Friday, February 17, 2012

Un Café: Partie 2

(...continued)


I guess this is made up for by the fact that France has some of the best pastries, breads, and meats. They also import oranges from Spain that are the best I have ever tasted, and you can buy a dozen for around 2€. The lack of peanut butter has also led me to try Nutella, which I regret living the last 20 years of my life without. Nutella over here is practically a religion, every household has a jar and street vendors will sell fresh made paninis, crêpes, and gaufres (waffles) with Nutella at street corners even late into the night.  

This leads me full circle to getting my café. I have been having a cup of tea as my morning breakfast of choice (in a mug, sorry Dad) even though this isn't very French. Today, however, is my last day in Cergy and I have been trying to run out of all my food by today and did a pretty good job, including the last of my tea. Luckily I came over 3,000 miles to a foreign country and the closest restaurant to me is a McDonalds. (Side Note: Pulp Fiction fans, they do acutally serve beer and a quarter-pounder is indeed called a royal). They also let their customers order via a touch screen (just like at Sheetz, you can imagine my excitement). Today, however I ran into the problem of my American credit card not working again and paid with a 2€ coin. I find it interesting that even though it is an American chain, the restaurant still has some French quirks. In fact, one doesn't pronounce any letters after the 'o', leading it to be pronounced like it was spelled McDeaux. I suppose this is because the 'nalds' sound doesn't exist in French, but it is a source of slight amusement for my fellow American students whenever its mentioned in conversation. Another note is that the portion sizes are much smaller, like in every other French restaurant. This is the coffee that I ordered:


                                                         The only size drinks they serve. With a mint!


 Of course, a Frenchman would have a café or espresso this size with every meal, so I guess its not that different. 


So I guess this is it for a while. As of today I am officially on February break, for a whole two weeks. Fortunately it has just started to warm up in Europe. The past few weeks were quite cold, up to this Monday temperatures were below freezing from the day I arrived. We even had snow on the ground for several days, and all this for a climate that stays in the low 40s during winter! I have heard that it is just the opposite in Buffalo, with mild temperatures just turning cold again. After I submit this I will just have to pack up my backpack and get ready to leave tomorrow. I'm going to be backpacking across Ireland and England. Tomorrow I'm starting in Cork, then working my way to Galway, Dublin, across the Channel to Liverpool, Manchester, London, and Canterbury before getting back to Cergy just in time for my class Monday afternoon. It will be nice to be able to speak in my native language for a change! I'll be sure to get a few photos to share. Take care back in the US.


-Adam 

Edit: Sorry about the random font changes. Blogger is being less than cooperative right now...

Un Café: Partie 1

Hey All,

Its been a while since my last text post (actually aside from uploading photos and one link I haven't done anything with this blog at all), so I thought I'd grab a café and update everyone on things before I finish up my assignments for the week. My next post won't be for at least two more weeks so I thought I'd make this a longer one. (Also why it's in two parts since Blogger has a limit on text size). However, at the time when I decided to grab a café, it was already 19h30.

Time here is told in 24 hours rather than the a.m./p.m. scheme that the US and others use. Occasionally time is told in 12 hours when referencing the time of the day, such as "I can't believe I was in the optics lab until 7 in the evening" or "The last RER out of Paris leaves at 1:30 in the morning, so don't miss it!" I personally find the 24 hour scheme a lot easier to use, and it has broken me of my habit of checking if I set my alarm to 7am or 7pm three or four times before I fall asleep.

But I digress, most cafés that would serve a coffee "to go" close in the evening, unless they are what is called a brasserie. Put through a translator, it also means café, but the concept is more of an intimate restaurant that serves drinks, small meals, and beer.  They are open through dinner hours and are probably the best way to go for a slightly upscale meal. Most brasseries have the same menu day to day, and at least from my experience every brasserie has almost the exact same menu as the next. While in the city they are a great place to grab a meal.

We usually will take advantage of their formules, a classy way to say combo menu that includes an entrée (appetizer), plat (main dish), and a dessert (well, that ones easy). Of course, a carafe of vin maison (house wine) is also a traditional part of a well-rounded meal, lunch or dinner. Ordering house wine was a tip given to us by our professor. Every brasserie has a selection of bottled wines, but they also select one to be their house wine and is served in a carafe. Though it is the cheapest, it is also usually the best value since no restaurant would want to risk their reputation on an inferior wine. Also helpful is that waiters and waitresses are paid full salaries, unlike in the US, and therefore do not rely on tips. Tipping in France is usually done by rounding up to the nearest Euro. Exceptional service can be rewarded with one or two Euros beyond that, but the point isn't to supplement the server's pay, only provide them with some extra coin for a drink after work. Interestingly enough this is where the the French word for tip, pourboire, comes from. It's literally translated as "for drink".

I have found that a lot of places around touristy Paris will not only speak fluent English, but also have menus printed in English and several other languages (a little frustrating for the French student looking to practice his speaking). However, a turn off a boulevard down a small rue or allée can bring you quickly off the beaten path even in the most popular places, if you know where to look. As we continue to explore Paris I become more amazed at the scale of the city. Paris is divided into twenty numbered arrondissements or municipal divisions working clockwise in a spiral outward from the Louvre.

                                                                       Arrondissements de Paris      

Street signs on boulevards are labelled with the arrondissement that you are currently in, so it is fairly easy to find your way around. I am in constant amazement of the Parisian metro, which according to their website gave over 3 billion rides last year. I downloaded an app for my iTouch that will plot the shortest route between any two stations and even give you directions to the nearest station if you have WiFi.

With one 7.10€ ticket, you are connected to the whole RATP system: buses, RER, Metro, and Tramways for all of Saturday and sometimes Sunday (sometimes our day passes will work Sunday as well and sometimes they won't, but there has been no pattern that we have been able to discern). Each line has a stop every 90 seconds, so you are never far away from a train. With the entire system transport between areas of the city is fairly easy. This makes it equally impressive when you emerge from a metro station in a different section of Paris and the city looks completely different. Paris has distinct sections, each with its own neighborhood style. The grandeur of the Louvre and public parks along the Seine contrasts sharply with the narrow streets of Montmarte and the open spaces and lively cafés of the Latin Quarter, it makes exploring the city very interesting.

We made our first attempt at Parisian museums last weekend, with a short trip to the Louvre, as can be seen in the photos. We looked at the Roman and Greek sculpture section, including Venus de Milo, among other works. The Louvre is almost as much of an exhibit as the art it houses. It originally was a residence and private museum for the French royalty and was successively added to by each generation of kings. The section we visited was one of the first to be built. It was used up until the reign of Louis XIV who decided that a 100+ room stone palace on the river wasn't quite good enough for him and started putting millions of dollars into his palace at Versailles. For a while the palace was regarded as the most opulent in the world, inspiring the creation of many like it across other European countries. His successors worked on building up Versailles as a residence and the Louvre as an art center, but circa 1789 their construction plans were put on a bit of a hiatus. After the revolution, the Louvre opened up more and more as a public museum.

The Louvre is a museum that you could visit for days. Many tourists make a B-line between the top five or so exhibits and leave. If you were particularly motivated to see everything and had two full days an a lot of energy it would be possible. If you are in Paris for a semester, however, it makes the most sense to do the museums a small bit a time, keeping in mind that the Musée d'Orsay and Musée d'Art Moderne are just as famous and worthwhile. In addition to the exhibits, every ceiling is intricately carved with a mural. The floors are rare hardwoods or exquisite marble and even the stairways, handrails, hallways, and bathrooms (I kid you not) are works of art. It all eventually becomes a lot to handle and one risks becoming jaded after several hours (yeah its just another 2,000 year old statue...).

Luckily I have a while to take my time and explore more (of course I do have classes to take while I'm here as well). Cergy is also an interesting place in its own right. Even the city of Cergy is divided into sections (Les Linandes, Les Chênes, Le Centre Ville) that have their own character. Les Linandes (where I live) is interesting as everything is found in between the roads (as opposed to the US where businesses face the street and have nothing in their backyards). Paths criss-cross throughout the area, with bakeries, schools, apartment buildings, and grocery stores all being found in the very center of the strips between roads. Such a layout makes it very pleasant to walk (I don't walk on a single road to get to school). Around Les Linandes is mostly apartments and university residences, but like Paris, the character of the area can quickly change. I intend on uploading a photoset of around Cergy, but I want to take my time and get a lot of good shots to show off its diversity. 


Luckily there is a grocery store right next to my residence, so I go shopping as often as I would like and even pick up a fresh-baked baguette on the way back. I have been cooking most of my meals, and saving quite a bit of money doing so, food tends to be slightly cheaper here, though prepared food is much more expensive. I have also been keeping the following list you might find interesting:


Things that do not exist in France, to my knowledge:
-Peanut Butter
-Dish Towels
-Lined Paper or Lined Notebooks
-Folders, the simple two-pocket ones
-Skim Milk
-Dryer Sheets

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

l'ENSEA

Hey All,

If you like slow panning shots set to classical music, then have I got a video for you! Dad actually found this one on the ENSEA website, it gives a good overview of the campus (labs, lectures, buildings). Blog update to come tomorrow.


Vidéo CLAP par enseacomm

-Adam

Monday, February 13, 2012

Paris: 1ère Partie

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Paris: Part 1, a set on Flickr.
Hey All,

Finally got my Flickr up and running, but I have to be on the WiFi network at the école (school) to use it, so for that reason I am going to add the photoset and then write a text post a bit later.

These are from my first few days around Paris, including brief parts of Les Champs-Élysées, Le Rive Gauche, Musée du Louvre, Basilique du Sacré-Cœur, and the usual touristy stuff.

Click the link "Paris: Part 1" to view as a slideshow in Flickr. I will be adding comments to the photos shortly, though the names of several landmarks and sculptures are sure to escape me.

-Adam

Friday, February 3, 2012

La Première Semaine

Hey all,

I'm very excited to write my first post from overseas. Unfortunately, my internet isn't letting me sign into my Flickr account (the internet at my résidence universitaire isn't always perfect), so this will be a text-only post. Hopefully I will get a chance to upload some photos of my résidence and around Cergy next week. But for now, since I am pretty much settled in and no longer as jet-lagged I couldn't put of a first post for much longer.

My flight was wonderful. In addition to having a comfy seat, a private TV, two full meals and some snacks, the plane was only about 1/4 full so everyone had the chance to spread out. I left the States at about 6pm and arrived in Charles de Gaulle at about 7am (CET).

Quickly the difference between textbook French and conversational French became apparent. Despite my decent knowledge of the language, hearing native speakers talking at normal pace blurs together most words that I would otherwise understand. Pouvez-vous parler plus lentement? (Can you speak slower?) is a phrase that I have used a lot.

Two professors with the FAME (French-AMerican Exchange) met us at the Aéroport and drove us to our résidence in Cergy. Cergy is what could be considered a suburb of Paris, but it is a city in its own right. This week, as I have been exploring the town, I have been fascinated with its diversity. Forty story buildings, shopping centers, huge glass-front university buildings and expressways share the land with quiet brick streets built into the hillside, expansive parks and green spaces, and abandoned buildings with shattered glass and French graffiti. My résidence is about a five minute walk from ENSEA. It houses students that go to many different universities in Cergy (there are at least a dozen that I know of in the immediate area). All the students in the FAME program are staying in the same building, with about 15 other students. Each appartement is made for one person, complete with its own kitchen, closet, bed, desk, bathroom, and shower. One interesting point is that we do not have keys. We each have a small key fob that opens the building and the appartement of the person to whom it belongs. The door into the building also doesn't have a physical lock. It is held shut by two strong electromagnets that release when the fob is scanned (same as the entrance to ENSEA).

Our first day we went on a shopping trip to the local mall with the aide of fellow ENSEA students. Every student at ENSEA is required to be proficient in at least three languages, with English and French being mandatory. Most students choose either Spanish or German for the third language and also must prove their comprehension of English through standardized testing in order to graduate with their engineering degree. Because ENSEA is of the top five Electrical Engineering schools in Europe, it draws students from across the world, especially the Middle East, India, and Asia. So as it turns out, some students at the college are quadrilingual, even though they do not necessarily speak English with the greatest of ease. Having a student with us the first day, especially when setting up a phone contract, was extremely helpful. We also went shopping at the supermarché Auchan to buy cookware, groceries, and a few essentials. Both these stores are situated amongst the Préfecture, a name referring to the expanse of shopping in the heart of Cergy and the administrative building for which it is named. This past week we have seen protestors outside the préfecture because of the budget crisis, and especially since Président Nicholas Sarkozy announced his plan to raise the TVA (sales tax) earlier this week.

We took a brief trip into Paris on Sunday. The Paris mass transit system (RATP) is extensive, probably around the size of New York City's MTA. There are 16 main lines that run throughout the city. In addition there are is the RER train system that connects the suburbs up to an hour away with the metro. The metro also connects to Charles de Gaulle Aéroport, as well as bus lines, and the 300km/h TGV rapid train that goes throughout the entire country. A person under 26 can purchase a billet jeune (young-person's ticket) that gives unlimited rides throughout the RATP system for only about $8 USD, so going to Paris is quite cost effective.

Though we mostly walked around, myself and another student went to evening mass at Cathédrale Notre Dame. I took a few pictures, which will be up eventually, but the immensity of the structure is hard to capture with a photo. The mass was conducted in a mix of Latin and French. All the hymns and prayers were said in Latin, while the readings and sermon were in French. (An interesting note to Catholics: the response for the liturgy was "Et avec votre esprit" meaning literally "And with your spirit", so I guess they say it here too!)

The college atmosphere here is slightly different than in the US, or at least at UB. The college is only open until about 8pm Monday-Friday and is closed on weekends and holidays. The library closes even earlier. Students take classes once per week, but at two to four hours at a time. All my professors speak English fairly well and they seem very knowledgeable about their subjects. This week has been the elections for Bureau des Élèves (like the Student Association) so there have been free food and games each day throughout la rue (literally "The Road", its the central point of the ENSEA complex that you have to walk through to get between buildings A,B,C and D). Even professors have been serving free food and drinks along with the students! The class schedule also has two 16-day breaks throughout the semester that I look forward to taking advantage of.

Anyways, a new post will be on the way shortly. Hopefully Flickr will be up by then and my next post won't be such a wall of text. Take care in the states!

-Adam