Sunday, January 23, 2011

my Christmas celebration in Denmark

shoveling snow on my last weekend when we got a foot and a half that morning alone!

digging the Christmas tree out of the snow with Flemming, I am standing on a bench and still buried.

Laila and Tine in their elf hats. they were doing lots of Christmas baking.

Sidewalk in our neighborhood.

Tine and me, before we played in the snow.

cool Danish house with a thatched roof.

Tine in a snow drift.

Me in a snowdrift. we would just fall in to them, or run and jump into them.



Tine and me, post playing in the snow.

Tine and me decorating the Christmas tree. the boys were mysteriously  MIA on this occasion.

Ulrik, Jon, Tine, and me right before Christmas dinner.

My plate with cooked red cabbage, mashed potatoes, caramelized potatoes, Danish meatballs, pork roast, and cooked apples with jelly.

The Christmas tree with real lit candles!

Flemming and Tine on our family walk after Christmas dinner.

The trees.

Thursday, December 30, 2010

Final Weekend in Denmark

   On friday after all of our exams were done, my friends and I went to a wonderful cafe to get some white wine Christmas Gløgg, which was delicious. Then I said goodbye to all of them and went to a reception with Laila and Ulrik, and then we headed back home through a blizzard.  The next morning it continued to snow another foot and a half. It was insane. I helped Flemming shovel the snow and then I had to dig our Christmas tree out of the snow so we could bring it in and set it up. Flemming had to help me lift it over the huge pile of snow I had just shoveled, and after he cut off the top and bottom to make it shorter, we brought it in and set it up over lots of towels to catch the melting snow we couldn't get off. Once the tree was dry, Tine and I decorated it with lots of little elves, old fashioned ornaments, and danish flag garlands. Before we decorated, we decided to go for a walk in all of the snow. we had a ton of fun playing in it, and she showed me a street corner where huge drifts always pile up, and we just fell into the drifts and would disappear in all of the fluffy white snow. It was really fun, and you could even take a running start. we jumped and jumped until we were frozen cold and covered in snow.
      it was a wonderful afternoon, and then we had a Christmas dinner. It included a pork roast with crispy skin that Danes love, and I can't even look at, and caramelized potatoes, cooked red cabbage, roasted apples, and mashed potatoes. This is the traditional Danish Christmas dinner. we ate and drank a little wine, and then after dinner they gave me some presents. They gave me very thoughtful Danish presents to take home, including a frying pan for apple cakes, which is a very special type of skillet that you can only find in Denmark. So during the break between dinner and dessert, I hurriedly finished wrapping my presents for them, including some chocolates from Vienna, and honeycomb candle, and a wonderful wool blanket. Risa la mande (I don't know how to spell it) is the traditional Danish dessert for Christmas, and it is  sweet rice cooked in milk with sugar and cream, and you eat it chilled with cherry sauce on top. there is a lone almond in it somewhere, and whoever gets the almond wins the chocolate treat. It's a delicious dessert, and Tine won it this time.  Oh, and they also lit real candles on the tree during dinner. it was beautiful.   After dinner, we all bundled up and went for a walk in the snow and played in the snow drifts some more. That was so much fun. To top off the night, Tine and I snuggled up with some warm blankets and watched Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets!
   Saturday was a really really special day. Sunday was great too, and Tine and I went into Roskilde to finish her Christmas shopping and eat a Danish hot dog together for lunch. they are delicious. I spent a lot of Sunday painting because I had to finish the two paintings I was giving them, and on monday I mostly packed. Tuesday morning I got to go see Tine's Christmas play at her school, and it was pretty funny even though I couldn't understand them.  Finally, they had to drive me to the airport, and that was 40 minutes of torture as I tried really hard not to think about having to say goodbye. My family was definitely the most important part of my Danish experience.  Luckily I got to sit next to one of my friends on the airplane totally by chance, since almost everyone I knew had left 3 days before, and it made the 10 hour flight a lot easier. I got home about 30 hours after I got dropped off in the airport because my flight in Chicago got canceled, but it all worked out in the end, and it was really nice to come home. 

Monday, December 13, 2010

Churches in Europe

small cemetery in Cinque Terre region, Italy
I thought it would be cool to post a church or two from each country I have been to because they can be found in all countries, and each country has its own style of church.  I got to go to church with Laila on Sunday to see the St. Lucia ceremony, and it was a beautiful chapel.

St. Lucia's day in my host family's church, ågerup, Denmark

My host family's church, ågerup, Denmark

My host family's church from the outside: it has extremely Danish architecture

Interior or Notre Dame in Paris, France

A bombed chapel in Berlin, Germany

The remains of this bombed chapel, Germany.

Santorini, Greece

Santorini Greece

Santorini, Greece

Santorini, Greece

Ancient Temple of Olympian Zeus, Athens, Greece.

Old church in the Ancient Greek Agora, Athens, Greece.

Pisa, Italy

Interior of the church in Pisa, Italy

The same church in Pisa, Italy

oops, don't know how that slipped in.

Cinque Terre, Italy

Lauterbrunnen, Switzerland


Cemetery, Lauterbrunnen Switzerland

Church in Wengen Switzerland

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Vienna Pictures (Nov. 25-28)


Secession Building, built for art Nouveau artists around 1900. defied socially acceptable neoclassical style of art and moved more towards organic, natural, and ornate designs. 

The Vienna Opera House

Outside of Vienna Opera House

Traditional cafe where we were treated to coffee on our freezing walking tour

Stunning cathedral


Insanely beautiful roof on this cathedral


Her hair

Palace

Fancy cafe where we had lunch!




Lizzy and I tried roasted chestnuts. they are really tasty!

Secession building again


Catherine (left) and Adrienne, they were my partners for our presentation on turn of the century art, and they are great. I really wish I had met them earlier in the semester

our fancy dinner before the Opera

The interior of the state opera house

we found a playground in our freetime: Lizzy and Catherine

me!

The ducks in the duckpond


another beautiful church

We thought the caricature of the dog on the far right was pretty hilarious

The Christmas market outside of the Belvedere palace

Adrienne and me with our drinks at 1:00 am sunday night, waiting for our train home. so sad.