Ice, Ice, Baby: Freezing in Melbourne
September 10, 2013 in Australia, Oceania, Travelogue
I could tell you about the excitement level Ezra woke up with at the promise of attending an ice bar.
I could tell you about whizzing around the rink playing air guitar to AC/DC.
I could mention the spectacular, five star fall that Hannah executed, trying to get off of the ice.
I could make you laugh describing the juxtaposition of the old guy “with something to prove to a 15 year old” shuffling around the rim of the rink with the graceful ice dancers practicing in the center.
Instead… I’ll tell you about the poutine.
Poutine.
Just one word on the overhead menu in the cafe made my eyes go wide and my heart race.
Poutine.
Could it be true? Surely not.
Poutine.
Perhaps the only food that Canadians can claim as originally their own (besides frozen whale and seal blubber, but who wants to munch that while she watches her kids skate?)
Poutine: golden french fries, drowned in brown gravy, slathered with melted cheese.
Affectionately nicknamed by my husband as, “a heart attack on a plate.”
The cheese is the kicker, of course. Traditionally it’s a mild white cheese curd, which is not available on this side of the planet, but a stringy mozzarella was not a bad substitute.
It’s embarrassing, the relish with which we mopped up every morsel of the greasy goodness. Canadian joy pulsed through my veins. “Yeah, but it’s going to settle like a brick in your stomach in about an hour, Mom,” Elisha annoyingly, and accurately, pointed out. Who cares. It was a taste of home.
I don’t know if a person who hasn’t spent a very long time away from “home” can fully appreciate the longing one occasionally gets for taste memories. There’s a visceral pull that is as powerful as any emotional homesickness and harder to soothe because of the absolute impossibility of procuring certain ingredients. At least when I miss people, I can call home!
Poutine. It was beautiful.
Of course so was the skating, and so was the novelty of drinking out of cups made entirely of ice, and the artistically arranged Tapas at the Chill On Ice Bar that we visited as part of the kids’ job. Did I mention the kids have a job? They’re testing all sorts of places for “kid friendliness” for an organization called Bound Round that is putting out a series of traveling apps for kids that we think are pretty cool. We used their Sydney app and loved it. When the kids were invited to be testers, they jumped at the chance! This weekend they tested the Icehouse for skating and the Ice Bar for food and crazy fun.
“Well, it was WAY better than ice skating in Singapore, at least!” Elisha announced. Which of course lead to a bevy of complaining about the difficulty of skating on a plastic rink and how “ridiculous” that was so close to the equator.
No matter how far and wide we travel them, our Canadian-American blend makes us notorious ice snobs the world ’round.
Ah, yes. Poutine. And Tim Hortons. Canadian staples! 🙂
We’ve spent the last 13 years in the southern states of the USA, and can relate to a taste of home… Fortunately a 12-24 hour car drive brings us back to Canada, unlike how very far away you are now!
Congrats to the kids on being “testers”! How fun!
While 3 out of our 4 are dual American-Canadian, *I’m* the one who loves poutine the most. We live literally yards away from the Canadian border, and they don’t sell it on our side anywhere. It’s the treat I get when we go out to eat with friends up north. If I had to choose a last meal….poutine would definitely be a side dish!
Sarah M
Yeah, I can imagine a few more years down the road being away from Canada longer we’ll be hankering for poutine. It certainly fits the “comfort food” category.
I want one of those blue jackets. and, a plate of poutine, please.
Greetings from a Sydney-sider! I’ve just found your blog and your adventures sound incredible! Will you be in Sydney again? I live at an outdoor recreation campsite (Teen Ranch Australia) with my husband and two girls. You should come visit!
Bec, thanks for the invite! We might be. We’re in the process of organizing our road trip north to Cairns at the moment (in October) I’ll shoot you an email!
Sarah… I’m laughing. I think I’ll take lobster as MY last meal! 🙂
Lori… gee thanks… now you’ve made my mouth water for Tim Horton’s TOO!!! ARGH!!! Oh what I would give for an apple fritter… fun fact: my friend Lee mails me packages of Tim Horton’s Chai Tea so I’m never without a taste of home!
Ah! Poutine! I hear you! We love our poutine too and when we lived in the Yukon, where they had not cheese curd, we had people coming and visit us buy a fresh bag in the morning in Quebec and we made poutine for dinner when they arrived!
sounds French/Canadian to me, right? I think Bumper’s got the right name for it! When you get here, we’ll make some!!!!!