Thursday, 30 October 2014

October 2014

Jack O'Lantern with a cheeky Tui photo-bombing in the background
It has been an exhausting few weeks here in Berlin. Wisdom teeth removal and recovery, tiny pumpkin carving, Berlin had a public holiday to celebrate the anniversary of the reunification of Germany, and I slept through the Berlin Festival of Lights, because bed is better. There was some excitement as the Nobel Prizes were announced and the prize for medicine went to three neuroscientists.


I have a big presentation coming up that I have been working like a mad woman for. I have a Ph.D. progress report the day after the presentation- so it had better be good!!

I haven't been running since I came back from California, I have just been working so hard that by the time I get home from work the realization that I have to have a shower is exhausting enough - without even considering running beforehand. 

In less than three weeks my Love and I will be meeting up in Washington D.C. for the annual Society for Neuroscience meeting. I am so excited!! My first big conference, I'm excited to meet some peers and some bigwigs in my field. I usually hate the idea of networking, but I have been a bit socially deprived lately, so I am actually excited to meet some humans. I feel like it will help that the horrendous introductory questions that always seem to trip up people I meet randomly ("what do you do?", "what is neuroscience?") will be less awkward to navigate at this particular conference!

Work is going well, my data is looking pretty sexy- if I do say so myself, and I am nearing the end of my first project and working on setting up projects two and three. So it feels like this Ph.D. might just sort itself out in a timely fashion. I'm excited to have a break over Christmas though, I'm getting pretty rundown.

I've been listening to a bit of MS MR, you should check them out! I recommend Hurricane, BTSK, and Think of You. I've also been feeling a touch homesick for New Zealand - so I have been smashing the Nature's Best albums while I've been doing my analysis. Kiwi music rocks!





Saturday, 25 October 2014

What We Do in the Shadows - kiwi spotting in Berlin

I went to the cinema for the first time in aaaaaaaages last Saturday night! It was my first Kino experience outside of New Zealand, according to my memory at least. 

I went to see the original language screening of 'What We Do in the Shadows' - a New Zealand "documentary" following the occupants of a Wellington flat, who just so happen to be vampires! The directors Jemaine Clement and Taika Waititi were there to introduce the film and also came out for a Q&A after the screening.

It was a small cinema in Kreuzberg called Moviemento, I got a beer + popcorn combo. They offer sweet, salty or mixed popcorn flavours which was new to me, I went with the classic salty, though perhaps next time I will branch out. Enough of that boring stuff - the film: I love kiwi comedy, so I may be biased here, but the film was pretty hilarious. Right down to the cheesy "What are we?" "We're werewolves, not swear-wolves" I had seen in the trailer. There was one part in which it was explained that one of the vampires used to be a Nazi vampire, which caused a little hush over the audience, one doesn't feel entirely comfortable laughing at Nazi jokes in Berlin I suppose, nobody appeared to be offended though, I think it was just out of respect.


Afterward the Q&A took a while to warm up, but the directors carried on the idea that it was a documentary, talking about how many interns had been sacrificed to the vampires etc. I asked if they thought there was something special about Wellington that drew the vampires in, or if they had found large populations of vampires in other NZ cities as well, they said that the vampires had tried out Hamilton for a while, but there weren't enough virgins there, makes sense. 

I was expecting to bump into a few kiwis there, but if there were any there they weren't making themselves known. I have been really missing New Zealand lately, I watched a documentary episode about the kākāpō, and felt really far away. Anyway, Disney has announced that they have begun production on a new Disney princess film to be released in late 2016, and that Taika Waititi is involved in the script writing. The details that have been released are that the main character, Moana Waialiki, is to be the first Polynesian Disney princess. She teams up with the demi-god Maui as she navigates her way through the Pacific ocean. I hope she goes to New Zealand! I hope they include a bunch of the back story of Maui and some of the other legends we learn about in the South Pacific. I'm excited to see it, I never thought I would see a Disney film set so close to my part of the world. 





Saturday, 4 October 2014

8. Go to New York!

I arrived in New York City the day before my birthday so I just managed to tick this off my 25 before 25 list!

Classic New York City view from our hotel
We had a bit of a whirlwind weekend in New York for my Birthday. We arrived on Friday afternoon, my flight arrived first so I just sat waiting the carousel where his luggage was going to show up. He found me sitting, surrounded by my luggage, translating my German gossip magazine. After that we made our way (with help from the airport info personnel) to the Supershuttle desk and booked a shuttle to our hotel. The wait was about 30 minutes so we grabbed something to eat in the airport.

When we arrived at the Wellington hotel the woman behind the desk couldn't find our reservation, and we went trawling through our emails to find our reservation confirmation email. As it dawned on us that neither of us had booked the hotel, we started to wonder where we would be sleeping that night. As it turned out the woman behind the counter just smiled nicely and said "it happens all the time, let's see what we can do for you" and she booked us into the same kind of room we had originally thought about booking, at a cheaper rate, and with free wifi! It turns out there is an abundance of accommodation in New York City, and if our hotel had been booked there are even apps that, if you are daring enough to leave your accommodation organization to the last minute, will get you awesome deals at hotels trying to fill up their empty rooms at a lower rate. Thankfully we didn't need it though!

It was late in the afternoon already so we dropped our bags in our room, freshened up, and took to the streets! We went straight to Broadway to wander up the street towards Times Square. When we got there we had a quick look at the night's show timetable, we hadn't booked in advance, thinking that you can get cheap tickets a few hours before the show, mainly due to my experience doing that in London. When we asked about tickets to Jersey Boys they said that we could get tickets, but not seated together. We weren't okay with that, we had just been reunited, so nothing was going to convince us to sit apart for an extended period of time. Instead we went to Dinner at a burger joint, I LOVE American burgers, they are just awesome! I swear every other time we ate out I ordered a burger. It was also at this point when I noticed that everytime we went into a store or went to buy something I was still figuring out how to do the transaction in German in my head, only to be surprised when the cashiers would speak to me in English! It's weird how long it takes you to get used to some things! Then we wandered down to Central Park, contemplated going on a night bus tour, but decided to head home and try to catch my parents before sleeping. We had both had early flights and time zone changes so we thought making it until 9pm was a respectable effort!

Early morning walk in Times Square
In the morning I woke up first, it was apparent that it was going to take more than kisses, a smiling face, and several cheery good mornings to get my Love out of bed. I wandered alone down to Times Square to see what it looks like at 7am on a Saturday morning. I shared the street with a few runners, and several garbage trucks and garbage men. Times Square was empty, I'm not really sure what all the fuss is about Times Square, is it just all the people in one place? I then made my way to a coffee/breakfast place, picked up some donuts and bagels, and of course coffee! When they asked me what type of milk I wanted in my coffee I made the mistake of answering with "just normal milk please". This was followed by "we have full, half, soy, goat, almond ...." The barrister listed off seven different kinds of milk! Now that I'm writing this out it seems like a pretty dorky thing to be wowed by, "I went to NYC and couldn't pick which milk to get in my coffee because the choices overwhelmed me!". I should really get out more.
Anyway, after the exciting milk-choice adventure, I made my way back to the hotel, as the smell of coffee reached his nostrils my Love began to wake up and wish me a Happy Birthday! We skyped my parents and I opened my presents while we had our breakfast.

Then we got into our running gears and went for a run in Central Park. There were so many runners there! The only time I've felt so crowded whilst running was in the We Own the Night race held in Berlin by Nike. We just so happened to arrive in NYC in the middle of a freakish heatwave, my Love, who is now very used to the Californian climate, was not in the least fazed by the heat. In comparison I struggled through until my face seemed as though it was attempting to out-warm the sun! I'm one of those get-up-at-six-AM-to-avoid-the-heat kinda runners. It didn't serve me well on this particular run! We ran for about 4km and then wandered the paths of the park until we found ourselves back where we started. On the walk back to the hotel we saw our first street-corner-crazy-shouter. He was shouting about prostitution, and how lax the police are in that area.

Some street art in Williamsburg
Then we jumped in the shower dressed up in the most hipster gears we had brought with us, and caught the subway to Williamsburg! The thing about us, is that we don't really do a whole lot of research about where we are going, so we just picked a subway stop in the middle of Williamsburg and went there. It didn't look like much, and we wondered if we had come to the wrong area of Williamsburg, or if there was a specific spot for Hipster-watching that we should have researched beforehand. We eventually stumbled across a cafe/restaurant with a sign outside that had 'free love' scrawled across the bottom, so we decided to take a chance. 
Lunch time in Williamsburg

We sat down and ordered drinks, I decided to branch out and order a cocktail, my Love ordered a beer, when the beer arrived in a mason jar we decided that we were in the right place, and then a crew of mustachioed, suspender-wearing hipsters arrived for a late brunch. We both ordered a pulled pork sandwich and got apple pie and crême brûlée for  dessert. Then we just wandered the neighborhood for a bit and made our way back to the hotel to get ready for the wedding!

Some friends of ours are having 52 weddings, so that instead of one big wedding during which they might be pulled in 100 different directions and barely get any quality time with anyone, they will have 52 small weddings, in which they can spend the whole evening catching up with one particular couple or friend group. We managed to find their Manhattan apartment, the view from the 44th floor is pretty fantastic. We caught up over hors d'œrves and fancy wine and champagne. They showed us their home, we were particularly impressed by the banjo displayed on the wall that used to belong to Neutral Milk Hotel. Then came the vows, I played officiant and only mixed up the words once! It was lovely, my Love and I are particularly mushy over weddings at the moment, though neither of us can be bothered planning ours, we are enjoying watching other people take the plunge!

Manhattan from the 44th floor
Then we took an uber! The driver dropped us off at Kiwiana, a New Zealand restaurant in Brooklyn. We started with a Pinot Noir, the Central Otago ones were pretty pricey, so we had to go for a Hawkes Bay one. We ordered a variety of starters including the green-lipped mussels, ceviche, tater tots, and something else that slips my mind.
Then we ordered an Epic beer each and split a main between each pair, my Love and I had the ribs glazed with manuka honey and marmite. They were the most delicious ribs I have eaten in my life! Once we had eaten our dinner the chef came out to chat with us, as it turned out he was from my home town. Our friends asked which desserts he recommended to which he replied "leave it to me". Shortly after that he sent out the pavlova, the milo cake, and two off-menu desserts: a sticky date pudding, and a lamington. He also sent us out some complimentary champagne as a congrats on the wedding and me turning 25.

Then we went on a tour of several Manhattan dive-bars. We tried Pabst Blue Ribbon, the men played a game of pool, which ended in my Love returning, looking pretty chuffed, saying "turns out I'm pretty good at pool!". Eventually we found ourselves wandering back to the Hotel through Times Square at 5 AM, agreeing that it was a fantastic evening but we probably don't need to go bar hopping for a long time now! We woke up in time to book a shuttle to the airport and have something to eat and drink before we left. We were the first people on the super shuttle which means you have approximately one hour of dicking around, picking up other people, before you even start heading to the airport. Our hangovers thankfully weren't that bad, I had been drinking lots of water in between all of the wine, beer, and whatever else we drank. We made it successfully to the airport with plenty of time. At the airport we ate at a Taqueria and bought some postcards, then off we flew, home to California.

New York is wild, I'd love to go and spend a week there, but not for a while I think, I'm all New Yorked out for now! Plus there are so many other places I want to see before re-doing NYC!












Wednesday, 1 October 2014

Getting my stitches out after wisdom teeth extraction

It took 10 minutes max. The bit that hurt the most wasn't the stitches coming out, I felt a pinch for some of them as he snipped them, the sore part was where they held my mouth open near the wound. It just felt like someone pushing on a bruise. Then it was all finished, the surgeon said it was all healing well and to keep using the special mouthwash for 2-3 more days twice a day.

My gums are still pretty tender towards the back, so I imagine I will be easing back into human food again, but I feel like I have my mouth back again, it reminded me, a bit, of the day I had my braces taken off.

*3 days later*

Now that I can see into my mouth I can see holes where the 3rd molars on the bottom jaw were, so I'm still rinsing with the mouthwash and have swiped a syringe from work to irrigate the holes to make sure there is no food lodged in there. I really dread complications, I'm so relieved for all the pain to be over that if I suddenly developed an infection or dry socket I would struggle to not cry on my dentist - not a pretty picture. The pain is mostly gone now, I don't need to take ibuprofen anymore, and the swelling has gone down too! It's nice to have my face back, and to know that, barring new wisdom teeth growing in (it's very, very rare), I will never have to do that again!

Things I've since discovered that I'm glad I didn't know before the surgery:

  • There are videos of wisdom tooth extractions on youtube! Don't watch them.
  • They are actually drilling your jawbone away - I thought they were just cutting up my teeth! - I don't know how this would have made me feel during all the drilling in my surgery ... 

Read about the extraction here

21. Take another cooking class

I'm already ticking them off the 26 before 26 list! I went to another cooking class with my Love in Palo Alto! We attended a class called Indian Home Cooking held at Sur La Table. When we lived in New Zealand we had Curry Sunday locked in every Sunday on our Google calendars. I think it started as a "let's cook something from a different nationality every Sunday" thing - but we started with Indian and never seemed to move on from it! We would visit our local Indian spice market to buy the things we needed and we got pretty good at our favourite curries. We never really mastered the breads, there were these delicious ones you could buy and just heat up in a frying pan quickly *drooling daydream*. Anyway, we really miss curry Sunday so we chose Indian Home Cooking .. That explanation probably didn't need to be so long!

The menu:
Curried Vegetable Samosas with Mango-Cilantro Chutney 
Chicken Tikka Masala with Cucumber-Mint Raita 
Coconut Vegetable Curry with Cashews 
Chapati Bread (Indian Flatbread)

We started off making curried vegetable samosas, I think that the pastry on a few of them was a little thick, but none of them burst in the deep-frying process, so we did okay! A few people left a little air in their samosas which caused them to start to inflate a little in the hot oil. One thing that we learned was that, if you deep fry things on a regular basis, you can pour the hot oil through a coffee filter to clear out the crap and reuse it! Obviously you want to be careful about what type of container you collect it in, because the hot oil will warp plastic. 
Deep frying is terrifying, I'm not sure I will ever be comfortable standing next to boiling hot oil. 
The rest was pretty straight forward really, though I'm still not confident with my Chapati bread making skills, I was happy enough with it for that night! The curries weren't as spicy as we were used to but they were still delicious, and we know how to spice them up next time we make them at home. They give you the recipes to take away and a 10% discount voucher to use if you see anything that you want to buy in the store during the break. We looked seriously at the knives and the sous vide they had in store, but decided against them in the end. 

This last photo is a bit blurry sorry ... I was a bit too eager to eat it all!! It was delicious!!