Audrey Scott: Egyptian TV Star

Audrey Scott:  You know her from the Uncornered Market speaking team of Daniel Noll and Audrey Scott, but do you know her as the Egyptian TV Star?  I do!

 

 

I was sitting just off to Audrey’s left snapping shots of her while Mohamed A. El Monem was interviewing Audrey on our time in Egypt this past April.

I got my time in front of the camera too, but I suspect it is on the cutting room floor, as ‘roamance’ and ‘looking for love and romance’ translates a little too literally in Arabic.  I found myself saying, “It’s not about me finding a husband.” and then realizing how that may have translated to me being a tart, so trying to explain that we had married people involved too, which then sounded even worse. Hopefully Mohamed at least got in the end that ‘roamancing’ is about finding the beauty and (love) in the places, people and cultures we explore around the world.

 

Mohamed & Audrey on Egyptian Satellite TV

 

As an aside to that, Mohamed interviewed us for a couple of Shows on the Egyptian Satellite Channel, as well as hung out with us.  He is an excellent interviewer and translator, and a fun and interesting person to spend time with.  We had a good debate or two.

Despite Audrey’s new stardom and being the kind sole she is, she is still keeping Daniel Noll as her speaking partner (really, she is such a humanitarian ;-) .  You can catch the two of them tonight (May 31st, 2012) in Vancouver speaking about their adventures exploring cultures around the world at the Future of Tourism talk that G Adventures and Planeterra are hosting at the Centre in Vancouver for Performing Arts. The Talk starts at 6:45 pm.  Here is where to get your tickets!

Hope to see you there!

 

PS. In Full Disclosure: As always, the opinions and thoughts shared here are our own and honest ones. We are bought out by no one. In the spirit of disclosure, it should be noted that on this trip, our expenses were paid by Egyptian Tourism, as a guest to the country and the UNWTO Media and Tourism Conference.

Mozambican Cooking: Feijao com Arroz

I’m now back in Vancouver after 3 months in Mozambique, and wondering how to describe it. It was both a varied and wonderful,  frustrating and surprising experience.  Note how I made for the Southern Hemisphere, where it was still summer, during the rainiest, chilliest and dreariest months in Vancouver. I’m still patting myself on the back for arranging to skip the winter. Ingenious, wasn’t it?

I’m sure you’re all imagining a sunny, beachy, coconut-filled paradise. And you wouldn’t be wrong. Mozambique is on the Southeastern Coast of Africa, and full of natural beauty. In the coastal capital of Maputo, the vistas knocked the breath out of me nearly every day.

 

This road running along the coast and is called "Costa do Sol" (Coast of Sunshine, Sunny Coast).

 

Sadly, due to a rise in kidnappings close to home, I was not permitted to explore the Maputo on foot as much as I would have liked for security reasons. Instead I spent a lot of time at home getting to know the housekeepers, learning Portugese and having Monica, the cook, teach me how to make Portugese-Mozambican style dishes. So even though I spent a lot of time indoors, I got to practice my Portugese and learn how to cook local meals. Sounds like a win right?

Tonight I tried one of the recipes Monica taught me. It’s a recipe for Portugese-African bean stew called “Feijao” (pronounced fay-szao, with a little nazalasation at the end). Feijao com arroz (beans and rice) is a staple local meal in Mozambique — much like it is in Brazil, which was also once a Portugese colony.   The phrase Arroz e feijao is probably like our “peanut butter & jelly” in that it is much loved, goes well together, and is a cornerstone of daily dining. Most Mozambicans eat it every day. It’s a not-to-be-messed-with classic.

(For those interested in international variations, there’s a YouTube Channel dedicated entirely to Rice-and-Bean recipes).

This is a magically delicious meal. The ingredients are so simple, and the result so delicious, that magic is the only explanation.

 

Feijao with red kidney beans. (Bear in mind this is my first foray into food photography. I promise it tastes better than it looks here.)

 

Here is what you’ll need to make Feijao:

  • 2 cups cooked beans (any beans will do — I used kidney beans today, but my favourite are black beans)
  • 1 medium-sized onion, finely chopped
  • 3 large crushed garlic cloves
  • 1 tablespoon grated or finely chopped ginger
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 1-2 of the hottest little chillies you can find (ideally the red piri piri, but green chilies work fine)
  • 2 cups hot water*
  • salt to taste
  • 0.5 tsp turmeric powder
  • asafoetida powder (optional)
  • 1.5 tablespoons olive oil
  • Juice of lime (optional)
  • A big handful of finely chopped parsely

*Note: You can amp up the flavour of this recipe by using the salted hot water that you cooked the beans in instead of draining the beans and adding new hot water to the pot.

Heat the olive oil in the pot, and add in the bay leaf and chopped chilies. If you’re chillies are exta hot like piri piri, or you want to keep the dish mild, slice the chillies down the middle instead of chopping them so you can pull them out of the stew before you eat it.

Next, add in the chopped onion and stir it around. Let it cook for a few minutes. When some of the onions start becoming golden-brown around the edges, toss in the garlic and ginger and mix it in.

When the ginger and garlic start to brown a little, throw in the chopped tomatoes and stir. Let this mixture cook for about 3 minutes. Add in the salt and turmeric.

Mush the mixture together with the flat of your spatula so that all the little pieces of onion and tomato are making friends. Let no onion sliver remain aloof from its peers. When the mixture starts to resemble a thick sauce, it’s time to add the beans, along with 2 cups of hot water or the warm water they were cooked in. Lower the heat of the stove and let it simmer.

Stand by the pot to stir the beans sporadically, making sure they don’t sink to the bottom of the pot to stick. Let it simmer for 15-20 minutes. You can simmer it for more or less, depending on how thick you want your stew. Turn off the heat and stir in the parsley. Squeeze in a lime if you like, and you’re done.

Enjoy your Feijao, and don’t forget the arroz.

I leave you with this inexplicably delightful piece of videotaped television featuring arroz e feijao!

 

 

Yorkton Film Festival Road Tripping Shenanigans Inspired by Paddock Wood

In case you had not noticed, our lives seem to attract more than a little bit of the ridiculous, which seems to be magnified 10 fold with our yearly pilgrimage to the Yorkton Film Festival to pay homage to our most beloved Canadian film community. This only seems to have been made worse by the likes of Katrina German and the augment of our now Annual Road Trip from Saskatoon to Yorkton, Saskatchewan (yes, google maps says this trip is only meant to take 3 hours and 37 minutes, but when done by Kat and I, it’s epic).

Well, I am not sure who had the bright idea of asking Kat and I to pick up Yorkton Film Festival’s Golden Sheaf Beer from Paddock Wood … but let’s just say I wouldn’t be asking us.  I suppose they thought with Annelise Larson and Erica Hargreave along for the ride, we’d behave ourselves. Fat chance (especially after I’d tasted the rather scrumptious brew – yes, it was 10 am, but thanks to Kat, I needed the hair of the dog)!

Now, I suppose I should state at this point that I was not driving, so a 10 am beer was perfectly acceptable. Kat, however, was, which is why she hashtagged the road trip #HowToDeliverBeerWithoutDrinkingBeerBecauseDriving, while I preferred such hashtags as #HowToDrinkBeerDeliveringAsKatDrives and #HowToMockKatAsSheIsDriving.

Here’s how it all went down:

 

And they're off! Kat - 0 : Me - 1

 

If the question is, do we leave 6 boxes of beer behind, it is amazing how tight the space I'll manage to fit. Kat - 0 : Me - 2

 

The head rush isn't as tasty as the beer. Kat - 0 : Me - 3

 

Strategy Stop - if Kat leaves we still have a ride. Kat - 0 : Me - 4

 

Singing the Paddock Wood Blues. Kat - 0 : Me - 5

 

Okay Princess, you can have a beer! Kat - 1 : Me - 6

 

Really not too sure why Kat didn’t just hand the wheel over to Erica who thought it too early to hit the cases of beer, but then we’re not here to judge Kat’s intelligence.  Especially as said intelligence thought it wise to leave three cases of beer in my room.

 

Kat - 1 : Me - 3 cases

 

PS. In Full Disclosure: As always, the opinions and thoughts shared here are our own and honest ones. We are bought out by no one. In the spirit of disclosure, it should be noted that on this trip, our expenses were paid by the Yorkton Film Festival, where we were speaking.

It’s Presidential Election Day in Egypt!

It’s Presidential Election Day in Egypt, and with that we want to wish the Egyptian people luck and an outcome that they are happy with and that builds for a positive future for Egyptians.

We will be following along today with the live updates of the election coverage from The Guardian.

In the meantime, we leave you with a few of the faces of the Egyptian people that with grown to love in our adventures in Egypt:

 

From the Seawall in Alexandria

 

The Woman that attempted to teach us to prepare bread near Dahshur.

 

Welcome to Egypt!

 

Working Together for Egypt's Future

 

From the Streets of Alexandria

 

Studying for Egypt's Future

 

From Cairo's Oldest Sugar Cane Juice Shop

 

Looking forward to Egypt's future from the foot of the Great Sphinx

 

We encourage others to share their love and support for the Egyptian people too this week.

#CrossCanada Wildlife Sightings

I know more than a few people thought I was a little nutso when I decided to road trip back and forth #CrossCanada this year for work in Ontario, as opposed to flying. Well, I have to say I’d do it again in a flash.  Not only did I get to enjoy Canada’s wide-diversity of landscapes and natural beauty, snippets of our countries cultural diversity and the food that comes with it, reflective time to my road tripping library of Canadian musicians, but I saw an insane amount of Canadian wildlife (each day, that many only read about in books).

Here’s a taste of what we saw on our Spring #CrossCanada Road Trip from Southern Ontario to Southern BC.

Days 1 & 2: Northern Ontario

We probably saw more wildlife than anywhere else in Northern Ontario, but much of this was at dusk, so we didn’t catch it on camera, just in our memories.  Sightings included: fox, coyotes, eagles, a hare, a bear and a moose. The fact that we saw all these animals around dusk by the side of the road was a good reminder why we needed to drive with extreme care and alertness between dusk and dawn.

 

Early Morning at Fort La Cloche

 

Footprints at Fort La Cloche

 

Tranquil Canadian Shield Beauty

 

Day 3: Manitoba

Our drive through Manitoba was a quick one, with most of our time spent in The Exchange in Winnipeg, but we did see deer and enjoy the beautiful spring birch.

 

Spring in Manitoba

 

Day 4: Saskatchewan

Saskatchewan was definitely one of the favourite parts of our drive for it’s gentle natural beauty, including red-winged blackbirds, beaver lodges, and a number of striking waterfowl.

 

Greeted by beautiful song in Saskatchewan Marshes

 

Canada's favourite rodent at home in Saskatchewan

 

Pelicans! Such an amazing treat!

 

Quackers for our last look at Saskatchewan

 

Day 5: Alberta

Amazing the difference you see in the landscape when crossing into Alberta from Saskatchewan, even before you hit the Rockies.  This drive held sightings of magpi, bison, elk and deer, magnificent beasts that reflected the magnificence of the Rocky Mountains that we were approaching.

 

A Morning Magpi

 

Alberta Bison

 

Elk, one of Jasper's Beauty

 

Elk in Jasper National Park

 

Day 6: BC

Not a bad end to the trip with these two British Columbian Beauties on the home stretch …

 

Beautiful in British Columbia