Archive for October, 2013

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A Business Proposition

October 25, 2013

Posted by Kanga.

plates of Filipino food

Many is the time that we go to a restaurant and have a good meal while having to bear the assault on our ears of blaring, annoying music. It is usually so loud that we cannot carry on a conversation or order our food without yelling. This results in a lot of pointing to the menu to make sure we get what we want. It also makes the dining experience miserable.

We have started asking wait staff to turn down the music. They sometimes do, although not low enough, but at least we can talk at a medium level instead of yelling. At our last (and I mean last) Texas Roadhouse experience, when we asked the wait staff to turn down the music, he told us that “Our sponsor wants it that way.” Well, then I guess “your sponsor” doesn’t want our patronage.

So, here’s my business idea — restaurants for introverts. An introvert restaurant would provide a quiet, nonintrusive dining experience.

  • Any “mood music” would be barely audible. Total lack of music would be even better.
  • Waitstaff would not constantly be interrupting the diners conversation to ask if they can clear an empty plate from the table and snatching barely used napkins. Unless the table is overcrowded with plates, the clean up would be left until after the diners have gone. The waitstaff would bring the bill to the table automatically after the diners have expressed that they do not want dessert or any further items.
  • The lighting would be pleasant – not so blaring that you have to squint and not so dark that you can’t see your food or dining companions.
  • Any loud, obnoxious customers would be ushered out. The owner or manager would not sit at one of the tables with laptop and phone, talking loudly while presumably doing business. Waitstaff would not sing or dance. The only music performance that should be allowed on this planet is the accordion player at the Rheinlander Restaurant in Portland, Oregon.
  • No televisions allowed.

I’m sure as soon as I publish this I will think of some other vitally important feature of the Introvert Restaurant, but for now this will do.

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Sohailia, How I Miss Thee

October 24, 2013

posted by Kanga. Please do not reblog.

There is one more American thing we miss — good dental care. Specifically, good preventative dental cleanings.

En Amérique un dentiste au travail [soignant un molosse] : [photographie de presse] / [Agence Rol]
En Amérique un dentiste au travail [soignant un molosse] : [photographie de presse] / [Agence Rol]
Source: gallica.bnf.fr

We were spoiled by Sohailia. She was such a good dental hygienist that I looked forward to my cleanings. With her range of picks she would carefully clean each and every tooth with such a light touch that it tickled. She would examine each tooth for problems and evaluate the state of the gums. When she finished, she would report to the dentist any and all problems that she observed.

American dentistry is amazing. It comes complete with guilt trip. You can count on being asked how often you brush and if you floss. If you admit that you don’t floss, you’ll get a little lecture about how important it is. The last time I was at an American dentist office, they took a swab of my mouth and showed me the bacteria from my mouth under a microscope to try to shame me into spending more effort on my oral hygiene.

They also go to extreme lengths to retain teeth. I had the root canal done in one tooth three times before a dentist finally admitted that the whole thing had to go. The truth is that I would have been a lot healthier if it had been extracted instead of remodeled.

In the UAE, dentists are everywhere, but hygienists are few and far between. Every “cleaning” I’ve had so far has been done by the dentist with an electric powered tool. This cleaning tool experience is unpleasant, at best. It sure doesn’t hold a candle to Sohailia’s light touch.

The first two dentist experiences I’ve had in the UAE were unpleasant. I specifically requested anesthesia for any drilling to be done and the dentist blatantly ignored this request. I did not go back for more. Our insurance makes it even more annoying, because everything has to be preauthorized, even diagnostic x-rays. So, the first visit is a bit of a waste, because nothing can be done unless you are willing to pay for it out of pocket.

I seem to have finally found a good dentist. The cleaning still involved an electric power tool, but I survived. Before working on fillings, she asked if I wanted anesthesia and then actually gave it to me. Hoorah! She rebuilt a broken tooth rather nicely.

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Watatsumi

October 22, 2013

Posted by Kanga. Please do not reblog.

We were invited to the grand opening of the Watatsumi restaurant in Le Meridien Mina Seyahi hotel. As you know, when someone says “sushi” I’m there.

serving station with a large fish on it

We began by meeting our future dinner.

closeup of a tuna fish on a cutting table

This may seem like a big fish, but as tuna go, this is a little one.

Miyoko Shida Rigolo doing a balance performance

Miyoko Shida performed the feather balancing act, which is amazing. She begins with a white feather. Then adds sticks creating a perfectly balanced structure.

Miyoko Shida Rigolo doing a balance performance

She keeps the structure moving slowly around in a circle.

Miyoko Shida Rigolo doing a balance performance

She can’t bend over, so she picks up each stick with her foot.

Miyoko Shida Rigolo doing a balance performance

Miyoko Shida Rigolo doing a balance performance

Miyoko Shida Rigolo doing a balance performance

Miyoko Shida Rigolo doing a balance performance

She balances it on her head.

Miyoko Shida Rigolo doing a balance performance

Miyoko Shida Rigolo doing a balance performance

Then she tips up that last stick and uses it as a pedestal.

Miyoko Shida Rigolo doing a balance performance

Miyoko Shida Rigolo doing a balance performance


Then she takes off the feather and it all comes tumbling down.

sticks in a jumble on the floor

The aftermath. My camera battery wouldn’t allow for a full length video, but if you want to see her in action, click here.

mushroom appetizer

Then, we had some delicious food. Mushroom appetizer.

beef and potato appetizer

Beef and potato salad.

seared tuna and kelp salad

Seared tuna and kelp salad.

tuna and salmon sashimi

Tuna and salmon sashimi (a bit of our friend the big fish)

lemon custard, whip cream, hazelnut crunchy bits

Ending with a tasty dessert – lemon custard and hazelnut crumbs. Maybe it’s been too long since I’ve had a lemon meringue pie, but this was a big hit with me. Yummy!

Everything was tasty. We will be going back to Watatsumi for a proper meal and proper review.

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Game Night

October 20, 2013

Posted by Kanga. Please do not reblog.

We headed over the mountains…

stony mountain

to Dubai…

Dubai skyline including the Emirates Towers

for game night.

pounce card game

Pounce

card game Quao the ultimate dictatorship card game

Quao (the cow dictator game)

card game laid out on a table

and Elder Sign.

Thanks to our friends for making the evening fun!

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Mashup or What?

October 11, 2013

Posted by Kanga. Please do not reblog.

Fujairah streets are under major construction and have been for most of the year. It is much needed, but makes it even more interesting to navigate the town than it was. Fujairah is not laid out in a system of rectangular streets and intersections. It is a web of diagonal streets and roundabouts. So, even when things are normal and not under construction one has to zig zag across town.

cement fence with upside down ionic capitals attached

We came across this last night while negotiating a rather challenging detour. The construction of this villa looks standard except for the upside down ionic capitals that have been tacked onto the fence. I’m curious to see what more this will involve.

close up of upside down ionic capital

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Infrastructure Should Come First

October 5, 2013

Posted by Kanga. Please do not reblog.

trench dug between buildings

This is the view around our apartment building lately. This is not the first time they have dug a trench along here and torn out the paving bricks and made a mess.

trench across parking lot

This trench goes across the one and only entrance/exit to the underground parking. Now, why this trench can’t be dug 30 feet north where there are no structures, I don’t know. Why these pipes weren’t laid before the buildings were put up, I don’t know.

Here is how building is done. They put up a building first. There are no electrical lines to the construction area. There are no sewer lines laid prior to building. There are often no paved roadways to the construction site either. The building may never get a sewer line. (Sewage goes into tanks in the subbasement and trucks come by to pump out the contents, hopefully on a regular basis. Our building is 21 stories tall with 7 apartments on each of 17 floors and offices on 3 floors – you do the math.) The building may, or may not, get city supplied electricity. Our building is one half city utilities and one half connected to a generator in the basement. The generator is permanently installed.

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Priceless

October 2, 2013

Posted by Kanga.

billboard showing random iconic sites

Sheikh Zayed Road is now lined with a series of huge billboards. I found this one astonishing due to its mashup of iconic images. Dubai — Egyptian pyramids — Grecian/Roman columns — Petra Treasury. It’s apparently an advertisement for Priceless Arabia, whatever that is.