We hustled the 10 ft. across our courtyard into the small two room addition to eat dinner. It had been spitting all day and the rain was starting to pick up. Sitting on tiny benches or the one large woven mat, eating by the fire always puts me in a good mood, both for the palpable communal energy generate by eating in such close quarters as well as the rich flavors that accompany cooking on wood rather than gas. Last night, out of the caldron (I think reading Harry Potter in Spanish is affecting my vocab...) my mom poured out fava beans and potatoes while my dad used the mortar and pestle to pulverize the aji peppers and chives into a thin but flavorful salsa, as we would say. One of my brothers mixed the toasted corn kernels with fresh though flavorless cheese from a hacienda up the hill, while the youngest arrived carrying the obligatory stack of bowls and spoons (the only utensils we use). The rain was now at a solid downpour, the open windows in the unfinished cement room facilitating a crazy conversion of heat from the fire and cold wet air, shoving the smoke to the top two feet of the room.
Best surprise to ever - arrived in a sac of potatoes |
The first bolt of lightning lit up the sky about two potatoes into dinner, with the thunder waiting a polite six or seven seconds to release the pent up screams of all the kids. With every bolt, everyone said a prayer and touched their head, torso, and shoulders in the form of a cross - I recieved more confused looks than usual when I failed to follow suit.
Shameless puppy photo shoot ensued |
I fell asleep feeling like a tiny but wholly integrated part of this amazing, powerful world. My lips burned from the aji, my hair still wet from the fleeting moments outside findings lights and feeding the pigs, the continuing downpour, intermittent thunder, and little bits of Latin pop music coming from a brothers phone, left me feeling content and sleeping like a baby.
On a totally unrelated note, here is one of the few pictures from last weekend, when I went to Ambato with my friend Jake for Carnaval. In lieu of throwing water, Ambato celebrates with a parade of fruits and flower. That being said, kids and adults alike were still ruthless in their foam attacks of the two tall gringos.
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