Wednesday, September 26, 2012

En ons gaan nou braai !




In SA everyone loves to braai! Braai is a great way to socialize. Either at home, in a park, by the beach or in the university’s case during fieldwork. Last Monday was even clamed to be a National Braai Day (actually Heritage Day). The idea is to have lots and lots of meat and savour it in good company. Traditional braai is on wood, but many South Africans also use a weber now. The men cluster around the fire, first taking care of the coals and then cooking the meat, while the women make salads and side dishes. Everyone brings his own, but this is then put together so that eventually everyone eats a variety of meats.

Just your everyday supermarket, like the Spar




Wood
Weber

I’ve had boerwors (sausage), ribs, tjoppies (pork chops), Sosatie (brochettes), Kalahari steak, koedoe. What’s also common to eat during a braai are braaibroodjies filled and warmed on the fire or roosterkoek made from scratch (bread). What is a little strange for us, is that it is customary to use a lot of sugar.  


Below a recipe of what could be part of a braai:

“Boerwors, pap en sous
Boerewors is a specifically spiced whole meat sausage. True wors has very little fillers and much more meat. This comes in thick and thin portions. Cook your wors over a slowish fire until brown all the way through.
Pap:
Pap is a Mielie based porridge. Add 3 cups of mielie pap to a cup of cold water until smooth, add another 3 cups and some salt. Place pot on stove and heat until the pap is hot. Add more water if necessary. Reduce heat and cook slowly for 1 hour stirring and adding more water (if necessary) every 10 minutes. Serve with sauce.
Sauce
Grate an apple.
Finely chop an onion.
Crush two cloves of garlic.
Finely chop one tomato.
Fry in olive oil.
Add 1 tablespoon of sugar, tomato sauce, 2 tablespoons soya sauce. 
Add 1 can of chopped tomatoes.
Flavour with salt and pepper.
Cook until the onion is cooked and you have a thick sauce.
To serve: Place pap on plate, add a chunk of boerewors and top with sauce.”


While sitting around the fire the night progresses, many funny stories and jokes will be told:
“Three scientists are sitting at a pavement table outside a bar, enjoying a quiet pint. Across the road lies an empty building. Over the course of the afternoon, two people walk into the building and three people emerge.
 The physicist says, "There's been a measurement error. "
The biologist says, "It's reproduction. "
The mathematician says, "If exactly one person enters the building, it will be empty again."”

Let me end this post with 10 braai tips I found on www.braai.co.za
1.             Nothing beats a real wood fire.
2.             Gas is Afrikaans for a guest at your braai, not something you braai with.
3.             Braaing is the only fat-negative way of cooking food. Even when you steam it, the fat in the food stays behind. When you braai, the fat drips out.
4.             Never braai with indigenous wood. Alien vegetation like Rooikrantz and Blackwattle drink lots of ground water and besides, it’s good burning Australian rubbish.
5.             Braaing is a direct form of energy use, from the coals, to your meat. With conventional electricity there is a lot spillage between the power plant, power lines, electricity box, wires, stove and pan. If you love the earth, braai.
6.             Have enough ice at your braai. To put in Klipdrift & Coke, to keep Castles cold, and to treat burn wounds with.
7.             Smoke flies to pretty people, so send them to the kitchen to go and make salad.
8.             Animals eat grass, leaves and vegetables all their lives and convert it to meat. Eating meat is like eating vitamin pills.
9.             A cow must only be killed once. Do not braai you steak until the flavour is dead.
10.    A braaibroodjie is your chance in life to have you bread buttered on both sides.

Friday, September 21, 2012

The Windy City

Port Elizabeth is a very windy city. It's a place where your car door can break if you leave it open or where your picture turns out blurry because the wind moved your camera.  Therefor, it is not only named the "Friendly City", but also the "Windy City". The weather is very hard to predict and half the time predictions are wrong. This because it's at a point where the weather can come from either Cape Town or Durban and this greatly influences the temperature. Spring is particularly unpredictable, but the it shouldn't get much colder than 10°C. I have had a day where the weather was "from Durban" and   the water temperature was nice enough to swim.


The beach side of Summerstrand

  



This year has apparently been a very wet year and ground water levels are saturated. Which is very different from a few years ago where they had long immense droughts and the people had very limited access to water. Until recently they also went through daily general power cuts of a few hours as there were capacity shortages.

A "bakkie" (pick-up truck)

Library of Port Elizabeth

Downtown PE has a whole different atmosphere than Humewood, where I'm staying, or Summerstrand, where the university is. It's the most dodgy part of town, however in comparison to other South African cities, I've heard that it is still quiet alright. It's just a little hectic and it would be a no-go at night. PE in general is very divers if you look at the people around you and you here a mix of English, Afrikaans and Xhosa. Everyone is really friendly.



Some downtown pictures

Sports are a big deal in South Africa, mainly rugby, cricket and "soccer". The stadium in PE has a peculiar shape and it is not easily missed when you drive around. The city was one of the venues for the 2010 FIFA World Cup.




PE stadium


Tuesday, September 11, 2012

First experience

It was only once I was on the long distance flight from London to Joburg, while sitting between a lady from Bloemfontein and a man from Pretoria, that it hit me. I'm going to South Africa! As they spontaneously started speaking to me, I found out that the lady had spent 2 weeks in London as an official for the Paralympics. The man had been there as a radio host documenting the same event. Both were excited to go home. Port Elizabeth is nicknamed "The Friendly City" , they added.




After a long flight, I arrived in Johannesburg only to be greeted by a huge mass of South Africans dancing, drumming away and blowing horns. This was apparently a welcoming party for the Paralympic heroes who would also be returning home. The team eventually arrived a few hours later and it is then that I heard the national anthem for the first time with so much spirit. Then it was time to go to Port Elizabeth.



Once there, I was warmly welcomed by Nuette who will be assisting in my research and Tim my new Dutch roommate. Tim showed me around my new living area and as it was such a beautiful day, we went for a long walk along the coastline and had an ice-cream. He showed me where to find the typical orange and purple sea-urchins from the area. We went grocery shopping in the spar (yess they have them here everywhere, open till 9pm !!) Not too bad for a first day in the SA setting :)