I thought it would be fun to write a bit about food. I will use everything I ate today to describe what the food is like here and how it is consumed. Let's start with breakfast. Today I had about seven minutes in which to make and eat breakfast or make lunch, and I chose to eat breakfast and buy lunch later. There are cornflakes, which may or may not be stale (something which I have begun to notice less and less), and it is possible that there is also milk in the refrigerator. However, the refrigerators here seem not to be very cold, and the milk is often expired by the time I find it. So I have begun to mix my cereal with yogurt. Today: strawberry.
Before you mentally jump to lunch, let me throw in the fifteen-minute morning break. Yes, between the 3rd and 4th classes of the day, there is a midmorning break. There are also five-minute breaks between classes during which eating is often possible because there is no need to waste time walking from one classroom to another in most cases, since a lot of the time, the teachers switch rooms instead of the students. During the break, there is a table at which various baked goods and drinks are available for purchase. I imagine that this serves as breakfast for some, but whenever I buy anything, I eat it hobbit-style (as a second breakfast). Today I had a nice roll with some type of sugar chunks on top. This is one of the more popular items. When I got back to the room, I remembered I had thrown a couple of bread pieces in my backpack and ate one of those. Water fountains are either invisible or nonexistent, and you refill water bottles from a sink that is in the room. Some people drink straight from the tap.
Now for lunch. I had a two-hour break today, and I, with a couple of other exchange students, hopped on a bus and went to the old part of the city (Altstadt in German, vielle ville in French). We thought we would wander for a bit and then pick a place to patronize. We ended up choosing a Lebanese-style fast food restaurant. I had a kebap, which is some kind of bread filled with some kind of meat, lettuce, sauce of some sort, and perhaps other things that I did not notice. Also offered for sale here were hamburgers. One of the other exchange students ordered one. It was...well, how do you think a Lebanese-style Swiss imitation-American hamburger would be? It was like that. In close proximity to the restaurant was an ice cream stand. The ice cream here is intense. This is no Dairy Queen. It's even a step up from Baskin Robbins. Both of the ice cream places I've tried here have signs to the effect that the ice cream is homemade and worthy of being labeled art. Today's flavors: pistachio and dark chocolate (70%). Another thing: dark chocolate is called black chocolate here. Schwarzeschokolade in German, chocolat noir in French. And don't think I eat like this every day for lunch. Usually I just bring a sandwich or two from home, along with a yogurt or fresh fruit and water.
After such a lunch, I hardly had the appetite for a snack in the afternoon. In fact, I usually just save up my hunger for dinner, because it is usually delicious. There are two types of dinner that exist at my host family's house. The first is for days when a hot meal was eaten for lunch, days such as Saturday and Sunday, and this meal consists of a pick-and-choose-your-own spread of bread, butter, jam, Nutella, cold cuts, cheese, and the like. Today's dinner was of the other type: hot meal. I made sure to ask what everything was called so I could properly write about it. There were pieces of chicken that appeared to have been grilled. There was salad (always the same dressing, so it's a good thing I like it). There was something called Fleischkäse. When I first heard the word, I laughed because it means, quite literally, "meat cheese." It tastes like meat, though, so I'm not sure where the cheese part came from. And there was Spätzli, my favorite, which is made from flour, water, and eggs. It's very like pasta, but it has a chewy texture. For some reason, nobody else usually drinks anything with dinner, except for sometimes beer or coffee. I like to have ice tea, and I have recently discovered green Rivella, which is mixed with green tea and is quite delicious, so they always set out a cup for me. An interesting social aspect is that everyone always eats dinner together here, which is different from how many families handle dinner in the United States. Also, if there is still someone eating, everyone else sits and talks, and this even happens once everybody has finished.
So, that's food. In other news, my younger host sister is back, for reasons that will remain undisclosed on the web of the wide world, so don't be surprised if she shows up in some subsequent blog posts. Also, I joined the school choir this week. It meets during lunch time, which is no big deal, because I still have thirty minutes to eat before the practice starts. I have not been in a choir for a long time, but I thought this would be a good way to meet other students at the school. The music from the first practice included songs in English and Swiss German. Also Vivaldi's Gloria, which is in Latin. Soon I will look into joining (or at least auditioning for) l'orchestre des jeunes de Fribourg (Fribourg Youth Orchestra).
Yesterday was my first meeting with the Rotary club that is hosting me here. It was scheduled for 6:00 pm, and I got out of school at 4:10, so I didn't have enough time to go home in between. I decided to spend that time walking around the city and taking pictures. It was a photo quest of sorts, and these are some of my favorites:
The countryside on the top left is obviously not part of the city. This was taken at a stop on the way to a family reunion last weekend. We drove through the Emmental region, which is pictured here. This is where Emmentaler comes from (what Americans called Swiss cheese). On the top right is a fountain outside of the cathedral in Fribourg. The bottom left is a view of a street going through the old city (Altstadt, vielle ville). The bottom right is a detail of the cathedral.
This is one of my favorite pictures of the city. On the right, you can see the red-roofed buildings of the old city (Altstadt, vielle ville). If I understood my host father correctly, the old city dates from the 13th century, so it is around 700 years old. The tall building just above the vanishing point of the bridge is the cathedral. On the left is the new part of the city. I like the juxtaposition of the two parts of Fribourg, the old and the new.