Welcome back to perhaps the worst blog on El Salvador ...
since very little seems to be about this country. I have been traveling a bit
and Malta was nice.
Chris and Tracey enjoying the deck at the Blacksheep in Wakefield Quebec |
Then to Toronto where Fatima joined me and we did Ottawa to
visit Tracey and Chris, Owen Sound, and the Kawarthas to the cottage.
Had another Zakuski. Note the pickled Russian garlic! |
YS holding court at Sushimoto. Did we eat two sushi boats? |
With Chris and Janet at Congee Queen |
No way can you fit that whole thing in your mouth Tracey. |
Made it up to Jeff and Kath’s cottage a few times for some
really hot and sunny days.
Jenny and Noel in the canoe. |
Back on dry land. |
Lots of time in the lake and lots of time cooking and
eating. Noelski who is working and studying in Ecuador came up with his lovely
girlfriend Jenny. Lots of cigars on the deck.
Usain Bolt winning the 100 m gold in London. Watched over a combo iPad cell hub thingee. |
Foodies start their young ... young. Lily mixing a salad she helped make. |
Then back to San Salvador and off quickly to Havana for
business. As usual, Matt and Jana were kind enough to host Fatima and myself.
We did the usual but the usual is actually quite a lot of fun.
My table setting at Atelier |
At Atelier with the Havana gang. |
We had a big
dinner party at Atelier http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NXdzVzpqVko&feature=plcp.
Then went to hip lounge bar on 1ra around 42 in Miramar called Melen. The great
thing about these hip bars is, you can go in and have like 20 drinks and the
tab will be $50. Then the lads tried to execute the rest of the very poorly
planned “boys night out” by heading to the den of inequity that is Don
Cangrejo, a former seafood restaurant turned into a giant outdoor rave-like
nightclub.
In Barrio Chino with Hetor, Delia, Jacqueline, Jose and some random CD vendor. |
We also made it to Tien Tan for some excellent Chinese food.
It was very very slow so the chef was outside smoking so I had a chat with him
and asked him to send out 8 dishes of his choice. Got some really nice ones
like lamb with cumin and great breaded shrimps. Also made it to Carboncita on
3ra and 38 a few times for the excellent pizza (although he was out of
prosciutto and good salami) but the grilled octopus was great as was the
porchetta (although it was hard ordering it from the ladies as I kept saying
porchetta instead of porketta).
Having lunch with Chukin at Dona Eutimia. |
Made it to Habana Vieja for a meeting and then
called Matt of Cuba Absolutely for a last minute recommendation and he told us
to go to Dona Eutimia off of the Plaza de Cathedral which we barely found as I
heard it with Matt’s English accent off a bad cell connection so I kept asking
for Dona Udania. Anyways, I have known about that paladar for maybe a decade
but never bothered going in figuring it was a tourist trap with crappy food.
Wrong! It had great Cuban food in a beautifully and tastefully decorated little dining room at the front of big old airy house.
Crab, lobster and octopus served in crispy boniato cups with cold Cristals. |
Went to a very interesting lunch meeting of a group of young
Cuban entrepreneurs. They meet once a week at one guy’s place who is busily
converting his house to a paladar including a huge multi burner range, stainless
steel counters and a gas burning paella pan 4’ in diameter. You have to hand it
to Cubans – this guy hired a designer who put together a 100 page book of
designs for all the rooms, furniture and fixtures. He found out that I was a
foodie so sat in the kitchen with him and some of the other early birds to talk
food and watch him cook. He made a great garbanzo lobster dish with curry
flavours, a crab salad, a cole slaw (in Cuba, cabbage is lettuce), and a
delicious lobster salad with enough garlic to surprise this garlic eating
Korean. He came up with an idea of making boniato (white sweet potato) cups, freezing
and then deep frying them to make a serving platform. Delicious. I hope his
paladar is open when I go back. I plan to bring him some nice food ingredients
like good wasabi, paresan cheese, and truffle oil.
Jose and Claudio getting ready to eat 10 tacos each. |
Also did a taco and domino night at Delia’s, went to visit
Hanoi at the Hotel Raquel, went to visit an artist and a gallery. Ended up
buying three paintings from Jurgen this time but his agent was off in Barcelona
so her assistant was in charge of the visits and then the paperwork which got
really screwed up the next day. I was supposed to have the paintings delivered
to Matt’s place at 2:00 pm, an hour before my departure for the airport, with
the export seals and papers. Instead, I get a call from Jurgen at 1:00 saying
that they couldn’t get the paperwork done and asked if I could come pick him
up. I told him that I had no car and no time and he had to take care of it. Now
he is an excellent painter but his agent is supposed to handle the paperwork. He
ended up getting his Dad (nice guy) to drive him, carrying the paintings in a 1.9m
tube, on the back of a motorcycle to the airport where he waited for me. Had to speak to two different customs offices before I found Gustavo at Taca who was willing to go through the
immigration area to the customs/patrimony people to see if they could come out
to pre-authorize the paintings before I took the risk of walking through and
running into problems.
Drinking beers with Jurgen at the airport, waiting for something to happen. |
So the right woman was found but she was at a different
terminal so we had some beers while waiting for her. She shows up and luckily
she knows the artist so she says no problems and I pay the balance of the
monies to Jurgen and take this giant tube through. Happily they didn’t make me
pull it out onto the floor and I helped the woman talk with some German girls who
were carrying paintings without a seal (they were told they didn’t need them –
wrong. Always a good idea to get the seal put onto the painting at the market
which will save you time and money). I think I paid $21 for the three paintings
and Gustavo let me board with this giant tube instead of paying the $100 or
whatever for oversized baggage.
We are only keeping one and two are for a friend in Toronto who has very large empty walls. I had one of them framed out (just blocked onto wood) and it barely fit into the back of my Honda Pilot which I thought would fit anything. It was so tight that the frame had to be twisted to get in. Now it is on the wall of my dining room and it looks great and gives the room a nice pop-arty feeling. I’d like to help out Jurgen by selling some more of his work so let me know if you are interested. You can see more examples at and he works off of photographs and I think he will take commissions http://www.facebook.com/media/set/edit/a.10152114618245114.904197.875965113/
The painting we bought "Amelia" (I call it Fat Uma) |
We are only keeping one and two are for a friend in Toronto who has very large empty walls. I had one of them framed out (just blocked onto wood) and it barely fit into the back of my Honda Pilot which I thought would fit anything. It was so tight that the frame had to be twisted to get in. Now it is on the wall of my dining room and it looks great and gives the room a nice pop-arty feeling. I’d like to help out Jurgen by selling some more of his work so let me know if you are interested. You can see more examples at and he works off of photographs and I think he will take commissions http://www.facebook.com/media/set/edit/a.10152114618245114.904197.875965113/
Trip was great even though there was dengue everywhere. Three friends of mine got it (all survived after a few weeks of pain and discomfort) and it was all over the city. We were very careful about not getting bit and left without a problem. On the upside, the avocados are great this year.
Avocado salesman in Habana Vieja |
Okay, back in San Salvador and it is the tail end of the
rainy season. It has been very light and I hope it continues like this for the rest of the
year. We were almost out of it last year when that weird storm hit and we had a
week of continuous rain which took out 57 bridges. There are Japanese engineers
here who are rebuilding a bunch of them and they are doing a good job although
the job is far from being finished – come on, 57 bridges is a lot. No one seems
to be able to understand them but no one is disagreeing with their engineering
decisions.
The golf course at Veraneras survived the season
beautifully. In past years, they have had a foot of rain sitting on top of the
greens for weeks making it impossible to play and impossible to groom. This
year, not one day of closure and when I played in the past few weeks, not even
any mud on the ground. I have also heard that the new Dye designed course, El
Encanto, is going to open 9 holes in February. We are all excited about that.
Heard that Dye wasn’t going to make it as hard as El Reunion in Guatemala which
is crazy hilly and hard. Also heard that they were going to make the fees more
affordable to the middle class (like me!) by dropping initiation from $25K to
$10K.
One reason why I had to come back at this time was because I
was at the end of my 90 day provisional temporary residency card. If I spent 90
days abroad, I would have to reapply which would mean that I would lose credit
for the previous 4 years and you need 5 years total to apply for permanent
residency. So I get back before the deadline and have my lawyer call them to
see if my regular temporary residency card is ready and she is told to check
back in a month but they may be up to two months behind due to a large number
of applications being submitted in May. So just like Canada, they are way
behind! Movin’ on up to developed country levels.
Things are pretty quiet and peaceful here. The city is
dressing up the Zona Rosa with a median barrier with surprising large palm
trees (how did they get those in there?) and lights. Amazingly not interfering with traffic – unlike the 6 month plan to resurface the highway down
the hill at Los Chorros. You can get details at http://www.mop.gob.sv
the Public Works Ministry website that is stressing transparency of governance which
is a great step to reducing corruption and encouraging accountability. Oh, they
almost have the other highway bypassing Santa Tecla completed to hook up with
Blvd Jerusalem and then into the city. Salvadorans are amazingly quick and good
road builders and I think we continue to have the best roads in Central
America.
Hmm, traffic was also crazy bad last week when we had two
demonstrations on the same day and they had to close the road in front of the
presidential palace and the highway going past Gran Via. I was driving out to
the airport highway and it took half an hour to clear the zone. Amazingly, I
saw some cops trying to direct traffic but they didn’t really seem to know how to do it.
Traffic jams like this produce incredibly selfish acts of gridlock. Like cars
filling intersections blocking cars and not being to clear the intersection for
two cycles of the lights. All this because people are trying to make left hand
turns through the traffic further along and no one letting them in. On the
positive side, having traffic jams like this makes the regular rush hour look
not so bad.
Paseo del Carmen continues to flourish with lots of people and
live music. Fatima’s friend opened up a place called La Brújula
which means “compass” in Spanish. She studied in NYC hence all the Brooklyn
stuff around. They have an okay taster combo plate of Arabic food but their
pizzas are quite good. Get the spinach mushroom pizza but ask for an extra thin
crust and baked longer to get it crispy.
Have
also eaten at the Faisca do Brasil Churrascarria at the Intercontinetal,
Pabelion Coreano in Merliot, and Paradise which has a menu and chef for
excellent appetizers that is cheaper and much better than the packaged crap at
Chilli’s and Bennigans. They have good sliders and wings and excellent onion
rings and popcorn shrimp. Their full on gourmet menu is also good with lots of steaks (I think they grow and age their own beef), lobsters and some old school classics like wedge salads.
Oh, one
weird thing I heard is about some other former bloggers in El Salvador. There
was a Korean American ex-punk rocker from Jersey who opened a cafe on the beach. I may or
may not have sent her a message saying she shouldn’t put too much private stuff on
her blog as that would give potential bad guys information to extort her – like
we know your kid’s name and where they go to school. Her blog just stopped one day and I wondered
what had happened to her. Then another blogger opened a business nearby there
and was commenting about the gangs and extortion demands being made of small
businesses. Then very surprisingly, someone commented and said that the area
had some prominent business people and if they didn’t think the new business
was good for the community, they would have someone call and make a fake
extortion play. Faced with violence, a lot of small businesses would prefer to
close and move elsewhere. Now if this is true, this portends very badly for the
future of this country. Extortion by gangs are really hurting the safety and
commerce of this country and if wealthy business owners are using the same
tools to fight competition, this country will never be able to turn itself
around. I hope that I am wrong or these people stop this behaviour!
Hmm, no photos of San Salvador. Will try to take some to post. See you back here soon, I hope.
Hi there! Jeanne & her hubby moved back to the U.S. I know towards the end Jeanne was fed up with El Sal (not much for the kids to do & just difficult to make a go of it as a small business owner) and wanted a better life for the young kids. They are doing well. She did cite privacy as the reason to stop blogging when I saw her in El Tunco (that was ages ago - at the beginning of 2011.) We had a small business in El Tunco and never experienced any extortion issues - just a lot of runaround for paperwork and having to give bribes to get things done (& we gladly paid them to get things moving!)- but that is the norm for El Sal! Regards, Jane
ReplyDeleteHi Jane, glad to hear that they are okay and you as well. Are you still in Tunco or have you and your hubby moved back to Canada?
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