We dock this morning at Tromso. We disembark and go to our bus. The whole bus routine is getting old. When we were on the river cruise at least they let us walk around with a guide. Here we get on the bus and are told things by the guide and have a couple of photo ops. Tromso is not terribly scenic. It is, however, home to some 70000 inhabitants. It has a university which is the main employer of the town. Our guide is recently graduated from high school and tells us about various high school hijinks. She explains about the midnight sun and the northern lights and also about the blue time when the sun is just peeking over the horizon. Tromso has a lot of festivals in both summer and winter. It seems to be quite the party town.
Approaching Tromso with its picturesque snow capped mountains behindView in one direction from our scenic stopJohn gesturing toward the tarn in the other direction from our first photo op
Re-boarding the bus after our first stop we ride through Tromso and pass the memorial to Roald Amundsen, the great Norwegian explorer of the North and South Poles.
Quick shot from the bus of the Amundsen memorial
Our second stop is behind the maritime school on a hill overlooking Tromso harbor. They have two bridges. One is painted black and is called the black coffin.
Tromso harbor with bridge on the leftMemorial to WWII soldiers
After returning back to the ship we hang around for a while waiting for the lunch hordes to dissipate. We are not fans of the lunchtime stampede. We look out the windows some after lunch, I work on my blog, and then take a nap until cocktail time. Room service thoughtfully provides us with chips and wine. From our vantage point at the front of the ship we watch as the boat moves away from the dock and steams north to the top of the world.
Tonight there is a new menu at the Chef’s Table called Venice Carnival. It is mostly pretty tasty and as usual the staff are super nice. Our amuse bouche is a roasted pepper and tomato jelly with goat cheese latte foam. It is served with a Monserrat’s Chiaretto, San Silvestro Piemonte Italy. John says that it is a rose of the Barbera grape. The whole thing is quite delicious.
Roasted pepper and tomato jelly
Next we have a beef carpaccio with a fig and mustard vinaigrette. We decide there is a reason why beef carpaccio is served with shaved parmesan and lemon. It is because it tastes much better that way! This course is served with Villa Bagnolo, Sassetto Sangiovese de Romagna, Emilia Romagna, Italy.
Beef carpaccio with fig and mustard vinaigrette
For our palate cleanser we have a Bellini granita that is tasty.
Bellini granita
The main course is a cod fillets that is cooked to perfection. It sits on top of a Jerusalem artichoke risotto. There is some foam, a fried fish skin, and a totally superfluous Parmesan tuile. This is served with a Vlacanzjria, Cantina Gulfi Edna, I.G.T. Scilia, Bianco.
Cod fillet with Jerusalem artichoke
Lastly the dessert is what they call Mascarpone Passion. It has a thick jellied outer skin with the mascarpone inside, plus a layer of chocolate over a cake. I can admit that the mascarpone was good.
Tonight we sail north to finish the northward section of our trip with a visit to North Cape, the most northerly point in Europe.
Today is a lazy day and we don’t even have room service deliver our breakfast until 8 AM! Nonetheless I wake up at 5 AM to get ready for the day. Our big plans are to look out the windows, sort our dirty clothes and give them to Von to have laundered, eat lunch, lie around, go to a wine tasting, have snacks, and eat dinner. It’s a tough life.
The cruise activity director is all abristle with myriad things we can do today. One thing is to put on a bathing suit, jump into a cold pool, kiss a fish, and get your nose painted blue. This is a ritual one does when crossing the Arctic Circle. We decline since the activity involves wearing a bathing suit, being with people, kissing a fish, and having our noses painted blue. Otherwise we would be all in!
We also have other exciting things to look forward to. There are some lumpy mountains called the Seven Sister Mountains (like the Seven Sister Waterfalls only mountains) and a mountain with a hole in it.
Here are some pictures of our “at sea” day.
First up is the famous mountain with a hole in it called Torghatten. We are looking out the window at this and there are a bunch of people sitting next to us who are asking all these questions about it to each other. I very helpfully Google it up and explain all about how it was formed during the ice age and that there is a path up to it and you can walk through. I even throw in the folk lore fable about it. These people are totally unappreciative of my effort.
Here’s the fable – According to legend, the hole was made by the troll Hestmannen while he was chasing the beautiful girl Lekamøya. As the troll realized he would not get the girl, he released an arrow to kill her, but the troll-king of Sømna threw his hat into the arrow’s path to save her. The hat turned into the mountain with a hole in the middle. (Wikipedia)
Famous Norwegian mountain with a hole in it
Other exciting mountains include –
Seven Sisters MountainsSleeping soldier mountain (imagine that the left lump is a head in profile)
Then I took some pictures of interesting-looking mountains.
I call this one pug-nose mountainHere is shark fin mountain
Vikesh and his crew have talked us into going to the wine tasting that is being held in the Chef’s Table restaurant at 4 PM. All the nuances of wine tasting are explained. We have heard all this several times before but the head sommelier, Jude, does introduce a few new ideas. Mostly it is too much talk, not enough drink.
Wine glasses waiting to be filled
We have our pre-dinner snack and discover that they have Downtown Abbey on the TV. We haven’t seen that in a few years so we start from episode 1. Poor Lady Mary doesn’t realize her life is going to be pretty disastrous at the beginning, but we do.
Then we go down to have our second spice road dinner. Mmmm, even better than the first because my beef tenderloin no longer has weird spices on it. After dinner Vikesh shows us pictures of his cousin’s restaurant in Bangalore. The food and decor look pretty impressive. It is nice to spend a few moments where it is not just about us.
We head off the ship around 9 AM after docking in Molde, Norway. This is the third incarnation of Molde. It was first mentioned in the sagas by Snorri Sturluson as the location of the Battle of Sekken in 1162, where king Håkon the Broad-shouldered was killed fighting the aristocrat Erling Skakke, during the Norwegian civil wars. (Wikipedia) The area’s settlement probably goes back much earlier than that, however. The town grew through the ages due to its temperate climate, an artifact of the nearby Gulf Stream. Then 1/3 of the city burned down in 1916. After rebuilding, the Germans bombed it with incendiary bombs and basically wiped out the city.
So there really is nothing quaint or historic about Molde. It’s a nice little modern town of about 26,000. We are stopping here to see the Romsdal Outdoor Museum. It is kind of a Norwegian Sturbridge village with houses transported from other parts of Norway illustrating life in the 17th, 18th, and 19th century. We are greeted by children doing folk dances. The little boy is especially earnest in his dancing. Some of the dances are funny with girls vying for boys and making rude gestures at the other girls.
Interpretive guide at the Romsdal Outdoor MuseumChildren walk in for the dancingThe little boy is the star dancer of the day
After the dancing we wander around and look at the various houses and exhibits.
Old Norwegian houseWoman baking Norwegian flat bread and making homemade butterDark interior of 17th century houseLoom in 18th century houseMold for making gjetost, a caramel colored Norwegian goat cheeseIn the 19th century house there is a mill shop for making barrels, furniture, and shoesLatheStove in the 19th century houseDecorative chest with date 1831 painted on
Another interesting aspect of these houses are their sod roofs. These are made by first putting down a layer of birch bark to water proof it and then sod. Plants grow on the roof and the goats go up on the roof to graze. Sod roofs last for 20 years before needing to be replaced.
House with sod roofClose up of sod roof
And now our adventure begins. The local guide on the bus says that it is a 10 minute walk back to the ship and that we can walk back or take the bus. Being intrepid adventurers we, of course, decide to walk back. We try to make sense of the little map we have been given and start out. We know that as long as we are heading downhill we cannot go too far astray. Over an hour later we reach the ship. The directions on the little map are hard to fathom and so we decide we will just head toward our ship. Unfortunately it turns out that our sister ship, the Viking Star, is also in port docked up in a different location. So first we go to the Viking Star. Nonetheless, unless you are some kind of Olympic race walker there is no way you are going to walk over a mile in ten minutes!
First we walk past the tennis courts which are red clay.Then we stop to take a picture of the some of the 122 mountain peaks visible from hereThen we walk a long way to the ship that turns out to be not our shipWe do have some adolescent giggles along the way
Finally we run into some other people from our ship. However, it seems that we are all trying to follow each other! Just a case of the blind leading the blind. But it is lunch time and we have promised ourselves a hot dog from the grill so that’s something to look forward to.
Max-like hot dogs!
A woman with some lettuce leaves on her plate remarks to me, “that’s some hot dog!” I want to say shut up, bitch. But control myself.
We spend the rest of the day idling about. We have the room service team deliver some potato chips and wine and then sit out on our porch as the ship departs Molde, Norway. Goodbye, Molde, maybe now I can get “The Moldau” by Smetana out of my head!
Molde, NorwayHere’s our sister ship, Viking Star, departing in front of us. It is heading south and we turn north
Even though we have reservations at the Chef’s Table for tomorrow night and they will be serving the same thing again, we head to the Chef’s Table because Vikesh has told us we are always welcome. We love the team of servers, sommelier, and manager there. We are probably friendlier with them then anyone else on the boat. Tonight’s dinner is inspired by the spice route. The amuse bouche is a carrot and cardamom cream with an orange and star anise foam. It is very tasty and I am in too much of a hurry to eat it to take a picture. It is served with a Prager, Riesling Federspiel Steinriegl from Austria. I see in John’s notes that we think it is only slightly sweet.
Next we have a tuna tataki which is really good. The little dots are avocado and balsamic sauces, and the line of white stuff is a sesame oil powder made with tapioca.The tuna is coated with Szechuan peppercorns, coriander and sesame oil and served over a tiny brunoise of pickled carrots and cucumber. The wine has asparagus overtones but goes well with the dish.
Spicy tuna tataki served with Pudnto Final, Sauvignon Blanc, Bodega Renacer, Argentina
Time to cleanse our palates with a spectacular ginger and tarragon granita.
Ginger and tarragon granita infused with vodka and lemon foam
The main course is a beef tenderloin with four warm spices served with mashed purple potatoes and mushrooms. We have this with a Brunello di Montalcino from Castello Banfi, Italy. The wine is very good but I am not so keen on the beef. I find the spice rub which is made up of coriander, cumin, cinnamon, and paprika to taste odd. I try to cut around the rub but the flavors permeate the meat. I tell the server and the chef that I was not a fan and they promise to set aside a piece of meat for me tomorrow night that will omit the coriander and the cinnamon. They are so nice.
Spice rubbed beef tenderloin with mushroom and purple mashed potatoes
I am not usually a dessert fan but the apple tarte tatin is really delicious! Especially so when we add some freshly ground salt. We have this with some Santa Cristina Vin Santo. The apple is spiral sliced and then reconstructed.
Apple tarte tatin with butterscotch calvados sauce
I am really looking forward to eating this menu again tomorrow night1
Terrible sleeping night with rough seas last night. We are up in the middle of the night and spend some time mid-ship where the swells are not as apparent. Finally I talk John into thinking about the motion of the ship like sine waves and to relax himself and just go with it. We manage to get some sleep and towards morning the ship enters the fjord where everything is much calmer.
The Geiranger fjord is spectacularly beautiful as we head toward the little town of Geiranger with a permanent population of only around 220 people. There are many more here today with lots of summer visitors and cruise ship denizens descending upon it.
View of Geiranger fjordView of still water and steep cliffs of Geiranger fjordOne of many waterfalls we can see off the starboard side of the ship as we approach the town of GeirangerTiny town of Geiranger at the foot of the fjord
We disembark from the ship using tenders and board buses for a scenic ride through the mountains surrounding Geiranger. The ship looks smaller and smaller as we climb.
Our ship, the Viking Sea, is on the right of the two shipsGetting smaller as we ascend
The bus driver negotiates the many switchbacks on the road with real know-how but so many busses on these narrow mountain roads are kind of scary. Finally we reach an overlook and stop for some pictures.
From our overlook, the view back towards the mouth of the fjord with the Seven Sisters waterfallThere are so many waterfalls! This one crashes down next to the parking area.John with clouds and fjordMary with fjord and waterfall
Next we negotiate our way back down the road and up another one which takes us behind the town of Geiranger.
At our first stop the town of Geiranger is far below in a beautiful setting
Our local guide tells us that this morning when she drove over the hill from her little town to Geiranger that the temperature was -4C and it was snowing hard at the top of the mountain but that the snow plows were taking care to make sure that the roads were clear. As we continue up it is hard to believe that it’s summer! We stop not too far from the top of the mountain at Djupvasshytta.
Partly frozen mountain lakeJohn by the lakeThe snow is as high as me!
After returning to Geiranger we do a little shopping with the thousands of other cruise ship folk from the various ships that have called into this port. Our tour guide has assured us that without the tourists that Geiranger would not exist but you have to feel sorry for these poor citizens of Geiranger who must put up with this onslaught on tourists every summer. I know if it were me I would be pining for the when the sun disappeared for six months along with the tourists.
John and I enjoy a glass of wine sitting out on our little porch as our ship departs Geiranger. The beautiful Seven Sisters Waterfall is on our side of the boat now. As we pass we can hear the roar of the water falling but it mysteriously enters the fjord with nary a splash.
Approaching the Seven Sisters Waterfalls
The Seven Sisters Waterfalls
Today’s on again, off again rain and clouds have cleared out and we are treated to a lovely ride back out of the fjord. We sit and watch this beautiful corner of the world go by as we have dinner at the Italian restaurant on the ship, Manfredi’s.
We both start with octopus carpaccioMy soup is porcini mushroom and John has pasta fagioliI forget to take pictures of our main course (veal Marsala for me and mussels for John) but here is the dessert we chose. The orange supremes, whipped cream, and sauce were the parts we liked.
The Captain has promised a much calmer night tonight and we are looking forward to a good night’s sleep!
We are not embarking until tonight and so today is our Bergen day. We are lucky to have gotten a head start on many people, by having seen many things in Bergen on Saturday. However, there are things we haven’t seen and so we are signed up to take the Bergen tour.
We have breakfast in our room which is nice because we can stay in our comfy clothes for a while longer. The breakfast arrives mostly cold and we will need to rethink our choices. After breakfast we are off on our assigned bus for a two hour overview of Bergen.
Our local guide informs us that we are quite lucky that it is not raining this morning as it averages five days of rain out of every week in Bergen. He also lets us know that this has been the rainiest June on record. So, yay, after being wet for the last two days we are able to enjoy merely overcast skies. We bus around Bergen seeing old and new things and then are treated to a view from a vantage point from an overlook of Bergen and the fjord on which it sits. We take the obligatory pictures.
Scenic view of BergenJohn at Bergen overlookMary overlooking
We have another stop downtown where we have a good vantage point to take a pictures of our boat and the Hanseatic district. Finally we stop near the Royal Palace where it appears that King Harold and his court are not home since the Norwegian flag is not flying from the top turret.
Hanseatic housesDas bootHalloo, King Harald, are you home?
We get lots of facts about Bergen and Norway in general and are back in time for lunch. We try to choose some healthy things from the buffet but I know that buffet eating is especially difficult and I find myself wanting to check out the pizza and have a bite of cookie at the end.
My lunch, sea bream and vegJohn’s lunch, soup, sea bream, veg, and risotto
We have considered going back out but it is spitting rain, windy, and cold plus we have been up since 3 AM. Thanks, jet lag. So we take a nap instead and go down to the theater later in the afternoon for a talk about our next day’s destination, Geiranger. After an embarkation toast we head to the World Cafe for dinner.
Dinner tonight is a pale comparison of the first night’s dinner at the Chef’s Table. First of all it is really noisy. We find out later that the restaurant is really crowded due to its being lobster night. I have a shrimp cocktail and poached salmon and John has foie gras and a pasta with boar ragu. The food is fine but the experience is not great. We will have to figure out what is best for us.
My shrimp cocktailFollowed by poached salmonJohn starts wth foie grasOrcchietti with boar ragu for John
We head to our cabin for another night’s troubled sleep. Seas are very rough and being in the front of the ship exacerbates the motion of the swells. Sleep is hard to come by.
Getting to the ship does not go as smoothly as we had hoped. As we check out of the hotel John requests a taxi and is given a slip with a number on it. We are told it will take a few minutes. After 45 minutes of waiting in gusty, rainy weather and three additional slips with new numbers on them we finally get a taxi. In the meantime no taxi with our or anybody else’s number has appeared and the few that do show are commandeered by folks who are a lot more aggressive than we. But we get to the ship and find our suite and are very pleased with it.
John in the dining areaMary sitting in the living room area with porch with table and chairs behind meJohn on sofaBedroom
We head out to find some lunch somewhere in the ship. The World Cafe is open and it is a buffet with cold and hot items. First things first, though, John needs to meet the bar staff and other staff associated with the food service. John is great with all their foreign names and soon Mr. John is having a conversation with Vikesh, the manager of the Chef’s Table. As we get a beer for John and a glass of wine for me, Vikesh convinces us to come to his restaurant tonight and really any night because they will always have room for us. We are flattered that he is so nice to us.
For lunch we find some nicely cooked salmon and salads of cactus and another of shrimp and squid. There’s also some tasty grilled radicchio and tomatoes.
John with his Ringenes lager
After lunch we unpack and arrange to get a top sheet for our bed instead of a duvet. I still need to talk to Von, our cabin steward, about getting some additional standard size pillows. With the bed fixed up and our clothes unpacked around 3PM we or at least I take an extended nap. It is so nice to be organized and comfortable.
Around 6PM or so we head down in search of a drink and maybe some nibbles before dinner. We sit in the Explorer Lounge where John once again introduces himself to the staff and I have a glass of wine and John has a beer. We run into the people that we met yesterday at the hotel and sit and chat for a while. Audrey and John are putting a really good face on the fact that they had a horrendous flight and have still not received their luggage. I would have been desperate by now.
Then we head to the Chef’s Table where we have a really outstanding meal and some good conversation with a couple of ladies and Vikesh and Paul, the sommelier. Here’s our dinner –
Amuse bouche – Reindeer consommé and handmade ravioli served with a glass of Domaine des Vercheres, Macon-Manley Cote Maconnaise, FranceFirst course – Salmon declination-herbs crusted poached loin, aquavit infuse gravlax lingo berry sense tartar caviar and pickled cucumber served with Linie AquavitPalate cleanser – Granita of beet with orange/cardamom foamMain course – Lamb far-i-kal ala Chef’s Table, a loin and a braise with cabbage served with Vina Marquis Lien, Blend, Colchague Valley, ChileDessert – Cloudberry consommé, vanilla white chocolate pannacotta with sesame ice cream and goro served with a Disznoko Tokaji Szamorodni from Hungary
It is all so good! My favorites are the lamb loin which we find out was sous vide at 60C and the cabbage. Also the sesame ice cream and the sesame tuile were memorable.
Even though we had a big nap we are exhausted and fall asleep immediately only to wake up for Monday at 3 AM!
The day of our 45th anniversary trip is finally here. I am so excited for this trip. It should be relaxing, interesting, and fun. Sarah drives us to the airport for our civilized 2PM flight. In 14+ hours we will be in Bergen, Norway!
After a breezy sail-through security we are ensconced in the KLM lounge. It’s not a great lounge but we have a chance to sit comfortably and have a lunch snack.
John at the airport lounge
The plane is a 747-400 and we are on the lower floor in the nose of the plane. It is a small business section so we won’t have to battle for bathrooms. After we take off the crew waits just long enough to serve lunch that we eat trying to keep our food from flying off our trays due to a lot of turbulence. The first course, cauliflower soup, is quite good and comes with adorable Dutch clogs salt and pepper. The main course, beef curry, is very sweet and really not edible in my book.
Nuts in cute delft bowls and wine on the planeCauliflower soup, a saucer of olive oil (?), salad, and adorable red salt and pepper shakers
The flight is around 10 hours and I sleep a little. John seems not to sleep at all. Our layover in Amsterdam is about 2 1/2 hours which we spend waiting in line for our passports to be checked, hiking to the B terminal where short flights depart from and is very far away from where we have landed, and sitting in uncomfortable chairs waiting for the next flight.
Taking off from cloudy Amsterdam
I am not a fan of this little plane. The seats are tiny even in business class and we are wedged in like sardines. For comic relief we are served club sandwiches on popsicle sticks for lunch. I should have taken a picture but it was too difficult to maneuver to get my camera. We are really tired now and I keep dropping in and out of sleep. But it is only an interminable hour and a half and we are in Bergen!
Approaching landing in cloudy and rainy Bergen
Riding in the taxi, Bergen seems much bigger than I thought. It has over 200,000 people and is half city with apartment buildings and commercial establishments and half charming houses perched on hillsides. We get to the Radisson Blu where we will spend two nights before the cruise. We nap and shower. We are really tired out.
Dinner is at the hotel restaurant, 26 North, and has gotten good reviews. Our first courses, pictured below, are very good. The main course, a sampler of first courses called a board is less so.
Delicous bread and butter at 26 NorthJohn’s first course is mussel soup which he rates among the finest/My beautiful beet saladWe both have the sampler “Board” consisting of crab spring rolls, fried cod, and ham on waffles. Wish it had been better.
Finally it is time to sleep again. It does not matter whether the sky is still light out at 10 PM we are exhausted from our trip and go to sleep immediately. (Only to wake up at 2 AM giving me a chance to type this.)
Nathan and Sam have just finished up school the day before they arrive in St. George. John and I are really looking forward to their visit. They are flying to St. George airport which requires a change of planes in Salt Lake City. It is nice not to have to drive back and forth from St. George and Las Vegas.
Jon, Nathan, and Sam arrive in St. George
Jonathan and I go shopping. What’s for breakfast, lunch, and dinner is an important question with two growing boys. One night we have burgers, the next, some tacos.
Sam wonders, have you snuck some vegetables in here Beeba?Tacos seem vegetable-free!Mmmm, Jonathan, John and I like tacos too!
One hot afternoon we spend some time at the Dinosaur Tracks Museum and finish off with sundaes at Culver’s.
Nathan and Sam at the Dinosaur Tracks MuseumSam is making origami animals and dinosaurs. Jonathan is enjoying the origami as well.
One of our big plans is to go to Bryce Canyon NP with a stop at Cedar Breaks NM.
Sam and Daddy at the overlook on UT 14 near Cedar Breaks NMNathan at the overlook
After the overlook we head to Cedar Breaks National Monument. The site is at over 10,000 feet and I know that I will not be hiking. John and Nathan in the other car miss the turn off so we wait for a while for them to arrive. In the meantime I buy Sam a thermometer and a compass which happen to be connected to a whistle. What was I thinking?! When Nathan arrives he wants one too. So now we have kids in both cars we whistles!
Sam looking at the hoodoos at Cedar Breaks NMNathan and Sam trying out their whistles
Around lunchtime we reach Bryce NP. After a quick lunch at the restaurant at Ruby’s Inn, we take the shuttle out to Bryce Point. The view is fabulous.
Jon, Nathan and Sam at Bryce PointNathan looking at the viewThe view!
Jonathan, Nathan, and Sam go for a three mile hike in Bryce Canyon. John and I go for a nap.
We return home in time for the show Shrek:the Muscial at the Tuacahn Amphitheater. It is great fun seeing the show. Eating frozen lemonade is part of the experience.
Nathan eating frozen lemonade before the showOnce it gets dark the stage will look more impressive
We spend three afternoons at the Sand Hollow Pool. It has a giant slide, a whirlpool, and a ropes course through an alligator infested pond.
The pool at Sand Hollow is a big attraction and we go three times during the visitSam conquers Pelican Pond and also the big slide!
We also go to the House of Jump two times. It is important to follow this activity up with a hot fudge sundae at Dairy Queen.
Another activity that fills our time are sessions at the Jump House
Our time together is almost over and we plan a little hiking in Zion NP. Instead of going with the rest of the tourists we take a hike on a little used trail and then go off trail to a slick rock area. Nathan and Sam mark the way with cairns so we will not get lost.
We go on an off-trail hike and Nathan and Sam mark the way with stone cairns (see they are holding stones)Nathan on the sliprockNathan and Sam on the trailSee their tiny figures way up by the top of the slick rock pinnaclesJohn and I amuse ourselves while we wait for them to descend
Before we head over to Oscar’s for lunch we spend a little time at the Lava Point Overlook.
Lastly we go to Lava Point Overlook and see the canyon we have been inJon and SamBeeba and Zayde
All of a sudden it is Sunday and our visit is over. We take Jon, Nathan, and Sam to the airport and wish them goodbye and a safe journey home. I know they have had fun but they are looking forward to seeing Mom and Auntie again. The house seems pretty quiet Sunday night.
Sunday evening in our spookily quiet house
All that is left for John and me to do is to clean up and head home. We start the drive home on Monday and stop at Seven Magic Mountains on the way home. We had a wonderful visit and are already thinking of new things to do when they come next year.
Yay, it is Mother’s Day and the family is really on top of plans for a lovely day.! Of course most of our celebration involves food because that is how our family rolls. John, Sarah, and I drive over to Jon’s and the munching and reminiscing begins!
First, a family picture, it won’t be too much longer until Nathan is taller than I.
Pilats!
Sarah has made a bacon and cheese quiche and a Swedish tea ring. Both are delicious.
QuicheSwedish tea ring
I bring a bowl of fresh fruit and Jon makes chicken liver mousse and pimento cheese.
Fresh fruit and chicken liver mousse and pimento cheese in foreground
I get a gift of fruit tarts from Nathan and Sam that they made from a recipe in their Harry Potter Cookbook.
Fruit tarts by Nathan and Sam
I also get flowers that Sam has picked out and cards from everyone. It is a wonderful day.
As usual we are not quite on the right day for our Seder but better a delayed Seder when the whole family can get together than no Seder at all! As usual I really enjoy getting the table ready.
Table almost ready for the Passover Seder
When the family arrives I have a special task for Sam. A few years ago we had made the ten plagues out of a paper bag kits. We put them on the mantle as decoration. This year I scramble them up and ask Sam to help me out by putting them in the right order. He can find the correct order by looking in the Haggadah. He is very enthusiastic about his job.
Sam getting started with the plaguesSam checking the Haggadah for the orderClose to getting doneSam is having too much fun to do this alone!
After Nathan and Sam finish it is family picture time.
Ryan, Jonathan, Nathan, and Sam
Time to get started!
Family at the Seder table
Nathan and Sam take turns being the basin holder and towel distributor for the two “washing of the hands”
Nathan holds the basin while Zayde washes his hands, Sam is behind with the towel
This Passover is the first time for Sam as the youngest participant to ask the Four Questions. He does a great job!
Ryan helps Sam with the reading of the Four Questions
We had a great time going through the ritual, singing songs, and having a delicious dinner. I look forward to this every year.