01 October 2011
31 August 2011
September
Hey everyone! Jay here. It's been a while ~ just wanted to let you know about some recent updates around here.
ls with the public hair dryer, and even combing their pubes with the shared combs. And then putting them back.
06 August 2011
Still Here :-)
As for our vacation, the food was excellent, the weather was fantastic (not rainy, and not even too humid) and I took way too many photos. I hope to give more detailed descriptions of our trip, but it took forever just to sift through the photos to decide which ones to put online... So go check them out :-) You can either click the link for "photos" at the top of the page, or, if you're on Facebook, just go to my profile to see the most recent pictures.
More to come soon (I hope)
LOVE!
-J&J
14 January 2011
First week back in Korea, and a trip to Insadong
Okay. So, week one of winter English camp is finished. 2 more to go. I'm just today getting over my jet-lag; I've been falling asleep in the early evening and waking up at ridiculous hours (3, 4, 5...) I have the weekend to re-adjust and we will finally get to re-arranging the house for functionality and living rather than travel-prep, packing, and travel-recovery. On the plus side, camp has been going great, Korean food is excellent, and we went on a trip to Insadong last weekend.
Insadong is a district of Seoul and it's the best place to buy handmade things such as wood carvings, pottery, brushwork, calligraphy, rice cakes, etc... Also, Insadong is just a great area to walk around. Lots of awesome street food, plus wonderful tea houses and the pottery and artwork are just beautiful. Here are some photos from the Beautiful Tea Museum (less museum, more tea) and another nearby teahouse (taken with our awesome new cameras):
I got a Chinese Oolong tea, and Jay got a Korean cinnamon tea. Korean traditional teas aren't really teas per se, as there is no tea leaf actually involved. They're generally based on fruit, grains, roots, or spices and served in a large cup.
At the second teahouse, we got imsil cha (green plum tea) and some lovely rice-cakes.
We ate a good deal of delicious street food (delicious 호떡 pancakes, grilled chicken, and some sausages on a stick for Jay) and just generally enjoyed walking around. That middle snowman looks a lot like the images of Jay that his students draw, so we had to take a photo :-)
We also met a woman who makes these awesome flower-like lamps. The base is made of wood (really dark - kind of like mahogony) and the lights themselves go into paper-like flower petals that have a similar texture to handmade paper. The lamps are really beautiful, but couldn't really imagine what to do with them. Maybe next time, if we can find a good home for one, we'll have to get one.
We got a couple wood carvings and a painted landscape scroll to decorate the house. The wood carving with the leaves says "every day is a good day" and the one with the man says "everything is affected by your thoughts." Jay loved the picture of the little curmudgeonly little guy and he thought the message was an appropriate one for him in the morning ^_^ so that's sitting above his desk and gives him ridiculous amounts of amusement. I'm thinking that it'll wear off at some point, but he still seems tickled by it.
We finally put up a picture that Jay drew of me in Germany and we'd been storing in the U.S. for some bizarre reason; I'm hoping to print out a matching photo of him looking the opposite direction to even out our lovely kitchen. Plus, I bought a beautiful teaset in Insadong to go with my teas... it is a gritty beige color with white and darker brown swipes and specks. Very simple and natural and it gives me incredible joy to drink tea with it :-) The Korean tea kettles have a handle coming out the side - it's a part that sticks out and looks rather strange (and disturbingly phallic), but it's way more natural to pour by simply rotating the wrist rather than the awkward rotate-lift-tilt move required with top-handles or side-handles of western tea kettles :-)
And yes, I did have to buy an extra set of shelves for my tea.
Chester's super excited to have us back and lots of attention, and the weather is absolutely freezing. The forecast for this weekend is -7º as the high and -15ª as the low. Celcius. So that's between around 5º and 20ºFarenheit, I think. Too lazy to check. Anyway, 'tis cold.
One of my wonderful co-workers invited us to eat rice cake soup with her and her husband on the lunar new year. It's a traditional start to the new year because the rice cakes in the soup are cut from a very long stick of rice cake, and it's associated with longevity. So Koreans start every (lunar) year with a bowl of 떡국 ("tteok-guk"). Plus, it's one of Jay's favorite meals ever. So that will be fun!
On the note of food, I'm trying to take photos of more of the food we eat here to tempt my dad to come visit Korea. This is a kind of comfort food: rice porridge. Not the flavorless gruel variety, but delicious and with tons of varieties. Jay got the spicy kimchi-octopus porridge and I went basic with the chicken-ginseng porridge. The porridge is served piping hot and in a huge bowl. We get a gigantic spoon to transfer a small amount to a smaller bowl so that it can cool down and we can eat that while the rest of our meal stays warm until we're ready to move it to the mini-bowl.
Jay is still working on trying to find a job closer to our house. He had an interview at a local high school and although the interview went really well, they chose someone with more experience in high schools. But, they had kind of a strange set-up where they split the classes among the 4 (wow!) foreign teachers and one Korean teacher, so although it's a public school, he would teach half a class (~20 students) alone rather than the whole class with the presence of a Korean teacher. So, yeah.... He's still considering his options (a few public and private schools in our area, or staying with his current company, who have stated that they'd love to have him for another year.) Feel free to extend happy-thoughts towards his job-hunt, as a shorter commute would really be lovely. I'm off to enjoy some tea and go about organizing the post-travel clutter of gifts and new stuff from the U.S. I leave you with the beautiful art of Jay's students: