Madrid November 2017

November 2017
A 11-day adventure by Mark Read more
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  • 11days
  • 116photos
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  • 11.1kmiles
  • 10.9kmiles
  • Day 6

    San Lorenzo el escorial

    November 7, 2017 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 48 °F

    Took the bus this morning some 30 minutes NW of Madrid to see This famous monastery. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_Escorial

    Bus was running half hour late so didn’t make it here till 11. Stayed till 1630 and then caught the last bus or would have had to wait till 1900 or laterRead more

  • Day 7

    EatWith.com and Paella

    November 8, 2017 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 52 °F

    Woke up late (around 9am). Had some coffee,cereal and then hit the metro to take us to Juan’s place where we are going to be heading to the market to buy fresh produce and seafood to make Paella at his place! This is the first time we’ve tried out the EatWith.com opportunity and are really looking forward to it. We paid for the experience some time ago, so we don’t need to be thinking about cost today! :). After a few wrong turns out of the metro stop (GPS on my phone seems to be getting confused lately), we make it to Juan’s place just in time and he buzzes us up to the 3rd floor . He lives in a nice apt there with a great outdoor balcony/seating area. We quickly head for the local market (Mercado de la Maravillas, which turns out to be an incredible and HUGE market that offers tons of veggies, tons of seafood, meat, you name it. Juan wanders from stall to stall searching out what he wants - the merchants seem to know him and as it turns out he shops here every day for fresh food because he loves to cook and cooks for his family and for EatWith clients. We grab red shrimp, squid, mussels, clams, and some other seafood, buy some special paella rice, a Nora Pepper , saffron and some tomatoes, parsley and garlic and we were good to go.

    Back at his house, he already had boiled some veggies to create a stock and then he got down to business with Janet’s help and my photography, cooking our Paella. In the meantime , we enjoyed some Manchego cheese with fig preserves (oh yes!), olives, jamón, some red wine, bread and mussels. . He had us join his private Facebook group for his guests so that he could share his recipes and help us with Madrid and cooking. How cool is that?

    The preparing of the Paella was a joy to watch - you could tell he was good at this and it turned out perfect. Sat down to a great meal with wine and dessert and good conversation. We’ll be doing this again for sure - great way to get to know a local. (As it turns out he spent 6 years in Houston so his English is pretty good which was helpful!). For the most part, the Spanish have been pretty good with helping us struggling non-speakers - a smile goes a long ways towards getting some help.

    Afterwards, Juan had to pick up one of his kids from school, so we walked about a mile with him and talked more about Spanish culture before parting ways and taking the subway down to the main train station (Atocha) before walking over to the Reina Sofia museum where we got to see Picasso’s “Guernica” (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guernica_(Picasso) and some cool paintings from one of my favorite artists, Salvador Dali . After a few hours in the museum, our dogs were wolfing, so we walked across the street to the main train station just to check it out. They’ve got a jungle growing in there! Big palm trees, a lazy river surrounded by jungle grasses and turtles everywhere snoozing on rocks. Crazy scene in a train station!

    Getting hungry and remembering we had ordered a loaf of bread from Panik(http://goop.com/specialty/spain/madrid/centro/p…), a bakery near our apt, we jumped on the metro and headed back, arriving about 10 minutes before closing at the bread store where we were sort of reprimanded for being “tarde”. I caught that word more than a few times, so I knew we had done something wrong! Apparently when we ordered this bread the day before and they said it would be ready around 3pm, they expected us to show up no later than 3:30pm. We never knew that rule when we had ordered - now I know what “lost in translation” means. :). Nonetheless with a bit of bowing and scraping, all was good, big smiles everywhere and we beat our retreat. I can only imagine what was being discussed later back in the bakery! LOL. Never knew we had almost faced the firing squad over a $5 loaf of bread!

    Back at the apt, I reconfirmed our BlaBla car reservation for tomorrow’s trip to Toledo. Gotta meet this guy (ride sharing ) at 750 in the morning. Time to crash! Pictures of Paella to follow, so check back in on this post again.
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  • Day 8

    Toledo

    November 9, 2017 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 41 °F

    A day in Toledo! Woke up early because we had to meet Alfonso some 20 minutes away. He had sent us the address, so it was a matter of using Google maps (which I’ve been using for all my transit stuff) to get to his apt. Knew from his profile that he was about 28 years old. We had paid up front - 10 Euros for the both of us each way. Short metro ride and then about a 6 block walk and we were there! He popped out of his apt on the dot and there was Janet and I and one other guy and off we went! Nice new car - took us about an hour to get to Toledo. He dropped us in the middle of town and we were ready for a day of exploring. We arranged to meet him again at 1900 (7pm) to take us back when he got off work. As it turns out, he is working on an environmental project there in Toledo, building some sort of park. His wife practices family law back in Madrid. He learned his English studying in London. - also speaks French because he works for a French company. Said it was a lot easier to learn French than English, which makes sense since French/Spanish are Romance languages.

    Our first stop was to grab some breakfast and we stupidly sat down at an outdoor cafe in the main square, which is a move you should never make as you know you are going to get hosed. But we were hungry and I was feeling grumpy till I got food disappearing down my windpipe, so we sat down for a few Spanish omelette and about $30 later we were done. Food was ok, but the bill made me choke a bit.

    Stopped at the tourism office for a quick moment to get a map - the guy circled about 10 things in rapid fire order and said see ya later. He smiled and everyone else did like they had just bestowed the greatest favor on us. Had to chuckle a bit over that - never used the map - went back to Google Maps and headed off to the Cathedral, which I kid you not, is friggin’ awesome. Probably not the best words to describe a cathedral, but this church tops all churches that I have seen in Europe. We spent about 3 hours there.

    Left there and just started wandering. Knew there was a church that had great views of the city - thought we had it pinpointed. Went to it, paid the entrance fees, walked up in the tower and thought - “gee, this view is not really that great”. Back down we went , got outside the church, fired up Google maps and said - “Whoops!” - There’s the church we were supposed to be seeing! So more money and got to climb another tower that did indeed provide the views we were looking for!

    More wandering and then sat down in a restaurant and had Tapas and glasses of wine before wandering back to meet Alfonso. Hour back to Madrid, we hit the grocery store for more wine and coffeee, then metro it back to the apt. All in all - a great day, made very easy by BlaBla Car (https://www.blablacar.co.uk).

    Pictures to follow!
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  • Day 9

    La Bola - lunch

    November 10, 2017 in Spain ⋅ ⛅ 59 °F

    Eating - Cocido Madrilenńo. Wonderful! cash only. Going to be close! - Whew - we had 66 Euros and the meal came to 53. The waiter even helped me put on my jacket as I left - probably hoping we’d get the heck out! Just kidding - very nice waiter and hostess. A meal that is basically stew and really tasty, polished off with a huge jug of wine.Read more

  • Day 9

    Thyssen Museum

    November 10, 2017 in Spain ⋅ ⛅ 57 °F

    Another museum! Feet are starting to woof. Portraits and landscapes - not bad, although this was a period of rather dark (literally) paintings, so not the most exciting stuff I’ve seen - got better near the end of the exhibit.Read more