While I was sad to not discover any programs along the lines of what I imagined to be a "Good Morning Buenos Aires" type of show, I am happy to find that TNT delivers movie after movie. Last night we watched "Signs" (and opted not to watch "The Village.") Tonight, we caught "The Borne Supremacy" just as it was ending, and "The Minority Report" is just starting. So, ciao for now...
Saturday, February 14, 2009
TV in BA
Our first morning in Buenos Aires, I was a little surprised to discover that the local TV offerings included little more than subtitled or dubbed United States TV shows ("Gilmore Girls," "The A-Team," "Seinfeld," etc.) and really, really bad weight loss infomercials. Seriously bad...I can't even begin to describe them.
Home away from home

Every time we take a walk in our temporary neighborhood, we discover something new. (The photo above is a view of our street.) Today, on our way home from a 5:30 p.m. ice cream run to Persicco (today's flavors: melon and tiramisu...the first a delicious accident that happened because J didn't pronounce "mango" correctly, the second because it is heaven in a bowl) after a long, hot day of shopping at the Palermo Viejo weekend market, we found a large supermarket, a mouthwatering meat and cheese shop, and an equally droolworthy bakery.
Truly, the neighborhood we are staying in is delightful. We would gladly transport it back to Seattle. When I say you can't spit without hitting a cafe, restaurant, small grocery store (supermercado), pharmacy or laundromat, I'm not being gross...I'm being serious.
Being able to walk a block to pick up essentials has really made us turn up our noses at the notion of "bigger is better." We went to the Jumbo supermarket yesterday, and it has really lost it's luster. There's a supermercado about a block away that's perfect for picking up cold beer, bottled water, and other non-perishibles, and we just need to walk a few more blocks to find a bigger market with a better produce selection.

It's February, and...
...I'm wearing a tank top (while blogging at our favorite morning cafe)...
...and the roses are in bloom (at Parque 3 de Februaro).
Friday, February 13, 2009
A Dog Day Afternoon

Dogs rule in Buenos Aires.
There are no laws saying that anyone has to pick up after them when they do their business, even if it's in the middle of the sidewalk.
When dogs are trotting along with their people, they are not always on a leash. Yet they seem to know not to run into traffic or bother people eating at the sidewalk cafes that exist everywhere. J believes this is an example of Darwin at work: the stupid dogs have simply been culled by now.
J took the above photo Friday afternoon downtown on busy, bustling Ave. de Mayo. Now, while we have seen many, many dogs in a similarly prostrate position on the city's sidewalks, they usually are not in the middle of the sidewalk. To be fair, Friday was quite sizzling, with temps in the low-to-mid 90s. Poor fella, can't really blame him.
A little R-E-S-P-E-C-T

Even though the Buenos Aires cemetery (aka the one that all the guidebooks say "you must visit") is in the Recoleta neighborhood, our first brush with the dead came Wednesday in the Chacarita Cemetary, since we were already just a few blocks away at the farmer's market, anyway.
Created in the early 1800s as a final resting place for the masses of victims from a yellow fever epidemic (mostly from the San Telmo and La Boca neighborhoods), this cemetery is less exclusive than Recoleta's, yet the best of Chacarita's tombs apparently rival Recoleta's best.

This was our first experience with a cemetery of this type, and the first thought that came to mind was "city of the dead." Indeed, the streets and streets of ornate tombs look like a miniature of some of the streets of ornate homes we've come across. Like many neighborhoods, there was quite a variance in the level of upkeep.

Others are covered with a film of cobwebs, skeletons of long-dried-up roses stuck in the ornate metal work on the doors, which at least are securely locked.

Beyond the tomb city lie its gardens: a huge area filled with trees, flowering shrubs and plant-covered plots. I love cemeteries, because although death does bring sadness, happy memories of loved ones never die. I can't wait to visit the Recoleta Cemetary next week (and not just because Evita is buried there).

Thursday, February 12, 2009
Heaven: in or out?
We died and went to steak heaven tonight. We ate at Campobravo (Baez 292) a few blocks from our apartment.
We chose to be unfashionable (heading out the door at 8:15 p.m.) so we could get a sidewalk table. We ordered martinis instead of wine (a mistake we won't repeat...see the previous post), a roasted red pepper with olive oil as our (delicious) appetizer, then shared a quite large bife chorizo (sirloin steak) and a platter of grilled vegetables.

This steak was so good, I can't even begin to describe it. But I'll try. It was thick, and tender, and juicy and perfectly cooked (seared on the outside, and evenly rosy throughout the inside). The flavor was...beefy. Delicious.
Anyway, imagine my surprise when, as we began to walk away from the restaurant, J says to me "We're never coming back here."
WTF?
Turns out, the bill included a 10 peso (5 pesos each) cubierto fee. AKA, a silverware charge. This was two nights in a row we saw this on our dinner bill (Wednesday night it was 7 pesos each, and for a mediocre meal at that). A little Google search revealed that this charge used to be common in Buenos Aires, went away for a while, and is now back. Some restaurants charge it, some don't. The fee tends to range from 2 to 10 pesos. It allegedly covers "extras" like silverware, napkins and bread.
I guess the question becomes, what price are we willing to pay to go back to heaven?
Lost in translation
We've found many things to love in Buenos Aires so far in our few days here (beef, ice cream, cafes, sidewalk seating, architecture, the subway system), many things we don't like but can tolerate (dodging dog poo on every sidewalk, the abundance of mullets, insanely crazy drivers), but let us state for the record that there are two things here that are awful beyond compare: toilet paper and martinis.
The "softest" toilet paper is a few cuts above sandpaper, and the martinis we ordered tonight were so strange that we couldn't figure out what the deal was with them. Sweet vermouth? Olive juice? Lemon juice? Cheap gin? So very odd. Plus, they cut a straw in half to use as olive picks...need I say more? I think we'll stick to wine and Quilmes from here on out, thank you very much.
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