And I state that emphatically and without qualifications even though I can only compare it with Berlin, Vienna, and Venice. We've got zapiekanki which are basically an open-face 12-inch sub roll covered in grilled mushrooms, melted cheese and ketchup. On the deluxe version you can get any combination of chives, garlic sauce, lettuce, tomato, pickles, corn and variety of meats. Then there are kebabs: a delicious medley of veggies (red cabbage, white cabbage, beats, carrots, pickles, lettuce, tomato, onions), meat, cheese and your choice of the-spicy-sauce-that-WILL-knock-your-socks-off or the-garlic-sauce-that-you-WILL-still-taste-next-morning-no-matter-how-much-gum-you-chew. And obwarzanki, which are apparently a Kraków specialty...they have similar versions in other Polish cities but K is the only place that gets the twist just right. Imagine a bagel with a larger hole in the middle, less dense bread that's twisted nicely, and covered in any one of a variety of toppings: sesame seeds, poppy seeds, roasted cheesy bits, plain, or (my favorite) pikantny! I can't quite figure out what's on the pikantny one, but there are lots of grainy things and it's quite deliciously spicy. Ooh, and now that it's warmer a lot of the street food stands are selling hot, steamy corn-on-the-cob. OH, I almost forgot gofry! Gofry are waffles (in the good places you have to wait a few minutes because they cook the waffles RIGHT THEN) covered with all sorts of yummy tidbits: chocolate sauce, caramel sauce, whipped cream, different types of jams, whole fruits, nutella... Nothing better than being handed a waffle on a paper plate dripping with whipped cream and chocolate sauce. Although there was that one time that I tipped my waffle slightly and all my whipped cream just slid off it since it was so warm and melty, and splatted on the ground. I thought that was only supposed to happen when you were 6 years old.
I read a newspaper today, which is a pretty incredible phenomenon for a couple of reasons. I normally get all of my news from the good old internet from daily emails by the Washington Post and New York Times, and it's a little expensive to obtain English newspapers in Kraków. I sat for a few hours today in Massolit, the English-language bookstore, and read a copy of April 16's International Herald Tribune as a break from my work. I read an interesting article about how the Himalayan glaciers are epxected to lose 75% of their ice by 2020, in the short-term causing severe flooding in mountain communities and in the longer-term causing severe water shortages since many of the major rivers in Asia have their source in those glaciers. This leads to, guess what, "desperate battles over water." Take Pakistan, for instance, whose major rivers all originate in India... It would have been a depressing article to read except for the large number of climate change initiatives listed at the end and a dead-on analysis of what needs to happen in the near future.
I had a wonderful time in Innsbruck and Venice last week, and will put up some pictures and write a little bit about it later this weekend...it's too late now and sleep is calling.
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