Thursday, April 20, 2006
Saturday, April 01, 2006
Germany
Picture of me and Emre in Bremen.We just got back from a 9 day trip to Germany. We spent 4 days with Emre's sister Eda and her husband Heiko in Bremen, a charming small city of 500,000 people in the north. They were fantastic hosts and introduced us to the morning cocktail "fruhshop" and their favorite game, bluff, which we also got addicted to.
We had 4 1/2 days in Berlin, which was really amazing. Compared to Istanbul, the public transportation is AMAZING (Although people openly drinking beer on the U-bahn was a bit suprising. It was definitely a bit sketchy at night, and there is graffitti EVERYWHERE.)
Bremen Bahnhof
Eda and Emre saying goodbye in Bremen.We ended up renting a car and driving from Berlin to Bremen because the train was 250 euro. normally it would be 90 euro round trip, but you have to buy it 3 days in advance (a German custom we never could get the hang of!) I had always imagined the "autobahn" to be a scary superhighway, but really it is just two lanes in each direction- like a local road on eastern Long Island. But the Germans DO drive extremely fast- no speed limit. We saw a horrible accident in the other direction, including dead bodies. awful. I will stick to the trains...
Brandenburger Tor (an old city gate) is a very impressive ending to Unter der Linden Avenue which has lots of neoclassical buildings. Next to the gate, the new American embassy is being built. There's also a Starbucks across the square (even here!). The gate was in East Berlin and the wall was just past it.
another night in Berlin

Emre's old roomate in the Bronx, Giuseppe, is now working at a glamorous club in Berlin, where we went one night. He took us around a few other areas another evening, which was great.
Giuseppe's parents are Italian, but he was born and raised in Germany. I didn't realize there was such a large community of "gastarbeiters" (guest workers or immigrants) from Italy and Spain, as well as Turkey, Lebanan and other Arab countries in Germany. Germany has a population of 80 million and 2.3 million of them are Turks. Berlin has the highest concentration of immigrants.
Kreuzberg and finally FOOD
Photo of Kreuzberg, which is supposedly the Turkish ghetto. We thought it was the most charming area! There are loads of fantastic restaurants and lively streetlife. Berlin is generally rather economically depressed, but somehow Kreuzberg seemed the liveliest and most interesting area to us. We decided we'd like to live on this street overlooking the river.
And the FOOD!
The street food in Germany is wurst (sausages with mustard, very yummy and nothing like a hot dog!) and pommes frites. "Kaffee und kuchen" is another German custom I really love - afternoon coffee and cake. I love apple struedel, kase kuchen (means cheese cake, but lighter and more lemony) and plum schnite! All the bakeries were really amazing- fantastic bread!
Berlin had fabulous restaurants. One traditional gasthaus we tried was Restauration Gambrinus on the corner of Linienstrasse and Oranienburger strasse. We had jaegar schnitzel (mushroom sauce) and fantastic salads with pickled shredded white cabbage and beets on top of regular mixed salads- excellent! Another good place was Assel on Oranienburger strasse, which was also fantastic. The area around Oranienburger strasse, just north of Alexanderplatz and Hackescher Markt in East Berlin, was very lively with lots of cool spots to check out. Another typical German dish is gulash which I had a great place under the S bahn in Hackescher Markt. Also came with celery cream soup, which was zuper!










