Archive for November, 2009

Thanksgiving

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

Here’s how you can tell American Thanksgiving is upon us: in the City Shopper, an expensive western supermarket with branches around Shanghai, a young Indonesian woman approaches you bearing a box of something labeled Starkemehl and politely asks whether this can be used to make cornbread. From past experience in this area, you know that this is a very fine German corn flour, so you shake your head no and lead her over to the organic section of the store, where you know that they now carry Arrowhead Mills’ line of stone ground corn meal. As you suspected, she confirms that she has been invited to an American home for Thanksgiving and is hoping to get her contribution right.

Last year, I recall a similar situation with a sweet German girl, who held up lingonberries and wanted to know whether they could substitute for cranberries. Thinking back to the sauce in IKEA cafeterias from Shanghai to Virginia, I told her she should be okay. But afterward I found Ocean Spray in a can in another aisle and went hunting for her.

Then there were the charming and flirtatious Italian guys in Carrefour who asked me where they could find a pumpkin pie. You’ll have to make it yourself! I joked back. But then they found me again in the vegetable section and dangled a pumpkin in front of me. How many does it take? And how to make the pastry? They were delighted when I steered them to the house brand’s surprisingly good pate brisee in a box. They were pretty sure that they had a friend with an oven — rare in a Shanghai kitchen — so I was hopeful about their pie.

The hardest part is the turkey. The first time that I attempted a Thanksgiving dinner in Shanghai, I boought a large expensive imported Butterball at a Singaporean grocery store and persuaded them to keep it in their freezer until just before I needed it. Fortunately, it was very cool that year, so I was able to thaw the thing outside on the balcony sealed up in a plastic bin safe from marauding cats. (It wouldn’t fit into my fridge.) The alternative to roasting your own is to order a turkey from one of the big western hotels, but then it wouldn’t be stuffed with my own special stuffing… And I’ve heard at least one horror story of a turkey arriving beautifully browned but raw in the middle!

Of course, the other alternative is to go to the buffet at the Hilton, and we have done that, too. The gravy doesn’t taste right — how could it? It’s not my grandmother’s/mother’s recipe — but it’s where, on a Thursday night after a regular workday in Shanghai, you’ll find our fellow citizens — teachers from the Shanghai American School and many other friends and acquaintances from around town. All thinking about what we have to be grateful for in China.

Obamamania

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

On the day Obama was going to spend 15 hours in Shanghai, I was ready! I figured there was a small chance he’d appreciate seeing a friendly face while over here to talk to the Chinese about North Korea, the valuation of the yuan, carbon caps, Iran, human rights and freedom, yadda, yadda, yadda.

Obama1

I’d heard that he was staying at the Ritz Carlton at the Shanghai Centre, which was good for me since I had a Chinese lesson scheduled nearby.

The weather was just abominable. Cold and pouring rain both. My driver said that he had heard that Obama was going to tour the Expo 2010 site, visiting the American pavilion. I pointed out that it hasn’t been completed — what a day to spend on a construction site! He agreed and said Obama would probably send an underling in that case and go somewhere where it wasn’t raining. “He’s only got three more years,” my driver observed, apropos of nothing. Funny, I hadn’t thought how very short his term is before. And so much is expected of him.

Security was tight at the Shanghai Centre at 12:30 — no cars allowed in the driveway except official cars.Obama2By 1:45, when I finished lunch and wanted to head to the opposite tower for my lesson, it was nearly impossible to get there. So many police, including many of the black-suited Caucasian ones with things in their ears, familiar from my Washington home. So many barriers. One man was angrily arguing, to no avail, that he needed to go into the hotel.

Obama4

I was bouncing up and down. “Have you seen Obama?” I asked one of the Chinese police (I couldn’t get anywhere near the Secret Service.) But the man just scowled at me and glared at my camera. “Please take good care of him,” I said to him before heading up to class.

Obama3My Chinese teacher was amused by my shirt. “Oh, your President is here?” she asked. “I wondered why there were so many police.”

And when I came out at 4:00, everything was back to normal, cars and people flowing freely. I later read the details of our President’s talk to students in the morning (ironically, the best coverage was online in The Washington Post) and saw a photo in The Shanghai Daily of Hillary Clinton standing under an umbrella at the construction site of the US pavilion. Sometime between 1:45 and 4:00, I’m guessing that President Obama returned to the Shanghai Centre before heading on to Beijing. So I was in the same building with him!! I hope he caught my good vibes.

)leM ome

Sunday, November 15th, 2009

Maybe it’s because I’ve been frustrated lately in my efforts to learn Chinese. For whatever reason, when I saw this sign on a new store in our neighborhood, I went over to suggest a correction.

clem1Hello, I called up in Chinese. One guy waved his arms windshield-wiper style in front of his face immediately. As if to say Don’t even try to talk to me in your funny language!

I am speaking Chinese, I insisted. My response to the windshield wipers is invariably to plant myself and persist. But I see English here, pointing to the sign, and it’s wrong.

He stopped waving and looked at me.

Then the tough part: how to say The left part of the sign is upside down. I tried, working on getting the correct word order, The left part’s top side is on the bottom and the bottom part is on the top. No light came into the poor fellow’s eyes. In the end, I made myself understood by resorting, as I still must do way too often,  to sign language.

After I’d acted out upside down a few times, he came downstairs to take a look and I went off down the street. When I returned in a few minutes, the English was fixed!clem2I’m still working on my Chinese.

Elsewhere

Saturday, November 14th, 2009

So where have I been?

I’m gonna let you guess. And I’m not cheating — I was in China, although I found this city to be full of surprises.

Such as: while I was still on the ground on the plane, the young lady sitting next to me murmured into her mobile phone so softly that at first I wondered what she was doing.

And, once I arrived, I noticed that people quietly lined up to get on the subway. See?elsewhere1

I’ve never seen a temple so busy as the Longshan Temple on Saturday morning. People of all ages were offering prayerselsewhere2elsewhere3and some were tossing red fortune-telling crescents that landed with a clack.elsewhere4

elsewhere5Tables were piled high with offerings of food and flowerselsewhere6including a can of Coke and a roll of Mentos!

We went nuts over the night markets and all the stalls of street food, chowing down on sesame noodles and passing on skewers of grilled congealed pigs’ blood. Alex couldn’t wait for a manguo bing (huge concoction of sliced mango and sweetened condensed milk over shaved ice)elsewhere7But here was the biggest surprise, something we can’t find in Shanghai.

John about to chomp a sesame bagel

John about to chomp a sesame bagel

Figured it out yet? If not, I’ll leave a couple more hints. The biggest treasure in the museum’s enormous collection seems to be a cabbage. Well, it’s very realistic and carved from jade (no photos allowed).

And although the trademark tall skyscraper is an elegant bamboo stalkelsewhere9 it actually  looks kind of forlorn from a distance, towering alone over all the rest.elsewhere10Anyhow, I’m home in Shanghai now. But I’ll go back there again, now that there is a direct 80-minute flight.