Friday, August 28, 2009
Schindler's Factory
Oscypki
Thursday, August 27, 2009
Pierogi Festival
What is better than fried sheep cheese? One thing, pierogi. The stuffed dumplings are the trademark of Poland and other Easter European countries and they vary from country to country. While in the US we may see potato and sour cream stuffed pierogi in the frozen section of your grocery store, you will not be able to see those in Poland and may even meet with an angry glance if you ask for them. Stuffing used traditionally in Poland includes mushrooms with meat, cottage cheese or sauerkrout, but the fillings change as you cross the border - spinach in Germany, potatoes and onions in Russia.
While in Krakow, we could not miss the 7th Annual Pierogi Festival, where the oldest Polish cooking tradition is celebrated... and tasted! Various stuffing mixes are used by the cooks trying to win the competition; from mushrooms, meat, cheese to even barley. Some are boiled, as they traditionally should be, some are fried or baked. All are delicious!
The best food!
We saw this monk on the Rynek, I don't know why it was so funny at the time; a monk with a backpack...
Grocery Shopping has never been this exciting!
Train ride from hell...
Time to leave Prague and continue our trip to Krakow, my favorite city! The 6 hour train ride turned out to be quite joyful; with no seat assignments, without working bathroom and with people constantly trying to pass by you. Not easy when you're carrying a huge backpack!
Train station in Prague.

A photo of a very unhappy traveler. You would be too if you had to stand for 6 hours!
Train station in Prague.
A photo of a very unhappy traveler. You would be too if you had to stand for 6 hours!
Wednesday, August 26, 2009
Ludmila of Bohemia
September 16th is the feast day of St Ludmila, celebrated in the Czech Republic. J and I had a chance to see her tomb located in the St. George Basilica while visiting Prague. We are still trying to figure out if the bones in the photo are real!
St Ludmila and her husband the duke were baptized and converted to Christianity in the 9th century, however, they were not welcome in their home land for some time because of it. She was later murdered by her dead son's wife Drahomira, due to the impact Ludmila had on Drahomira's young son, who was a ruler at that time. Old story says that Ludmila was strangled with her own veil! Very convoluted story!
St George's Basilica, where St Ludmila's remains are, was built in 920 and clearly re-done a few times. Now the exterior is kept in the Baroque style.
A walk in the Prague Jewish Quarter
Beautifully preserved part of town where Jewish communities lived since the Middle Ages caught our attention while visiting Prague this summer. I have read about this part of town in my wonderful Prague Guide book that never left my hands, which had descriptions of the history of Jewish population since their oppression in the 16th century to naming of the Jewish quarters "Josefov" after Josef II in the 18th century.
This part of town is very well known, as the Old Jewish Cemetery has been their burial grounds since 14oo's and is a popular tourist spot. As this was the only burial site permitted for Jews, they had to bury their loved ones on top of each other from the lack of space; there are over 12,000 gravestones in the cemetery, some 12 layers deep! Last burial was sometime in the 1800's. The cemetery is a very popular site for visits; people purchase tickets and walk through it admiring decorative gravestones and tombs. The cemetery was my number 2 site to visit in Prague, after the Cathedral, but unfortunately the lines were so long that after waiting for 30 min we decided that we will walk through the Quarters and skip the cemetery. Not visiting it was a great disappointment for me but I don't think I would get much out of it with all those people in there! Tourists... ;)
We had a wonderful time admiring the architecture of the Jewish Quarters, including the Old-New Synagogue standing there for over 700 years.
Coffee Break
Tuesday, August 25, 2009
The Grand Hotel
Since we wanted to stay one more day in Prague, we also had to switch hotels, as the post-communistic hotel we were staying at was so cheap, it actually had no vacancy! Oh, will I miss the cooked hotdogs and grumpy service at breakfast...

After a hike and a tram ride we finally got here!
Time to rest a get on with the rest of our day!

The view from the window was amazing!
After a hike and a tram ride we finally got here!
The view from the window was amazing!
Monday, August 24, 2009
St Vitus
Czech Cuisine
Sunday, August 23, 2009
Professor
Saturday, August 22, 2009
Praha: getting in!
Sunday, July 5, 2009
4th of July Funky Fun


Nothing better than spending Fourth of July in a small American city -this is where you get the essence of how huge this holiday is in the US. My town has organized an event downtown filled with attractions such as parade, food court, concerts, petting zoo, lots of vendors, and, of course, amazing fireworks show, as they do every year. Magnificent!
Walking downtown we encountered a couple of very patriotic dogs. One of them was a Great Dane, who was 160 pounds and only two years old. What a champ! Lunch choices consisted of fair food, such as foot long hotdogs, fries, lemonade and such. I opted for deep fried cheese curds, as I like to eat healthy. ;) Funnel cake made the cut as well!
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