Budapest and Ideas Brewing

As part of our time in Frankfurt, Germany, we’re trying to travel as much as possible. This was easier during our first stay here, when we had but one child. Now, with three children under six, it’s more complicated. Not impossible, but difficult.

Last month, we went to Budapest, and it was lovely but cold. The kids had a great time (we stayed at a hotel with an indoor water park), and it was a nice holiday away. We saw the Buda and Pest sides in winter, and each has a beautiful character quite unlike the other. Overall, the city reminded me a bit of Vienna.

The most memorable part of the holiday was our visit to the New York Café, where I had the best dessert that I have ever had in Europe. We’ve had memorable desserts in Paris, Barcelona, Malaga, Vienna, and other places; but truly this was the best. I’m sure that the setting and history contributed a bit, but the quality and presentation of the desserts were excellent.

The New York Café has an interesting history, and for me, it was love at first sight. The café actually gets its name from the New York Insurance Company, who commissioned the Art Nouveau building in 1894. The New York Café held its grand opening on October 23, 1894, and soon took its place as one of the most famous of nearly 400 literary cafés in Budapest at the end of the 19th century.

From the early 1910s until the 1930s, Budapest boasted of a thriving coffee culture, where writers and artists spent much of their day creating and chatting at their “regular” tables. They enjoyed free ink and paper, and they ate from a discounted “writer’s menu.”

The New York Café was frequented by famous literati of the time: Michael Curtiz (born Manó Kertész Kaminer), director of Casablanca, dined there with Sir Alexander Korda (Sándor László Kellner), director of The Thief of Baghdad.

Legend has it Ferenc Molnár, a famous Hungarian writer, and his friends threw a key to the café in the Danube, so that the café should never be closed. It seems that his “magic” may have worked, and I hope that it continues to exist until the next century.

Unfortunately, it was ravished by two world wars, turned into a shoe shop, then a tourist restaurant, and finally restored to its original splendor in the Rococo style by Boscolo Hotels, who reopened the café and hotel in 2007.

The interior is amazing; the New York Café is a café with personality. Photos do not do it justice.

This from the Budapest Guide:

“The majestic building was built in eclectic style relying on Italian renaissance and baroque; its lavishly furnished interiors were designed in the spirit of historical eclecticism. Everything being made of marble, bronze, silk and velvet many people compared the building to the palace of the Bavarian King Louis II.”

My husband had the best apple strudel ever (and we live in Germany, so that’s saying something), and my chocolate souffle was divine.

I now have a not-so-secret dream of coming back to the New York Café someday to do a reading for one of my books. Dream big, I say. Maybe during that visit back to Budapest, I’ll also throw a key from the New York Café into the Danube.

Propinquity & Imbolc Wishes

In the days when the Ancients had a more intimate relationship with the Earth, this time of year marked the beginning of Spring. The Celts called this day Imbolc, Gaelic for “in the belly.”

After an arduous Winter, people needed hope that Spring would come and life would continue. They looked around for signs of renewal, including the emergence of animals from their hibernation, a precursor to our own Groundhog’s Day. They celebrated the first signs of rebirth; and even if Winter still persisted a while longer, they knew that the days were getting longer, the light was returning and life would follow.

Many of us have had a rough Winter: physically, emotionally, mentally. Now is the time to have hope that change is coming; renewal is not far away. The snows will melt, the cold will pass, the greenery will return. Even if we love the cool embrace of Winter–the quiet time of solitude and introspection, the stillness and peace–the new season brings potential.

I hope that this Spring presents you with possibilities, for whatever it is that you have unwillingly lost or continue to seek in your life.

Speculative Coffee and the Allusive Alchemy of the Neil Gaiman Latte

Speculative Coffee:  Coffee that exists on the threshold between this world and the liminal realms; coffee that encourages speculation, invokes the Muses, and inspires travelers. The art of crafting speculative coffee is a form of literary coffea alchemy, requiring an extensive knowledge of certain Books of Magic and requiring tools of the barista-alchemist. When successful, the ever-elusive speculative coffee is allusive ambrosia.

I’ve been a fan of Neil Gaiman’s since the Sandman days and have followed his career and books with interest, reading his blog and gleaning quite a bit from his method of maintaining contact with his audience in a way that’s wide-reaching and personal.

Recently there has been a great deal of Internet and Twitter talk about coffees named after Neil Gaiman. It seems to have sprung from a bookshop in Indonesia, and the idea took off from there. The Guardian did a story on the Reading Lights bookshop in West Java:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/booksblog/2009/jan/20/writers-food-novelists-analogy?commentpage=1

Then Needcoffee.com did an article on Neil Gaiman: Man, Myth, Legend, Coffee Drink:
http://www.needcoffee.com/2009/01/23/neil-gaiman-coffee/

This was accompanied by two other coffeeshops that jumped on the Create-a-Neil-Gaimain-Coffee bandwagon:
Strange Brew in Greenwood, Indiana has a Neil Gaiman Latte (and a colorful description of the process of creating the drink on Joan of Dark’s blog):
http://joanofdarkknits.blogspot.com/2009/01/neil-gaiman-needs-coffee.html

ZubZub in Boonville, Northern California, has their version of the Neil Gaiman Latte: espresso, bitter almond, dark chocolate, black cherry.
http://www.zubzubicecream.com/

There is also a list of growing suggestions on Twitter from Neil’s fans. The campaign to find the quintessential Neil Gaiman coffee (or beverage, since Neil himself prefers tea), is a testament to his writing and ever-growing  fan base, but it’s also grassroots, internet publicity at its finest. What better way to spread the word about Neil and his writing than to bring a coffee named after Neil to your favorite local coffee shop. It’s brilliant and fun. Where else will the Neil Gaiman coffees appear? How many different cities and countries?

Perhaps next will be Gaiman character-inspired beverages: Coraline macchiato with black sugar button; hot Nobody chocolate with marshmallow skull; an iced Odd Mocha, served with an eye-shaped biscuit; Death Chai made with Gunflower and Rosehips teas. It’s poetry in coffee.

Keep an eye out for a Neil Gaiman coffee coming to a café near you, and thanks to The Graveyard Book, perhaps there will be a Lupescu Latte?

~Valya Dudycz Lupescu