Last Thursday we met some new expat friends, Tom and Susan, for coffee at the El Corte Inglés department store. They are from the US and have been in Portugal for about a year. We shared experiences and tips, had a really good time, and plan to see them again.
We also tried the legendary Portuguese pastry
Pastel de Nata for the first time there at our coffee date. It is a small flaky pastry cup with a custard filling, first sold in the early nineteenth century as
Pastel de Belém. In 2011, Pastel de Belém was elected one of the Seven Wonders of Portuguese Gastronomy, so we have been waiting for the perfect opportunity to try this delicacy. Frankly, we were underwhelmed. It was good, but nothing to die for. Susan said we had to try it in a particular famous
pastelaria (pastry shop), and she promised "our eyes would roll back in our heads". We'll keep you posted (and will be sure to be sitting down for that first bite).
On Friday Pat got started on a One Note document for us to use in order to record all our impressions of the regions we visit. Our visit to the appealing area of
Guimarães a few days ago made us realize that we'll want to record our impressions before they turn into a blur. She built a beautiful template up with maps and graphs, recording annual climate trends and so forth. It will be a valuable resource for house-hunting.
We also had to return to the Honda car dealer to sign a document for the extended warranty, and got to chat with our salesman Amadeu again. He told us what a pleasure it had been to work with us, that the Portuguese have an expression to describe people like us as "peaks of culture". He is a salesman after all, but it was very touching and we parted good friends.
Then we went to
Continente, a large supermarket where we love to shop. They use a single-line system where everyone queues up and the head of the line goes to the next available cashier. It was a busy Friday afternoon, the line was about a dozen people long, but we took our place. A woman then approached us and said we could go ahead, and to follow her. She happened to have the next place in line, and she came all the way back to offer it to us! We gratefully went next and thanked her for her kindness. So heartwarming!
Gerrit has been spending part of the last few days writing a Python computer program to scan spreadsheet statements from our Portuguese bank and convert them to a format compatible with Quicken, the financial software Pat uses to keep track of all our finances. She has been laboriously copying the statements transaction by transaction, which makes Gerrit's computer-oriented brain go "tilt". Gerrit's program is almost ready to go, and should make it much easier to transfer Novobanco statements to Quicken.
On Saturday afternoon we took a little trip to
Porto, to see a nature reserve just on the north side of the
Douro river. We had to skirt around a major wreck on the freeway (fortunately with the help of Google Maps we weren't stuck in it), but when we reached the reserve it was thickly shrouded in fog! Well, that was unexpected, and there was consequently no wildlife to be seen. We took a little driving tour and walked around an oceanside park a little instead. (Pat has since found a website with beach-cams of the reserve, so next time we can check for fog before we go.)
Yesterday, Sunday, we took a day trip to the city of
Viseu, due southeast of us a couple of hours. Well, the route we took was more than a couple hours, but it was worth it: really beautiful. We took smaller urban roads to town of
Vale de Cambra and then through the mountains on the scenic and winding N227 two-lane road. We stopped for a break in the small town of
Junqueira and snapped this photo of a lovely little church, beautifully maintained.
Along the road near the village of
Bordonhos, just before the town of
São Pedro do Sul, we spied a little restaurant and café and pulled in for lunch. The place was called the
Ponto de Encontro (Meeting Point), and there was a good crowd of happy locals in the restaurant and the café/snack bar. They had some tables outside with no one sitting there, so Gerrit asked in broken Portuguese if we could eat outside. The owner indicated that that was fine, and he set a paper tablecloth for us out there. He had a gentle and friendly manner, as he touched us lightly on the arm and brought us china, wine glasses, and silverware. A friendly waitress then came out and took our order. When we didn't quite understand what she asked about the
vinho verde we ordered, she came back out with three different bottles for us to choose from. Shortly our
porco no forno (oven roasted pork) arrived, which was delicious. As we finished, a group of two older men and a woman came out from the restaurant and greeted us with friendly smiles. They stopped and chatted for a few minutes with us and our broken Portuguese. It was such a lovely experience, really our first "conversation" with locals. The owner's smiling wife came out a little later and asked if everything was okay with Pat and again lightly touched her on the arm. When Gerrit went in to pay the bill, she was cooing and cuddling with a young child, maybe a granddaughter.
The whole experience was just wonderful, full of love and sweet in a way you wish the whole world was. It looked like the entire place was family-run by gentle and helpful people who simply wanted their customers to be comfortable and happy. They were sincerely kind and friendly. They seemed to appreciate that we tried to speak Portuguese, and did their best to communicate with us. The patrons all seemed to be the same way, friendly and enjoying themselves. What a delight!
This trip was about the journey and not the destination, it turned out. By the time we got to Viseu it was already late afternoon, so we tootled about for a little while and then took
Pérola Azul (Blue Pearl, our new car) home via the highways. Pérola performed flawlessly the whole trip, taking the winding roads and the 120 kph (74 mph) highways in stride, smoothly and quietly. Gerrit was delighted looking at all her high tech displays (while trying to keep his eyes on the road). He found the radar-assisted cruise control, which can either track the vehicle in front of you or slow down if they are traveling less than your set speed. At one sudden traffic stall on the freeway, Pérola sensed the stopped car ahead and began firmly applying the brakes before Gerrit could get his foot over to the pedal. Remarkable! Well, maybe not to a Millenial, but it sure was to us.
As usual, you can click on any photo to enlarge it, scroll through them all, and click in the black area outside a photo when you're done.
(Just a note on the blog itself. We're using Blogger for the blog and it is rather buggy, especially with pictures and tables. Simple and free from Google, but buggy. Some of our previous post was mixed up for a few hours, so if you couldn't make sense of it please try again. And don't scoff at the sometimes goofy formatting. We know, and we haven't found a way around it.)