LIFE IN ASIA

We spend time in spring and summer in our house in Italy. The rest of the year we live in Thailand. On this page, Life in Asia, I want to document some observations on life away from Italy.  

+++ 

published so far:

What Italians and Thai have in common - Food

Spring Cleaning in May - why I give "Life in Asia" a try on Palazzo Pizzo

Beijing Notebook - my blog while living in Beijing, China (2005-2008)

+++

coming next:  What Italians and Thais have in common - Family

+++

Remark about the photo above (copyright 2013 Palazzo Pizzo):

The left half shows some branches of a purple Bougainvillea flower that is growing over a wall of a private garden in a sub-street of Sukhumvit Road in central Bangkok. I found Bougainvillea, which I like a lot, very symbolic for my new aim to combine my two blog subjects, Italy and Thailand, because this plant grows well in both tropical and mediterranean climate. 

Christmas time in Pizzo!


Natale in Pizzo
 

The photo that Angelo sent me last night is so beautiful that I changed our facebook page cover for the first time to share the Christmas feeling in the South of Italy.

This week the temperatures are from 6 degree (lowest during night) up to 15 degree Celsius during the day. Winter clothes and heating is definitely required as occasional rain and wind make it feel more chilly.

 
This year's festive illumination (luminarie) in Pizzo is especially beautiful. On December 8, with the fiesta of the "immaculate conception", the day Italians traditionally decorate their homes for Christmas, a procession took place in Pizzo's piazza. I shared a photo and a link on Facebook. Click below and read more about this special day in Italy: 



Renovating an external wall - correcting an error of our previous renovation

Renovation reloaded (November 2014)

We are renovating again an external wall, that was beautiful restored during our previous main renovation six years ago in November 2008. See my post about how to renovate the side facade here. It included a voting by readers, and the result is presented here.

It turned out, the decision we made back then was an error, as the bare stone wall was deteriorating over time and soaked in all rain water in some particular areas. With the result of having humidity spots on the inside which dried out during summer, but let the plaster and paint on the inside constantly come off the walls. That was not a problem in the guest residence as the residence has a different surface on the outside walls, but in our living room on the ground floor, and in the master bath and guest room upstairs.

deteriorating stone wall (July 2014)

The picture (above) was taken during the procession of La Madonna del Carmine in July 2014 and shows at least one of the crucial areas.

Why did we wait so long for the correction?

First it was not clear where the water infiltrated. It looked more like a leak on the roof terrace and on one balcony. But then it became more and more visible from the outside.

Second, we lost many months and weeks thanks to our reluctant neighbor who had to give access to our wall.


after applying impregnation paint, foam is added for further insulation

fixing the foam to the wall with these blue pins
foam fixed

The new method of renovating this external wall: applying an impregnation paint on the stone wall. After that a 4 cm thick insulating foam was fixed on the wall (with blue pins, see above). And at the end, a finishing of colored plaster comes on top.


a glimpse of the new look (December 2014)

A large portion of our first year's vacation rental earnings will go into that wall.... But that is the purpose of renting out our guest residence. The income should help to maintain and improve the residence and to pay the running cost of the house. Hopefully, we won't have this kind of major spending on renovation again any time soon, and will be able to build up some reserve funds. Our project remains a project ... but a wonderful one.

See below the side façade over the years. And now, just in time before some rainy days, we finished the insolation and plaster work.


house in 2006 before renovation project started

after renovation in November / December 2008

after 2nd renovation December 2014






Hoaba Datschi - Bavarian Blueberry Cake

Hoaba Datschi (here with blueberries and raspberries)

The Hoaba Datschi is a Bavarian desert. You could translate it into German as "Heidelbeer-Auflauf" which doesn't sounds even half as original (urig), and don't think of it as a "Blueberry Casserole". Its' a Hoaba Datschi.

I was invited to a girls evening at my friends house. She planned on serving Bavarian food and asked me if I could bring a desert. So I googled "bayrische Suessspeisen" and decided on that yummy looking desert which I found via the blog Die Landfrau.

"Hoaba" is Bavarian and translates blueberries (which is Blaubeeren or Heidelbeeren in high German language). But what is a "Datschi"? It's a Southern German word, and stands for the cake (although there are many different recipes for a "Datschi", most famous is the "Zwetschgendatschi", a plum sheet cake). The original meaning might come from the verb "tatschen" (English = to touch) or "hineindatschen" as the fruits are pressed into the dough (in some recipes). In the "Hoaba Datschi" the fruits however sink into a very liquid dough, comparable to a pancake dough.


ingredients:
5 eggs (separated)
200 gr sugar
300 gr flour
350 ml milk
1 pinch of salt
some butter for the mold
500 gr blueberries


how to:
1) pre-heat the oven, add some butter into the mold(s)
2) beat the egg white until stiff
3) mix egg yolk, sugar, flour, salt and milk like a pancake mixture
4) gently fold in the stiff egg white
5) pour the liquid into mold(s) and top it with the blueberries
6) bake it in the oven at 180 degree for 20-25 minutes


tips:
You can use fresh or frozen berries, and you could add raspberries to the blueberries. For serving you could sprinkle a bit of icing sugar. It goes also nicely (when fresh from the oven or warmed up) with vanilla ice cream or whipped cream.


Blueberries added on top
- you can use excess dough to make muffins -

before baking - the berries before sinking

make the wooden stick test after 20 minutes in the oven

Hoaba Datschi with blueberries (Hoaba) and raspberries


to sprinkle with sugar or icing sugar (with or without whipped cream)




Tiroler Nusskuchen - Tirolian Nutcake - and a simple pound cake recipe

 
Tirolian Nutcake

When I was a kid, I helped my mum in the kitchen. My special fields were salad dressings and cakes. Despite being around when she was cooking, I never really developed cooking skills. Beside some dishes I am quiet successful with, I prefer very much baking over cooking. For good reasons: the entire home smells better, the kitchen is less messy, and you enjoy a cake usually over a longer period of time meaning baking is a much more efficient process.

One of my usual cakes for the weekend was among others a plain "pound cake" (Sandkuchen) with lemon icing. That easy and quick cake can be varied and become a "marble cake" (Marmorkuchen) when adding chocolate powder (and icing sugar on top). Or it can become a "birthday cake" when adding chopped nuts and chocolate (and rum raisins for those who like it, together with a chocolate coat). But recently, I found a more elegant variation of the pound cake, a recipe that tops it all: it's the Tirolian Nutcake (Tiroler Nusskuchen).


ingredients:
200 gr butter
200 gr sugar
6 eggs (separate white and yolk)
250 gr almonds (1/2 roughly cut, 1/2 finely ground)
200 gr dark chocolate grated (rasped or finely cut)
125 gr flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon cinnamon
lemon skin grated


how to:
1) mix well butter, sugar and egg yolk
2) add flour, baking soda and cinnamon
3) add all almonds (fold in with wooden spoon)and lemon skin
4) mix well egg white until stiff (in separate bowl)
5) fold into dough with wooden spoon
6) at the end add the chocolate and fold in slowly
7) bake 1h at 180 degree (don't forget to preheat the oven)


Tips:
Bake the cake a day earlier as it will taste even better the next day(s).
You can also freeze the cake or part which makes it also yummy moistly later.
Instead of making a cake, you can make muffins.
Top the cake or muffins with icing sugar.
If you don't have icing sugar, make some by adding normal sugar in a mixer.


------------------------------------------
 

My basic Pound Cake recipe, easy to remember, easy to vary:

ingredients:
250 gr butter
250 gr sugar
250 gr flour
4 eggs
1 pack of vanilla sugar (teaspoon)
1/2 teaspoon of baking soda
1 spoon of rum

how to:
1) mix butter, entire eggs and sugar well
2) add flour ad baking soda
3) add vanilla sugar and rum
4) bake 1h at 180 degree

Tips:
You can double the ingredients to use the heated oven more efficiently with two cakes, or one cake and muffins. You can freeze part of your bake.
Topping can be simple icing sugar, or lemon icing (lemon zest with icing sugar), or melted chocolate.
For the "marble cake" variation, take 1/3 of the dough in another bowl and add (sieved) dark chocolate powder (up to your taste). Into the cake pan add first one layer white dough, then a layer chocolate dough and the last layer again white dough. Dip with a fork gently up and down through the layers to achieve the marble effect.