Last Friday, Hubby came back from his business trip to Penang with a few goodies (e.g.
Kueh Lapis and
Pineapple Tarts from the
Bengawan Solo and
Curry Puffs from the
Polar Café at Singapore's Changi Airport where he transited,
Prima Taste Mee Rebus from my good friend PL and
Shark's fin from my mom - though he kept grumbling about sharks getting extinct because of our soup frenzy etc). I ate up 3 curry puffs in more or less 3 large bites and half the Kueh Lapis and then we went out to look at cars.
I mentioned a few posts ago that Hubby could not decide between the
AR (Alfa Romeo) Brera and
AR Spider, and that he was thinking of getting me the
AR 159 Sportwagon. Well, we arrived at the car dealer's and started helping ourselves to the cars on display. I looked at the Brera and then called the salesman over. "Are those seats behind really for sitting on?" As I had suspected, he shook his head and said no.
To sit on those passenger seats in the AR Brera, you'll need to either not have legs or have really short ones. There is no leg room. Full stop.
I turned to Hubby with a sigh and told him that since this was the case, he might as well make himself happy and get that AR Spider two-seater convertible, the kind of car for selfish people who would not be able to help bring the kids to school or fetch them back. Though I also added that he had better not forget himself too much in that car and come back with
speeding fines, in which case the next year (we get to change our cars every year) he'll have to content himself with a
FIAT Punto.
Let all my readers be witnesses to this pact.
Speaking of speeding fines, I had yet to pay off the last one and he got himself flashed at in the tunnel between the car dealer's showroom and Stuttgart City Centre on our way back! That's another pair of
Hugo Boss pumps, damn it.
Then we opened the door to the AR 159 SW and I entered the car. How in the world could people get all excited about cars that make you drive almost lying down? I felt closed in. Kind of like I risk having the head knock on the car ceiling each time I fidget in the seat. And there is leg room behind, but not too much. You can imagine the kids sitting behind and complaining about it after 30 minutes. If it takes us 6 hours to drive to the Alps, that would be 5h 30 mins too long.
So we must look for another alternative. Less sexy, but surely more practical. Besides, if we have family over, we could avoid driving 2 cars each time we go out, him so cool in his convertible (cannot take passengers, cannot take luggage), while I have to lug around everybody plus the luggage. No way, man. Plus think of the extra petrol and the environmental pollution.
We will probably get the
LANCIA Phedra (http://www.lanciaphedra.it/phedra/ita/main.html). It is like the
RENAULT Espace that we are currently driving, only less powerful but more chic. 7-seater, enough leg room etc. Difficult to park, but if you give me automatic gears, GPS and rear parking radars, I'll survive. I hope.
Then we spent the weekend looking at Baby Girl's head, she has crusts on it. It's weird. And we also debated long and hard about whether to write a letter to Eldest Boy's teacher and school Principal - and try to meet and get them to change the lousy grades and nasty remarks on his report card. The boy has a concentration problem and daydreams on his feet, but he doesn't deserve to have the teacher write it down so nastily the way she did. Also, he has been bringing back excellent grades (interspersed with mediocre ones) in the past 2 months, but none of that was reflected in the report card. Just bad grades. Something's not right there. I am the last person to challenge a teacher's judgement, but honestly this time around I can't sit around and let it pass. It would be unfair to the boy. Most kids are already mean to him because he is so out-of-this-world, he shouldn't have to harvest mean remarks and lousy grades just because the teacher too has a bone against him.
Assez!Otherwise I am pretty happy today. I cooked my
Mee Rebus and ate it all up myself. Such satisfaction. The children get to eat the usual
Papa-is-away stuff like
Minced Pork and Shrimp Congee,
Fried Wantons and yesterday I had to cook
Salmon in 2 different ways i.e. just pan-grilled with
olive oil and lemon juice and served with
grilled zucchini and potatoes, and also cooked in a
curry and served with rice - because Eldest Son likes it done European style and the other 2 prefer it the Asian way.
On Saturday Hubby made us a lovely dessert -
Banane Flambée au Rhum served with a scoop of vanilla ice cream that we ate in front of the TV (the Samsung DVD player is
kaput, by the way, it's relatively new so it's a pain).
Last week, I had a craving for
sardines. But it has since been satisfied and I won't go near any for quite a while. If you had to remove scales and innards from a dozen fishy sardines with your fingers, you'll understand why. The whole kitchen stank for 2 days at least. But they were good, lightly coated with
ground turmeric,
corn flour and
salt and fried. Served with fries and a squeeze of lemon.
To celebrate Hubby's promotion we had dinner 2 Fridays ago at this nice restaurant
Landgasthaus zur Linde recommended by the
Gault et Millau Guide. The wines were good and the food too and the bill came up to a reasonable 170 Euros for 2. We both had the
Octopus Salad to start with, followed by a
Herb Soup with Scampi and then
Beef Rolls in Balsamic Sauce (the potato purée was too salty though). And we shared a chocolate dessert that was nicely done. More importantly, it was nice having some couple time together and be able to carry out a discussion without a few kids screaming around us.
And last Friday evening, we left the kids at home with a babysitter and turned up at Eldest Son's school for
circus night. Every Friday afternoon, the boy learns circus tricks from this private circus school (
Circus Circuli) in his own school. And to make us feel better about the huge amount we have paid for our kids' classes, I suspect that they had come up with an evening of letting the parents try their hands on the same tricks. We brought the finger food and they were supposed to provide the drinks, and when we were there, they said that we could contribute towards the drinks as we wished. Hmm...
Anyway, M and her hubby were there too so we were happy to be there. I arrived with my sport shoes, but didn't try anything once I was there (no wait, I touched the fire on the torch). Just didn't feel like breaking a bone. Besides, it's difficult jumping etc with my glasses on and I can't see a thing without them. Hubby tried the trampoline, the wheel and a few other things, he's a better sport, of course. M and her Hubby tried everything and they were quite good at them, I must say. We didn't stay too long as Hubby was tired after a whole night spent on the plane and I was a little worried about the babies who were a little off-colour. Also, I've eaten almost everything there was to eat and couldn't think of anything else to do.
PS : Most of the photos turned out blur, the camera must have been badly adjusted and nobody knows how to make it work normally again...