Egészségédre

By Chef Dad

There are a few important words to learn in each language.  Please.  Thanks.  Sorry. Bathroom?   Check, please.  Most everything else you can figure out by pointing or waiting. The most important word to learn, though, is Cheers!  This is the word  that takes you from seeming like someone who is out of place to seeming like someone who’s bringing the party.

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In Hungarian, the word for cheers is Egészségedre, a word I’m glad I heard before I saw.  Hungarians have lots of vowel sounds and accent marks, and after several months of practicing Polish, trying to convert written text into sounds from Hungarian is really hard.  It’s pronounced, roughly, eggy she-gehd-reh, and it sounds more like two words than one.

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We learned to pronounce this at dinner on our first night on the town of Eger, Hungary.  We visited a little restaurant downtown, where we had little trouble communicating with our Hungarian host, despite the language barrier.  Pointing at a menu is easy in any language, I suppose.  When we were finished and getting up to leave, he brought us an apertif called Unicum.

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Unicum translates to fire-water. Or if it doesn’t, it should.  Before tossing it back, our host taught us how to say eggy she-gehd-reh, and we did our best to keep up.  With the language and the liquor.

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Fortunately, Eger would provide us with many opportunities to practice (again, with the language and the liquor), but before you go off toasting your health and showing off your new linguistic skills, you should know that Hungarians don’t clink their beer glasses.

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Eger was the highest-ranked small city on our power rankings, and Miss A gave it her top overall spot.  There’s lots to see in town, with beautiful squares, walkable streets and sophisticated wine bars and restaurants.

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But the real highlight of Eger is out of town.

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No, not the thermal bath resort (which was, in fact, awesome).

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The real reason to stop in Eger is the Szépasszonyvölgy which really does translate to the Valley of Beautiful Women.  I don’t know about women, but it’s certainly a valley of wonderful wine.

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We were nervous as we approached the valley.  It’s just on the outskirts of Eger, right next to a quiet residential neighborhood (quiet, except for the dogs who barked at us from nearly every single yard as we walked there).  From the top of the road that takes you down into the valley, it’s hard to tell exactly what you’re about to come up on.  We were there during a slow time of the year, and many places along the way were still closed for the season.

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The valley consists of about 40 wine cellars contained in an area of about two small city blocks.  It’s practically made for bachelorette parties us.  We visited four of the wineries, chosen mostly at random, beginning with Juhasz Pinceszet.  The wines were excellent, probably the best ones that we tasted on our visit.

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Each of the cellars is cut into the side of the valley, and they are set up for you to taste wines from the bottle or quite often from the barrel.  The picture above was taken from inside the cave, but up above in a room that would have been suitable for a meeting of medieval knights.  Most of the cellars evoked that sort of feeling, I suppose, and it is fitting that Eger is best known for the Egri Bikaver (“Bull’s Blood“) wine blend.  Legend has it that invading soldiers during the Siege of 1552 believed the wine was, in fact, bull’s blood, though the story gets decidedly murky after that.

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Bikaver is a red blend, which must include three grapes and usually includes Kékfrankos as one of them.  There was a notable difference between the best and the worst, but one thing is for sure–the taste of the wines lingered on the palate for what seemed like the rest of the day.

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There are a few restaurants in the valley as well, a couple of which were nice and several of which were cheap.  We picked a cheap one (not shown), and we got what we paid for.  Then we headed for our final stop, Biro et Fia.  There we met Beatrix, and sadly we don’t have a photo, but we won’t need one to remember.

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Beatrix, who was probably 75 years young, spoke very little English, but she could tell a tale with her hands like no one I’ve ever met.  We spent probably about an hour laughing and tasting wine, sometimes out of these long fancy glass tubes that somehow Beatrix could aim and fire at our glasses with pinpoint accuracy.  She could hit her own glass too–she was matching us taste for taste, an impressive feat because I’m sure we weren’t the first people to come through that day.  The kids loved it as well–Beatrix hooked them up with corks and toothpicks for making sculptures and merriment.

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Alas, all good things must come to an end, but the end of our visit meant we were headed to Budapest.  As we hit the road, Eger had certainly left a pleasant taste in our mouths.

Le Home Away

By Chef Dad

When we originally mapped out our route through France, we had planned to spend a bit of time touring Dijon, but we never made it. Instead, we stopped in the beautiful little town of Beaune, right in the heart of the Burgundy wine region. We checked into an adorable little hotel, Hotel Le Home, where our host Mathilde greeted us with much enthusiasm and guidance for our visit. I’m glad for her advice, which helped us pack a lot of activity into a little more than one day in town.

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French Connections

By Chef Dad

As we make our way through Europe, it’s fascinating to learn about cultures that have survived despite the fall of their sovereign empires, and while we were sad to leave Spain, we could stay in Basque Country for just a bit longer.  Somehow or another, the Basques have managed to maintain a language, culture, and fair degree of political autonomy for about two millennium in this little corner of Europe along the Bay of Biscay between Bilbao, Spain and  Bayonne, France.

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A Pot of Gold – Rioja, Spain

By Chef Dad

In Spain, we were generally blessed with sunny weather, but for our visit to Rioja, we had partly cloudy skies and scattered drizzle. Nevertheless, we had Hawaii-quantity and Hawaii-quality rainbows, so we didn’t mind. And Rioja was our pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.

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Distinctly Passionate – Bodega Huerta de Albala

“We live and work to produce one of the finest red wines in Spain; a wine with the character, goodness and strength of the pilgrim who devotes each day to preparing his spirit for its culminating moment, because uncorking a great wine is like reaching Plaza del Obradoiro in Santiago de Compostela for the pilgrim. So before sipping those last drops, you cast your mind back and realise that the best thing was not getting there but the whole journey: every day, every supplication, every friend made along the way, every bottle of wine….” 

Vicente Taberner Carsi
Founder and president of Huerta de Albalá.

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Sherry – Jerez – Xérès

Many modern wine drinkers will look at this section and wonder why on earth I think it worthwhile devoting so much space to such a dinosaur of a wine as sherry. The answer is plain to anyone who has tried a good quality version. The trouble is that most people have not.  —Jancis Robinson

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