Category Archives: Malmö

Balmy Wintertime Malmö

I’ve been saying that the weather has been pretty mild here, and now I have proof. All you naysayers who were like, Kate has finally lost her marbles once and for all, poor thing thinks that it’s warm in Sweden during the winter. Next thing you know, she’ll be telling us that there aren’t any polar bears there, either. 

Proof, I tell you! PROOF!

I took this photo on Malmö’s main shopping street, Södra Förstadsgatan, during the period between Christmas and New Year—conveniently called the “mellandagar,” or “in-between days,” in Swedish. The picture was taken at 17:04:44, give or take a few milliseconds. Not really the warmest part of the day, and yet, and yet…

Against all odds, one brave coffee shop had set up outdoor seating, and people were flocking to it, plopping themselves down in the cold, damp, overcast weather, out with their coffees and coats on. Unbelievable.

A mellandagar miracle. 

5 things that are already making my 2012 fantastic | The Expat Blog

Click here to read the whole article on the Expat Blog at Sweden.se

I love the idea of New Year’s resolutions. Keeping them is another thing altogether.

I don’t think I’ve ever kept a New Year’s resolution that has been life-changing… or kept one at all, if we’re being honest. I’m much better with Lenten promises. It’s really hard to forget what you promised to do in just 40 days.

This year is going to be different, though. I swear. I have only two resolutions, and I’ve got a plan for at least one of them. The plan for resolution #2 is still in the works, but I fully intend to create a plan and work on it. Immediately, if not sooner.

My first resolution for 2012 is to cultivate more contentment in my life. I have a tendency to obsess about where I want to be six months, a year, and five years from now, and sometimes I realize that I forget to enjoy the here and now. I’m not giving up on being all my goal-setting and crazy ambition, but I’m going to try to temper all that forward-thinking with more satisfaction with what I have now.

To that end, I’m going to start practicing deliberate gratitude on a regular basis. Numerous internet experts say that gratitude has amazing benefits on your health and well-being, and if an internet expert says it, it has to be true. Right?

At the very least, the New York Times said, “Cultivating an “attitude of gratitude” has been linked to better health, sounder sleep, less anxiety and depression, higher long-term satisfaction with life and kinder behavior toward others, including romantic partners.”

I can’t really argue with that. So to start the year off right, here are 5 things that are already making my 2012 fantastic.

Click here to read the whole article on the Expat Blog at Sweden.se

Sunshine is playing a big role in the awesomeness of 2012. Can you believe that this is what Lund and Malmö looked like on January 6th??

Click here to read the whole article on the Expat Blog at Sweden.se

QUIZ MASTERS! Southern Kitchen = New Obsession

Did I ever tell you that I was a QUIZ MASTER? No?! Well, IT’S TRUE! It’s going right up there in the trophy case next to middle school spelling bee champion (TWO TIMES) and my gymnastics trophies (I WON FOR PARTICIPATING) and the medal I got for being in the band (SAXOPHONE).

Muwahahahaha.

We got a certificate and everything.

It all went down on what seemed like a normal Tuesday evening, but turned out to be a night of Epic Quiz Proportions.

The place: Southern Kitchen American Restaurant in Malmö

The team: Sarah, Sarah, Marie, Lloyd, Warren, and Yours Truly 

The theme: The Holidays 

The prize: Two free entrees or four free appetizers, redeemable any time in the next three months

BOOYAH.

What makes Southern Kitchen an American restaurant, you might ask?

Well, for one, their menu mainstay is the burgers page: six burgers to choose from and cornbread comes with your meal. There’s only one beer on tap, and it’s Sam Adams’ Boston Lager. They also have Budweiser, Miller Genuine Draft, Samuel Adams Boston Ale, Samuel Adams Black Lager, Brooklyn Lager, Brooklyn Brown Ale, Brooklyn East India Pale Ale, and Sierra Nevada Pale Ale in bottles.

Much like banana bread, cornbread has the ability to spark spirited debates on the existential composition of cake and bread and the differences to be found betwixt the two.

For dessert, they have an apple pie, and that’s great and all, but let’s be serious. Every country has their own version of an apple pie. Southern Kitchen has a Brownie Sundae, which is actually a million desserts rolled into one and served with a cherry on top. I haven’t tried it yet, but I will. It is fate.

There’s also Southern Fried Chicken.

Anyway, our Swedish-Australian-English-American team crushed the opposition, and now I’m hungry for more. More food and more winning. Quiz nights on Tuesdays… I’ll hopefully be dragging a team there next week.

Join me? 

Southern Kitchen is at Östra Förstadsgatan 24, almost in Värnhem if you’re coming from the center and just before Big Bowl. Brunch… Quiz Night… Live Music sometimes…  Dessert specials on Wednesdays…

Be there or be square. 


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Malmö is all dressed up for Christmas

Malmö is all dressed up for Christmas, and I love it. I took a few photos today as I walked from one office to another. All the beautiful lights are enough to make you kind of glad that it’s so dark outside all the time.

On another note, I posted a blog post today on the Expat Blog at Sweden.se called, “THERE WILL BE GLÖGG!” Get it? Get it?! Well. Ok, then.

COME TO MAMA.

Here goes nothing:

In a country filled with seasonal food holiday traditions, I have discovered the tradition to rule them all. The celebration centers on a certain group of foods and drink, but the focus is much more on the Christmas feeling tied to the smells and tastes than the food itself. You will know it by its name and the sound it makes as it goes down your throat:

Glug, glug, glögg!

To read the whole thing, follow this link to “Christmas time in Sweden: THERE WILL BE GLÖGG!” at the Expat Blog at Sweden.se.

Halloween in Sweden in Photos

My coworker Lloyd and his lady, Charlotte, threw an awesome Halloween party last Saturday, one of the best I’ve ever been to. People really went all out with the costumes. I only caught a small portion of the costumes there because I was having too much fun to wander around with my camera.

Together, Simon, Steve, and I dressed up as Americans on Spring Break. Sarah and Marie (top photo, left to right) were “Incognito” and Clark Kent, respectively. Sarah switched her mustache about once every hour so that she would remain Incognito. The second photo from the top is Incognito Sarah again and Sarah the wolf.

The charming she-man was our host, Lloyd. He was a bearded lady. He even shaved one of his armpits to round out the character. So great. That’s Simon with his trophy belt in the top right vertical picture, and the bottom left vertical picture is a new friend, Nick, dressed up as Tintin.

There were a lot of people there that I hadn’t met before, so I’m not sure who the guy below was… super creepy costume, though.


Happy Halloween to you, wherever you are! Send in photos if you dare. :)

Happy Halloween in Sweden!

I’m supposedly busy, working on a bunch of blog posts for my other blog and trying to get moving on some big proofreading jobs, but last night I celebrated Halloween with Steve, Simon, a bunch of my coworkers from my day job, and a lot of people I had never met before but were really interesting, awesome people.

More photos to follow soon, but for now, a little taste of what’s to come…

Bringing the land of the free, home of the brave to a living room near you.

Steve, Simon, and I went as Americans on SPRING BREAK ABROAD!!! Definitely the most comfortable clothing I’ve ever worn to a party, and Simon was very proud of his trophy belt. (I hope that doesn’t become a regular fixture at parties.)

Someone took a photo of the three of us together, but it wasn’t on my camera, so I’ll have to track it down. Steve was wearing a wife beater and was looking extremely sexxxy.

Right, Steve? Right.

 

Delicious lunch at “Smith I” at Hansacompagniet in Malmö

In the center of downtown Malmö, there is a shopping center called “Hansacompagniet,” or the Hansa Company. It’s got a fairly standard array of shops and restaurants with some upscale options mixed in among the rest, plus the all-important Systembolaget (hello, liquor store!).

One thing I discovered, however, when shopping with Simon and his mom last Saturday (and taking in the demonstrations against the Sweden Democrats), is that there is a really nice lunch and fika spot tucked in the glass pedestrian bridge that links the shopping mall to the parking structure. It’s called “Smith I,” and while it’s not cheap, it’s not that much more expensive than a fika at Espresso House or regular lunch at a restaurant. Plus, you get to sit in the glass bridge overlooking the street… pretty cool.

Simon had a chicken Caesar salad that he thought was really good, and I had this amazing cured salmon salad with sweet teriyaki dressing, pickled onions, pickled ginger, shaved carrots, and crisp romaine lettuce. MMM! I’m not normally a big teriyaki fan, but the sweet and sour and salty and crispy combination was amazing.

My cured salmon salad.

As usual, Simon gave me the tomatoes from his dish, but it was really hard to move from my Asian dish to his more garlicky one, so I didn’t really eat much. He thought it was really good, though.

Simon's chicken Caesar salad.

Both were served with the world’s crispiest crisp bread. When I was eating it, it felt and sounded like I was chewing through concrete. It was strangely tasty, though.

I should add that Simon’s mom had what looked like the richest, fudgiest chocolate cake of all time, and she was very happy with it. For some reason, it disappeared before I managed to get a picture.

You can find Smith I in the Hansacompagniet shopping center, which is right by Gustav Adolfs Torg and just off the main pedestrian shopping street. Besides the salads above, they had sandwiches, warm dishes (like salmon and vegetables or beef and potatoes), plus a good assortment of delicious-looking cakes. Besides the typical coffee bar drinks, they also had a lot of specialty sodas, including a Blood Orange Pellegrino soda. Yum.

Here’s where it is: 

Visa större karta

Opening Hours

Monday-Friday: 10 am-7 pm

Saturday: 10 am-5 pm

Sundays: Noon-5 pm

Website (in Swedish)

Demonstrations in Malmö

Last Saturday was a big day for the Malmö police—so big, they had to call in reinforcements from Stockholm, Gothenburg, and the rest of the country’s riot police squads. Part of the reason was a rematch between two soccer teams: Malmö FF and Djurgården, a Stockholm team. The match was originally supposed to be a month or so ago, but it had to be called off only a few minutes into the game because people were throwing firecrackers onto the field. Not good.

The other reason was that the Sverigedemokraterna (Sweden Democrats, or SD for short) were holding a march in central Malmö. It’s a “nationalistic” (read: far right) party which, sadly, has a stronghold in southern Sweden, right where I live. You know Anders Breivik, the terrorist behind the attacks in Oslo and Utøya? If you understand where he’s coming from, you’ve already got a basic grip on the Sweden Democrats’ political platform. (One notable exception to this comparison: Breivik believes that many of the weaknesses of modern Western society are related to the advancement of women, while Sweden Democrats base some of their anti-Arab/anti-Muslim rhetoric on claims that they degrade women’s rights. )

In any case, the Sweden Democrats got more than 4% of the vote in the 2010 elections, which gave them a seat in Parliament and some political legitimacy. Their main goal is to greatly limit immigration policies, including the ones that this girl has benefited from (see The Skinny on the Sambo Visa, The Low Down on the Love Visa, etc.) because, you know, immigrants are bad. And dangerous. And very, very scary.

Saturday’s demonstration was, however, more notable for the protests of the Malmö inhabitants against the Sweden Democrats. There were far, far more people behind the barriers than there were marching within them, and their boos drowned out the Sweden Democrats’ chanting.

Demonstrations in Malmö: Gustav Adolfs Torg, protesters, and high-speed riot police caravans.

On one hand, I found the protests inspiring. Living in Lund, I knew that they were going on but had forgotten about them. I just happened to be walking by at the right time. I was glad to see people caring so much about their ideals (especially ideals I agree with) to protest a group they find hateful.

At the same time, the protests were kind of scary. There were explosions going off, and at one point, people were just running away from the square and then turning back. It felt like things could easily get out of hand and become chaos. I’ve never seen protests like this in my life. People waving signs and sleeping outside the White House, yes. People screaming and shouting and pushing and firecrackers going off? That I haven’t seen before.

I didn’t spend much time in the midst of the demonstrations, but I watched from above through the windows of a nearby building. I was with my boyfriend and his mom, who just broke her elbow and still has it in a cast and a sling, so we weren’t taking any chances that she would get pushed or shoved. It was a very interesting thing to see in what is normally a quite calm city.

One funny thing is that as we were driving out, I was saying that they should have outsourced the riot cops’ jobs to the Danish police. Simon and I watch a TV show that is basically like Danish cops, and let me tell you: Danish cops are way tougher than Swedish cops. About thirty seconds later, we drove by this van:

Politi!

Sure enough, it was a Danish police van of some sort! (Swedes say “Polis,” Danes say “Politi.”) Awesoooome.

For more pictures of the demonstration and the protests against it, check out the slideshow in Sydsvenskan. The text is in Swedish, but there are lots of good, big, high-quality pictures that’ll give you a better sense of what it looked like.

Floating Bridge – Malmö

Yesterday morning, when I went to work, there was a fully-constructed bridge suspended in the air from a crane. By the evening, it had moved to sort of a hovering position over the water. I really don’t know where it’s going or what it’s going to connect, but the canal looked spooky and beautiful.

Another long day of teaching today: first to Malmö, then Landskrona, then Malmö again, then home sweet home. Tomorrow is Växjö. I may or may not survive the week.

Must-eat in Malmö: Meze’s Lebanese Buffet

I like falafel and feta cheese as much as the next person, but this place takes it to the next level. Even better, the all-you-can-eat lunch buffet is only 76 crowns for an incredible spread of fresh grape leaves, tangy salads, warm pita bread, and more. Every time I go there, I end up eating so much that it hurts.

Oh, sweet deliciousness at Meze.

I mean, seriously. Stewed vegetables, fresh hummus, tabbouli, falafel, babaghanoush, parsley everywhere… if you’re in Malmö and looking for a delicious (and cheap!) lunch, this is the place to go. For dinner, they have a regular menu, which you can find on their home page (it’s in Swedish, but the Lebanese food names are the same). They also have a Friday night/Saturday lunch buffet for a little more money and a Sunday brunch.

Mmmm! It’s so good!

Opening Hours

Monday-Friday 11:15 am-9 pm; lunch buffet 11:15-2:30

Saturday-Sunday 11:30 am-9 pm 

Website www.falafelnr1.se (in Swedish only)

Find it here


Visa större karta

It’s less than a ten minutes walk away from either Gustav Adolfs Torg or the Central Station in the old-timey Gammal Väster neighborhood.

rain and cold
are not conducive to fun.