Saturday, April 1st, 2006 06:03 pm
When I first visited Sweden I loved the crisp flatbreads served in great variety everywhere. On my last day there I went to a grocery store and grabbed a package of them to bring home, because I wanted "a taste of Sweden" as a souvenir.

Now you can buy them in grocery stores here in Sunnyvale. Yay!

I remember being surprised just after I moved back from France that Little Schoolboys and Nutella had apparently followed me. I loved les petits-écoliers. If only the streetside crêpe vendors had followed me too! And now I can get crispbreads.

A slice of Wasa "fiber rye" and a slice of aged Swiss cheese... delicious.
Sunday, April 2nd, 2006 03:09 am (UTC)
isn't it wonderful to discover that exotic european delicasies can be found in the states? i found nutella and toblerone stateside not long after my return, but it wasn't until just a year or so ago i figured out that it was potato dumplings (not matzo balls) that i'd fallen in love with.

*resists the urge to say something lewd about the Little Schoolboys*
Sunday, April 2nd, 2006 04:15 am (UTC)
Bite they tiny heads off, nibble on they tiny feet! Oops, that one is about mousies, not little schoolboys. :-)
Sunday, April 2nd, 2006 04:51 am (UTC)
that could apply to little schoolboys, depending on what you're into.

my mom would eat her Teddy Grahams belly first. or play with them, nibble off all their ears, continue to play with them, dismember them some more, play with them ... and i just can't figure out why i'm so weird. ;-)
Sunday, April 2nd, 2006 07:12 am (UTC)
I think your mom was half feline, that's what I think! :-)
Sunday, April 2nd, 2006 03:35 am (UTC)
I had to go to a pancake house in Amsterdam, and we got fish & chips in London, but in Paris we had pizza, cheese fondue, and I had Greek food once there. :-)
Sunday, April 2nd, 2006 04:21 am (UTC)
Pancake houses in Amsterdam are a slice of heaven. So is cheese fondue, but then I'm hopelessly biased due to my love of cheese! I like trying pizza in different places to see what they do with it. Pizza in Japan is JUST WEIRD. I made them leave the octopus off it.
Sunday, April 2nd, 2006 02:50 pm (UTC)
Yeah, the pizza we had in Paris was great. It was funny, though, we were there with the stereotypical impression that "French people don't eat huge portions" - we'd even seen that in various news reports and such. When the server said the pizzas were small, single-servings, we each got one.

HUGE.

French don't eat small portions - we figured out they just walk everywhere to burn it off. :-)
Sunday, April 2nd, 2006 04:02 pm (UTC)
Maybe the server knew you were American ;-)
Sunday, April 2nd, 2006 04:11 pm (UTC)
"Maybe"? She came to the door of the restaurant when we were studying the menu and greeted us in fractured English (which was waaaaay better than my fractured French). There was no hiding it. :-)
Sunday, April 2nd, 2006 10:00 pm (UTC)
There never is. ;-) My greatest accomplishment, when I was living there, was to have people start to guess my nationality as German. The accent is ineradicable, but at least I had hopped over to a different branch of the language tree. And that was once I started wearing different clothing and all. I wasn't even too far from the right size to pass for a Parisian woman -- rail-thin and not very tall. Nope, there's just no disguising it. :-)
Sunday, April 2nd, 2006 05:36 am (UTC)
Do you have the store Big Lots there? You can find them there too, and for cheap!
Sunday, April 2nd, 2006 07:11 am (UTC)
I don't think we have that one. The name isn't familiar. Still, I can find this stuff in grocery stores now, and I'm all happy! I like nifty foods!
Sunday, April 2nd, 2006 02:36 pm (UTC)
Tell me when you can get Kushari and stewed fuul beans, and I'll move. ;)
Sunday, April 2nd, 2006 04:01 pm (UTC)
I can get fuul mudammas, but I can't get Kushari. I don't know if I'll ever be able to get Kushari. Man that stuff is good. :-/