cameras make sure to cut to him any time anything interesting happens on the field, because he’ll be glowering or waving his arms around or tackle-hugging people (in a manly way, of course). He’s promised (threatened?) to go run naked in the streets of Buenos Aires if Argentina wins. I guess it’s rebellion against that suit his daughters convinced him to wear.

Lionel Messi


Currently suffering under the title of the ‘New Maradona,’ he's the star of the Argentine Mundial selection this year (though Higuain and Tevez are doing pretty well for themselves, too). There are rumors flying right now that he has a cold – and if I, in my eh-sports and language bubble, have heard of this, you can imagine what a big deal futbol is here. The country literally stops for the games – there’s a law that federal employees must be allowed to watch Argentina games. I don’t even need to watch to know the score, just count how many times the city has erupted with horns and yells. There was a man singing and throwing confetti off his balcony after Argentina won against Greece, and after Portugal lost to Spain I heard two separate people enquiring the results of strangers on the street. Versus Germany tomorrow should be an exciting game.

Back to Messi – he plays for Barcelona, and they call him ‘Pulga’ – flea – because he’s just little (and seems to get knocked down a lot by the bigger players), but oh man can he handle the ball. Maradona seems to alternately treat him like the favorite and a scapegoat – probably jealous of the attention.

That is quite enough of futbol. The excitement is infectious, though - chau chau, y VAMOS ARGENTINA!!

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Eat your heart out, Baskin Robbins, 'cos I ain't ever coming back

Heladeria count: 14
Current favorite: Volta
Runners-up: El Vesuvio (on Corrientes right next to the Obelisk) and Persicco
Left to visit: 3 – that is, of the ones I've had recommended to me. All existent is too many to count. Also one has moved so I'll have to hunt it down [insert battle cry].


Flavors include: - starting with the weirdest flavors I’ve seen (though some of even those pop up in every heladeria):
Kinotos/quinotos al wisky – kumquats! With whiskey. Who thought of that? The one time I tried this, it was not good, but it’s surprisingly common. As is champagne al limon. Ristreto granizado: ristreto is one step stronger than espresso, and granizado, which is often an option for popular flavors, is what I would call shredded with chocolate. Needless to say, caffeine-y!

Sambayon (yes, the wine and egg). Marscapone, mousse de limon, crema de chantilly, gancia (a type of ‘vino espumate’ – bubbly wine? It’s popular in Uruguay too). Other random ‘let’s add alcohol!’ flavors. Frambuesa (raspberry), maracuya (passionfruit), mango, pomelo rosado (pink grapefruit), frutilla (strawberry), durazo y naranja (peach and orange), blueberry mousse…

If you avoid strawberry ice cream (which I do in the U.S., because it always tastes like cotton candy and not actual strawberries), they really do it right here. The fruit flavors are delicious, because they use real fruit and not flavored syrup, and don’t use too much milk – sometimes none at all – which really lets the fruit stand out.

Then there’s the twelve or so variations on chocolate every place has (I am not exaggerating – I’d better take a picture of their menus one day), and a whole selection of ‘cremas,’ which I usually don’t bother with because I don’t find them as interesting. They’re like vanilla (with less vanilla flavoring) with nuts, or chocolate, or fruit, or dulce de leche swirls…
Speaking of, can’t forget that every place also usually has at least three variations on dulce de leche.

The apparent reason the ice cream is so good here is the Italian immigrants. The older places (El Vesuvio began in 1902!) sometimes have little blurbs about their history posted somewhere, and it usually begins with a variation on, "in such-a-year, the family such-and-such travelled from North Italy with their gelato skills..." which I think is always a good beginning.

My method of trying ice cream (yes, I have a method) is to get two flavors each time: one experimental, and one that I know I’ll probably like. That way I will be happy even if my ‘ooh, what’s that? Let’s get it!’ urges don’t prove fruitful. The smallest cone with two flavors is definitely enough – they tend to pile it high.
And that way I get to try all the different kinds of chocolate (it’s my safety) without missing the other things.

I also like to ask what things are and to try them beforehand, as it results in either lots of delicious varied spoonfuls or very confused workers trying to explain than it’s a “red fruit that grows in the forest, and it’s not a strawberry” – or, once, a man warning me very seriously that it “has alcohol, you know!” I guess I looked like At Risk Youth that day.

Presently, I mean to post addresses (if I kept track) and ratings and things, so that anyone in Buenos Aires can visit them, but for now I’m a little busy with my sugar coma. Mmm.
/end fluff