But don’t worry, no pigs were harmed! The fire was put out with a hose and the pigs were waiting for a ride with their owner when we passed back a couple of hours later.
We arrived at Tamaraw Falls, a beautiful waterfall.
But, Adam found these far more interesting.
Back in the Jeepney!
We arrived at White Beach, a big sandy beach with tons of shopping. Sort of like the Jersey Shore of the Philippines.
Then you guessed it, back in the Jeepney.
Is there anything better than a meal by the beach after a long day in the sun? We walked over to Hemingway’s Bistrot which is in the city of Sabang.
After a yummy dinner it was home for a good night sleep after a wonderful full day. Ah vacation, how I love you.
But let me start at the beginning. We decided for Memorial Day weekend to go to Puerto Galera. There is no flight involved to get there and for me and Randy, this will always be a big selling point. If we can get someplace without a plane we’re in. It was a short hour and a half drive to Batangas and then an hour ferry ride to Small Laguna, Puerto Galera. Words learned on the car ride- socks, shoes, no, no, no, no, no and Coco for Rico the driver.
Here we are waiting patiently for our ferry. Words learned waiting for our boat- boat, boat, boat. We are a BIG boat fan.
We arrived and checked into our hotel. Adam took a nap and since we had brought our trusty nanny, Maria, Randy and I headed off to check out the nearest sandy beach, Big Laguna.
The beach was ok. Nothing amazing but it was just nice to get some sun and swim.
We did finally make it to dinner and had a yummy meal followed by a family bedtime of 8:30. That sun sure does make you sleepy.
For the longest time we had mama, dada and this and this and this. Then we added woooooow, which I still think is the cutest thing ever and is said with surprisingly accuracy at the correct times. In just two weeks, we’ve added in this order bubble, ball, yes, banana (nana), book and cake. Cake was my fault. I had leftover lemon cake from book club and gave Adam a little piece (yes Daphne, I gave Adam a piece of cake!) and for the next three days he would point at the kitchen counter where the cake used to be and yell cake over and over. Let’s just say that boy loves him some cake. It’s also amazing to me that he started saying yes before no! Maybe it’s indicative of the positive attitude he’ll face life with or maybe he’s just saving all his nos.
You can imagine Adam’s joy when we went to a birthday party last weekend and there was a bubble machine (straight from the 1950’s).
There was yet another Filipino clown…I will let the children’s faces speak for themselves.
Adam, who always loves the older boys. was obsessed with the video game room.
So…last week I ignored him and made a Tuscan Minestrone.
It was delicious! So hearty and yummy. Since we live in Manila and Kale is an imported commodity that costs a million dollars, actually I’ve never even seen, I substituted spinach. I know loads and loads of people love kale, but not me, so I’m secretly glad I live in Manila and I don’t have to use kale as the recipe says. And since swiss chard is also nowhere to be found, I substituted bok choy.
This was really one of the best things I’ve had in a long time. I added some lemon to my bowl before I ate it and it took it to the next level. It wasn’t really soupy, more of a thick and hearty bean and vegetable dish. Adam loved it, I loved it, Randy refused to eat it. He had some leftovers and wouldn’t even look in the direction of the Minestrone.
Finally today for lunch I was having a big bowl and I convinced Randy to take a bite. Delicious, he says. Much better than I thought it would taste. Maybe we can make more and I can take it to work for lunch?
It’s moments like these that I can see exactly what Adam will be when he’s older 🙂
Tuscan Minestrone
Adapted from The Fine Art of Italian Cooking, Giuliano Bugialli
8 ounces dried cannellini beans
1 large red onion, minced
1 celery rib, diced
2 garlic cloves, minced
1 carrot, diced
1/2 cup Italian parsley
½ cup olive oil
½ small head Savoy cabbage, chopped
1 ½ bunches kale, cleaned and chopped into small pieces
1 medium potato, peeled and cut into small squares
1 cup canned tomatoes, drained and seeded
1 small bunch Swiss chard, stems removed and cut into small pieces
Salt and freshly ground pepper
Soak the dried beans overnight in a bowl of cold water. The next day, drain the beans and cook them in a large pot with 2 quarts of salted water. As the beans absorb water, keep adding enough hot water to maintain about 2 quarts of liquid at the end of the cooking time. Cook for one hour, then let sit on stovetop in pot.
Saute onion, celery, garlic, carrot, parsley, salt and pepper in the olive oil in a Dutch Oven or large stockpot for about 12 to 15 minutes. Add the cabbage, kale, and potato to the stockpot. Then add tomatoes, smushing them with your hands as you drop them in the pot. Cover and simmer for 15 minutes, adding a little bean liquid every now and then if it’s looking dry. Then add Swiss chard.
Scoop out about 1 cup of beans with a strainer or slotted spoon and set aside. With a handheld mixer, blend the remaining beans in their pot, then pour bean puree into the stockpot with vegetables, stirring to combine. Simmer together for about 15 minutes more until heated through. When you are ready to serve, add the reserved whole beans. Add salt and pepper.
Ladle soup into bowls and serve with crusty bread, freshly grated Parmesan and a healthy drizzle of good quality olive oil.
The first book was Shanghai Girls by Lisa See. I really liked this one. It was an easy read, well written and really interesting. It follows two sisters in Shanghai during World War II and their journey to the States. The perfect book to read by the pool.
Our new favourite activity is to head to the pool when Adam wakes up, take a swim and then he goes off to the playground with his nanny and I get to read for a bit by the pool. This is HEAVEN! It’s one of the things I’ve missed most since having Adam. Being able to lay by the pool or beach and read.
The second book club book was The Fault In Our Stars by John Green. When I first started reading this one I wasn’t that into it. It’s follows a teenage girl who has cancer, but it’s not the typical tearjerker. It’s funny and the characters almost seem made up they’re so exaggerated. By the end I actually really enjoyed it. It was different than any book I’ve read and a really fast read.
I actually (amazingly) had time to read a third book and I really liked it. It was probably my favorite of all three. Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn. This book was great. I’ve been hearing about this book for a while and in the beginning I wasn’t sure what all the fuss was about. But now that I’ve finished it, I have to say I see what all the fuss was about. I don’t want to say anything and give anything away but go buy this book!
What is Adam reading these days you ask? Well, his cousin Roman just sent him the The Little Engine That Could and we’re been reading it on repeat. His Aunt Daf and Uncle Meej also sent him a book – Larry Gets Lost in NYC and this is also fan favorite.
Right after I had Adam I was so exhausted and busy trying to keep this little baby happy that I forgot how much I enjoy reading. I’m so happy I’m getting back into it and I’m also so happy that Adam so far loves books! Hopefully he’ll get as much joy out of books as his mom and dad do.
She was the one who started my lifelong love of books and Gin Rummy. She was the most interesting person I have ever known and my one regret is not writing down every story she ever told me, because she had loads and they were all so interesting.
If your mom dies when you’re forty-two, are you still an orphan? That’s what I was thinking as we drove to Connecticut. My aunt had called the night before to tell us that granny was in the hospital again. So here we were on our way. We stopped at McDonald’s, my sister and I fought over the front seat. A typical trip up to granny’s. We were quieter than usual though. Each of us absorbed in our own thoughts and memories.
Finally reaching the hospital four hours later, we walked into granny’s room. My mom started crying right away. Whenever my mom cries I always feel uncomfortable, I just don’t know what to do. This wasn’t the way it had been all those other times. If I had come straight home after school instead of hanging out with my friends, or if we hadn’t stopped for food, maybe we would have gotten there before she lost consciousness and we could have talked a bit. It would have made it easier.
All those other trips to the hospital, she had been fine by the time we arrived. I guess three years of emphysema does that to a person. You simply assume that in a couple of days, granny will go home, just like she did all those other times. Besides, she was only sixty-seven, I still had to ask her a million things and she still had to tell me all her stories again that I had already heard. I always wanted to hear them again.
We were all there, my mom, my aunt, my two cousins, Kathryn and Caleb, even my little sister. We took turns holding her skinny hand. My sister swears her hand was squeezed back, but I don’t know. We sat there for three hours. You know the kind of hour I’m talking about, the long kind, the kind where you’re waiting for something to happen. Why had she signed a non resuscitation order? Of course, as much as it hurt, we all realized that granny wouldn’t be happy any other way. So this was the only way for her.
Half the time we were crying, half the time we were laughing. Like pregnant women we had our ups and we had our downs, remembering granny. Her breathing got lighter and lighter until you couldn’t hear it anymore. Finally the doctor came in and told us that was it. And that was it, no dramatic flinging of anyone on the bed, no mouth to mouth, no frantic shock attempts. Just us cleaning out her drawers and packing up her little pink sneakers. She liked pink sneakers a lot. Then it was just us walking to the car and driving to my grandma’s house, which is where my aunt lives too.
Ever get that feeling that something didn’t really happen? I get that a lot. Especially about granny. I just think she’s coming down to visit soon, or coming for Easter, or we’re going to visit her soon. I wait for her to suddenly pop up, her arms full of books she found for us to read and cards for that Rummy game that went on way past 500.
The last thing I packed up when I left her house was a little painted box I had bought for her in Russia. It has seemed perfect for her. I almost didn’t want to have it again. It didn’t seem right. But now I’m glad I have it. I keep some change in it that I found in the pocket of her jacket that I wear sometimes. I wonder if maybe she was going to buy a newspaper or a pack of gum with that change. Sometimes when I have a day that I miss her more than others, I’ll take the box down and think about how much I miss her. I’ll think about how I miss her jokes that could make us all laugh. I’ll think about how I miss her love of butter and New York bagels, crossword puzzles, Skor candy bars, Paris fashion, good books, Nivea hand cream, her back roller, sleeping on the floor and most of all how much she loved us.
Her four children are as unique as her personality was. Each one is special. My uncle Mark, he’s the artist. His work is even in galleries. Of course his biggest gallery is our house, along with his biggest fans. My aunt Vangie, she’s the musician. She’s a singer and a guitarist in a band. They just made a demo. My uncle David, he’s just my Uncle David. He’s schizophrenic. He converted to Judaism and gives away all the money and clothes my mom and aunt give him. Last there’s my mom. She’s the oldest. She’s the mom. When disaster hits, Gretchen will be there to clean up the mess and cook for everyone. She really misses her mom.
One day, after an especially competitive Trivial Pursuit game (my family takes competition very seriously) my mom looked over at me and said-
“I think Granny really would have enjoyed all of this, don’t you”
I nodded and smiled, looking away, anywhere but my mom’s eyes where I can see the tears shining brightly, almost as brightly as my own.
All of this from my little petite, five foot, ninety pound Grandma. The strongest person I know. I wish she was still here to give me advice or so I can tell her how much I miss her and love her.