Monday, September 3, 2018

Escaping the 2018 European heat wave -- Summer trip to the Italian Alps - the Italian side of Mont Blanc


This summer -- 2018 was our hottest ever. Temperatures in Switzerland and most of Europe were in the high 80 and 90 degrees Fahrenheit for weeks on end without a break. There was almost no air conditioning in Switzerland so we decided to head for the hills to try to get a break from the heat. Courmayeur Italy near Mont Blanc was a little over 3 hours to drive so we made a last minute reservation at an inexpensive hotel (about 110 euros total per night, breakfast included) for the three of us and our dog Pearl.

We escaped to the sixty degree temperatures. We were also lucky with our hotel.  The Tavernier was a five minute walk (but uphill) to the shopping/restaurant district in Courmayeur and right next to the glacial stream coming from the mountains -- Fiume Dora Báltea. The staff and owners of the hotel were incredibly nice and kind to us.


This was the view when we came out of the top floor of our hotel and walked over the bridge to town (following 2 photos).  The video is taken from our hotel balcony a few steps out of our room.









Courmayeur was a beautiful little town with older buildings and nice small restaurants. There was a grand hotel in the middle of the town -- the Grand Hotel Royal e Golf. Very old school with an English butler type waiter in a suit serving drinks outside.  It has a grand lobby filled with marble and stag's horns. We had cocktails on their lovely outdoor terrace overlooking the mountains. We tried to go to the restaurant Cadran Solaire afterwards, but will make reservations for dinner ahead next time.  The other restaurant that we went to looked nice and was inexpensive but the food was unremarkable -- it was restaurant Mont Fretty.

We looked at the map and decided to hike up to a mountain lake to swim. Here are pictures of Val Veny and our attempts to hike to Lago Delle Marmotte (marmot lake). We never actually made it because it was starting to rain and it was very long steep hike. We were afraid of getting stuck in a storm so we went back down before reaching the lake.

Photos from the hike to Lago Delle Marmotte (marmot lake)


Thomas and Christian near one of the glacial steams on the hike to Marmot Glacial Lake.






We had to take off our shoes and put our toes into this cold wild glacial stream on the hike to Marmot Lake.




Thomas pausing to rest on boulders -- hike to Marmot Lake.

We only made it to this bridge and turned back.



On the way home we stopped to check out the cross country skiing in Val Ferret for future reference. 

Here are pictures of our hike.


Mountain top - Val Ferret 




 Val Ferret 

Glacial stream - Val Ferret


Christian also used to para-glide in places like this mountain in Val Ferret



Thistle - Val Ferret 


wild alpine lily

Perennial Cornflower 


Wednesday, July 11, 2018

European Snorkeling Road Trip -- Our first stop on the Lake of Lugano

The view during our drive along the lake of Lugano.
Our stay at Stella D'Italia on the Lake of Lugano
We decided to go snorkeling and our ultimate destination was the island of Elba just off of the coast of Tuscany in Italy.  We took our dog Pearl so we wanted to break up the trip into short drives. We drove about 3 hours from the Zurich area to the Italian part of the Lake of Lugano.  We drove on the road on the cliff above the lake for about 20 minutes to reach Valsolda. We passed through small villages along the lake and finally arrived at the Stella D’Italia hotel.  Our room had a gorgeous view of the lake. The hotel was traditional and beautifully decorated. We ask where our dog was allowed to walk in the hotel and the concierge said “Wherever she wants.”.  

The view from our room.

Our immediate concern was to go swimming in the lake.  We put our suits on and walked through the grounds to the deck.  Only a few people were there laying in the sun. A women was in the outdoor cafe working on a laptop.  We thought that she must have been a famous writer staying here to work on a book. She looked very serious so we did not bother her.  Even the pictures don’t fully capture the beautiful blue color of the clear lake water framed by mountains and by arbors full of roses and bougainvillea.  After a time a family of ducks rested under the deck chairs. When they went back into the water they marched over several feet to the ladder as they had seen the hotel patrons do and jumped into the water from there.  There were also swans further away near where the water transit boat stopped to take people on tours of the lake or to other towns.

View from the hotel grounds and dining area.
Looking up at the dining area rose arbor.
The hundred year old rose bush - Belciana rose.
We had a long dinner that night under the rose arbor.  It was a large structure covered by several very large rose bushes that were said to have been around 100 years old. Each rose plant was as large as a small tree. The view was breathtaking. The appetizer of melon and prosciutto had a surprising addition of burrata cheese. It was a creamy fresh mozzarella-like cheese that was so good we bought several while still in Italy to take back to Switzerland.   We ordered an entire bottle of prosecco to share -- grateful for the gentle prices after drinking 20 dollar glasses of wine in Switzerland with insanely expensive and unremarkable Italian food at our small neighborhood restaurants.

We had also walked our dog Pearl along a brick path that follows a mountain stream and another time up stone stairs that go to a church and then beyond.  We left the next morning to drive through the piedmont to the coast of Italy near Piombino where the ferry goes to Elba.

Wednesday, April 25, 2018

Before and After House Renovations - Cambridge and Pennsylvania Farmhouse

Cambridge Massachusetts Renovation.  

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Old Cambridge Kitchen - view looking at back window.
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New Cambridge Kitchen - view looking at back window.
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New Cambridge Kitchen - view looking at back door.
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Old Cambridge kitchen view of front window.
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New kitchen view of same front window from dining area.
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Old Cambridge bathroom and shower.
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New bathroom.

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Yard before planting the garden and putting up white fence.

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Garden/yard after fence and plantings.
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Another view of garden.






Franklin Pennsylvania Farm House Renovation

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Old farm kitchen.

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New farm kitchen (same view as old kitchen picture).
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Back (west side) of the farm house -- original kitchen area.
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The new patio (west) on the back of the new farm kitchen.


View of the patio and back of the new kitchen from the other side.

Sunday, October 1, 2017

Swiss Braided Bread

Organic Swiss Braided Bread

We make this bread at least twice a month.  We've streamlined the process by using a digital scale to measure the ingredients.  Make sure that the scale is set to measure metric (e.g., gram), not imperial measurements (e.g., pounds) and tare the scale (zero it out with the bowl on the scale) after every addition.






Ingredients:
salt 18 grams
organic bread flour 1000 grams = 7 cups unsifted
yeast 15 grams dry yeast(approx. 1 1/2 tbsp)
1 stick of organic butter (plus 1/2 tablespoon - optional)
600 grams or ml organic milk (we use whole milk)

-      Preparation:
Put the bowl on the scale and push tare (use metric measurements).
Add 18 grams salt (tare bowl).
Add 1000 grams bread flour (tare bowl).
Add 15 grams yeast.
Take bowl off of scale and mix dry ingredients.
Soften butter in microwave (about 10 sec.)
Cut butter into flour mixture or add soft butter in flakes so that the pieces are about 1/4 inch thick. 
Flour, butter, yeast and salt mixture with a well of warm milk in the middle.

Pour milk into a glass measuring container and measure 600 ml.  Microwave until warm (99 sec).
Make a well in flour/butter mixture and poor the warm milk into the well.
Roughly mixed dough.  Kneading will mix the dough completely.

Stir until combined a little and then knead the dough in the bowl until it is smooth, homogeneous and elastic - takes about 5 to 8 minutes.
Dough after kneading - now it must sit and rise with a damp cloth or lid over the top.

Cover bowl and let rise until it doubles in size (1 to 2 hours). 
Dough after rising for 2 hours.

This will make 2 loaves of bread.  Roll out one large cylinder and cut it into 4 cylinders of dough that are each about 3 feet long.

Four cylinders for 2 loaves of bread.
Make the first loaf by crossing two cylinders.  First the two ends of the lower cylinder swap places.  Do the same with the other cylinder as in the photographs below.
Cross 2 cylinders to begin braiding.
Cross the two ends of a cylinder over the center.





Brush twice with egg wash and put into a cold oven.  Turn the oven on to 425 degrees and bake 25 to 35 minutes.

When the loaves are braided put them on a cookie sheet lined with parchment paper. Beat an egg and brush the loaves twice with egg wash. Put the loaves into a cold oven.  Turn on the oven to bake at 425 degrees.  In the time it takes the oven to reach the target temperature the bread will  rise a little more.  

Remove the bread after it has turned brown or when a knock to the bottom of the bread returns a hollow sound.

Let cool a little before cutting.