Strawberry-Basil-Watermelon Smoothie “Recipe”

I know I just posted a blog entry half an hour ago, but I wanted to share this non-recipe.

The weather is getting quite warm in Alanya, and it’s only going to get hotter.  I’ve been toying with the idea of eating mostly raw foods this summer, with the exception of a few grainy, bean-y, dishes, and of course a few yummy baked summer fruit crumbles.

I’ve been drinking lots of colorful smoothies lately–35 Turkish lira (about $20 US) goes reeeeally far at the Oba-Alanya farmers’ market, and I’ve been trying to finish my produce in time to stock up again on Thursday.  It’s probably not going to happen.

For this smoothie, I used about two cups of strawberries, including their tops, a handful of purple basil leaves, and a quarter of a huge watermelon.

Strawberry-Basil-Watermelon Smoothie

Strawberry-Basil-Watermelon Smoothie

Instructions: Blend it all up!  (I like to blend the leafy, seedy parts–the strawberries and the basil–first on their own.  The watermelon takes only a couple whirls in the blender to emulsify.

This made one liter of very refreshing, tasty juice/light-density smoothie, and I drank it up all by myself!

Did you ever get the feeling you were being watched?

Lazing around my Alanya apartment on my day off, half-intending to eventually make it to the store to buy nail polish remover before it closed, I noticed this camel outside my window.

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I couldn’t get a decent shot of it without going outside, so getting this photo became the impetus to make my trip to the store a reality.

Once on the move, I took advantage of the opportunity to enjoy watching the sun as it set over the Mediterranean Sea.

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Paradise!

While I was taking the above photo, I got the sensation I was being watched, a rather common sensation in Turkey.

I turned around and awkwardly met eyes with a tall, thin fellow who was walking by, and quickly turned back to face the sea.

Is he still there? I wondered.

Of course he was.

I knew the answer, but I turned around for another awkward eye meeting.  He was walking past again, this time in the opposite direction.  Argh!

Foto çekim mi?“  He offered to take my photo.

Why not?  I figured.  Since I’m in Alanya alone at the moment, all of my photos are of me facing the mirror, holding my phone and trying to keep it from blocking my face.  (Lame.)

“Alright, thanks,” I said.  “But take it from far back, so it looks good.”  (No makeup.)

He obliged.

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He returned my phone, and went on his way.  I headed to the market.

Two minutes later, I got that sensation again.  I turned around.

Surprise!

“Are you following me?” I asked.

“No,” he lied.

Then he said, “I thought, maybe, I could ask you to take my number.  And maybe you would give me a chance.  Otherwise, I just won’t be able to sleep tonight.”

Charming!  (Creepy-charming.)

I took his number, but I won’t call him.  I never do.

My sister says I’m single because I never give anyone a chance.  My BFF says I’m too in love with my job and travels for a relationship anyway.

Personally, I’ve decided I’m a late bloomer.  I’ll probably meet someone some day.  Just not yet.

When/how did you meet your soul mate?  Or are you forever alone, like me?

Settling In and Sorting It Out

I arrived in Alanya on Thursday afternoon, and so far, so good.  No rest for the weary–I performed later that night.  Loved the stage, loved the crowd, and really, really love the people who hired me.  I also got to meet the other two belly dancers.  One is friendly, curly-headed (automatic points in her favor), and pleasant.  The other is a zenne, or male belly dancer.  He’s moody and rude-y.  What do you mean, why am I in the dressing room?  Because I’m a major star, that’s why!  Maybe he was having an off-personality day.  I’ll give him another chance.

First night on the job!

First night on the job!

The apartment they gave us is gorgeous, with views of the Mediterranean Sea from every window.  I’m sharing it with the bookkeeper.  She works seven days a week, from 9:00am to midnight, which is a definite bonus in a roommate.  The management has been working diligently to get everything complete in the house, which has been vacant for quite some time–cleaning, replacing appliances, purchasing a full length mirror so my roommate can check herself out, etc.  There was just one (major) problem.  The refrigerator they’d bought second hand and had moved into the house just before I arrived, while unassuming enough in daylight, was SWARMING WITH ROACHES that scattered guiltily when we came home from work that evening and flicked on the light.  I may be vegan, but roaches are where I draw the line.  First thing the following morning, the exterminator was called, the refrigerator was removed, and poison was sprayed.  I usually don’t like chemicals–I clean my house with vinegar, baking soda, and castile soap–but again, these were extenuating circumstances.  The problem seems to have been remedied.  I saw one lone roach today, lying dead on his back.  May he rest in peace.

Friday, yesterday, was my off day, and time explore the neighborhood, visit the beach, get friendly with the cafe owner downstairs, start an argument with (then immediately apologize to) the girl at Migros who sold me some stale nuts, and finally rest from the emotional, hectic, and vermin-laced roller-coaster I’d been riding since leaving Istanbul.

Traumatic cockroach experience aside, everything has been great.  I think I’m going to like it here.

Practice and Programs

For my next long term gig, they’ve requested two shows.  One for Turkish Night, and the other for Palace Night.

Palace Night entertainment features, but is not limited to (i.e. I don’t remember the whole program): a fusion dance group of two or three, a Russian revue dance group, a Russian-speaking comedian, and me.  I think I will perform candle tray that night.  (Sorry, Mom.  I know you hate fire.)

Turkish night includes live music, another belly dancer (she’s from Turkmenistan), a zenne (male belly dancer), a folk dance group, a Kafkas group (I love this.  The female dancers are elegant and graceful, and the men do this thing where they parade around on their toes, which is cool and surprisingly masculine.)  For Turkish Night, I think I’ll incorporate some floor work and a cane dance.  “But cane dancing is Egyptian and Lebanese!” you say.  And I say, “So, what?”

Months ago, in one of my updates, I mentioned that I had been doing some improvisations with darbuka player Coşar Kamçı, formerly of Baba Zula, and promised that I would post one online eventually.  Well, I probably never would have, but my drummer did, so here it is.  I think we recorded this one in August of 2012.  Please note: the refrigerator in the background and my sigh of relief at the end signify authenticity.

Adventures in Danceland

So, my mother came to Turkey for the first time.  Yay!

Mom and me.  Do we look alike?

Mom and me. Do we look alike?

We had a great time and did lots!  Here is one of our adventures:

A talent manager/agent contacted me to discuss at length (ad nauseum?) an opportunity to perform at hotels in Alanya, but I turned it down.  What he’d described  didn’t seem like a good fit.–It sounded very similar to what I’d done in Bodrum two summers ago, which was only wonderful until I got fed up with it.  Plus, I’d already been to Alanya to perform with another agent, (just briefly, before I escaped to Bodrum) and what a fiasco that was!  Besides, I’m quite happy in Istanbul.

To my surprise, he contacted me again to introduce me to a colleague of his.  The second agent proposed my performing nightly in a beautiful, historic venue in Alanya.  Still not a perfect fit–he wanted me to start work mid-April, but I have obligations here until at LEAST May.  I thought if I went anywhere to dance this summer, it would be to Fethiye for three months, starting early June or so.

He told me to think about it and he would call me the next morning at 9:00.  If I’m not mistaken, my mother and I were enjoying some homemade carrot cake pancakes (YUM!) when he called the following day 9:01 am.  He listed all the reasons I should take this job, offered to postpone my start date, and asked if he could fly me down to Alanya so I could “see the venue, the city, and how he operated.”  The answer to that was “Of course!”

I told him I could make the trip the following weekend, after my mother’s visit had finished.  After all, she and I were hanging out in Istanbul!

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But since he preferred to meet this weekend, he suggested that he send for both me and my mother.  Soooo. . .  my mother and I were flown to sunny Alanya and put up in a nice hotel, visited the beach, and also met the very professional, persistent and polite manager, his supportive and hardworking wife, and their charming, cheerful 4 year old daughter.  We were thoroughly introduced to the venue–

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Beautiful and old!

its grounds, stage, staff, food, and owner are all very lovely–and shown the apartment in which I’d be living were I to take the job.  The venue is open 11 months a year, so my mom and I also got a chance to watch the winter/off-season program, which was highly entertaining.

Between what seems like a most pleasant workplace, and a south facing, sea-view apartment situated right across, and I mean right across the street from the beach, I must say I’m enticed.

My mom is already planning to come back.

Dance Life

After long post-New Year’s hiatus during January and most of February, my performance schedule started to pick up toward the third week of February, starting with my show in Van, then the listening party for a pop singer called Arman, where I performed with incredible percussionist Bünyamin Olguncan, and some other great musicians at Ghetto Music Lounge.  (Don’t ask me why it’s called that, but it’s a cool place.)

This Friday and Saturday past, I performed with Besidos, the Balkan-gypsy-pop quartet of Germany in their shows at Nublu Istanbul.  It was so much fun!  Here’s a video from Saturday:

Yesterday was pretty cool, too.  I, along with 29 other dancers, performed an oryantal choreography in a music video for Israeli singer Dudu, to be released this summer in Israel.  We also had to sing a bit.  In Hebrew!  The filming took place in a beautiful hotel on the Bosphorus in the Tarabya area of Istanbul and lasted allllllll day.  I met some cool dancers, and a few weird ones, too.

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So much fun!  What’s next?

Hey, old maid! Thoughts on aging and Turkey.

Turkish people have a unique perspective on aging.  Here in Istanbul, it’s common for couples to marry in their early or mid-20s, and begin having children shortly after that.  An unmarried woman who’s in her late 20s might receive this “charming” comment: “Evde kaldın artık.”  Literally, it translates as, “You’ve stayed at [your parents'] home”, but the meaning is: “You’re an old maid.”

My (Turkish) dentist once told me that Turkish people don’t take very good care of themselves.  Of course, there are exceptions to this rule, but I have observed that most men have begun to develop a “Turkish balcony” (fat belly) by the time they reach 27 or so, and I also understand (I received this information during the same conversation with said dentist) that the average age for full dentures in this country is 40.  When I mentioned to a friend that I hoped to have all my same teeth for the rest of my life, she and her adult son laughed heartily.  They genuinely thought I was joking, as though this were an impossible goal.  Further, and rather unfortunately, it’s more common to smoke cigarettes here than to not smoke.  A lot of my acquaintances here also visit the tanning booths, and I don’t know anyone here who uses sun cream, except maybe on a day at the beach.

I know that aging, and all that comes with it, is difficult for people everywhere.  Even I, who happily entered my flirty thirties this past June, felt a bit wistful when I looked into the mirror at age 27 and realized I no longer looked 16.  Still, when my baby-faced friend was moaning about “getting old” on her 22nd birthday, it was hard not to roll my eyes.  Actually, I’m pretty sure I did roll my eyes, and then, like a crotchety old woman, I probably lectured her, saying something like, “Please!  Stop wasting your youth mourning your youth.”

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Here in Turkey, 55 is old.  65 is ancient.  When I told someone my mother’s age, he asked if she could still walk and get around easily.  What?  Walk?!  My mother can touch her toes without bending her knees.

The contractor working in my apartment building is one of the exceptions to this early aging phenomenon.  While he did marry young and have two children well before 30, he doesn’t look any older than he is.  At forty, he’s divorced, fit as a fiddle, has never smoked cigarettes, and drinks only the occasional beer.  He looks pretty good, actually.  I even admit to checking him out while he was moving my refrigerator.  But guess what?  He certainly wasn’t checking me out.  He thought I was a university student, a few years older than his son.  Instead, he had a crush on my friend, who was visiting me from the United States.  She’ll be 50 next month!

Youth is fleeting, and I certainly take precautions now to preserve mine, but life is a gift at every stage, and since aging is inevitable, why not try to enjoy it?

Moving by yourself is hard

I don’t even want to get into the reasons I’m moving unexpectedly to another apartment. (My former roommate morphed into frigid b*tch and her layabout boyfriend was basically living with us.) Instead, I wish to focus on my adorable new Galata area home!
It’s tiny compared to my old apartment, but plenty big enough for me. It’s a corner building, which means my many (doubled paned!) windows (so many that I struggled to find a lady willing to clean them all) face east, west, and north, with one bay window facing south. I even have an itty-bitty balcony. Welcome, smokers!
It’s got two decent-sized rooms–a bedroom and a living room–plus a well-appointed kitchen, a corridor that I plan to utilize to the max, as though it were a real room, and a nice bathroom. Well, the bathroom will be nice after the contractor finishes raising the sink and adding the built-ins.
Moving on your own isn’t easy, though. Especially when you don’t have a car. And when you do hire a car, it can’t easily approach your door because there’s a television show being filmed in your neighborhood. Yesterday, I came via taxi with a dresser, small table, suitcases, and et cetera. The contractor insisted it was a better idea for him to meet the taxi at the bottom of the hill instead of maneuvering our way up to my street. I tried to tell him I had too much stuff for that, but men don’t always listen. Luckily, once my possessions had all been unloaded onto to curb, and the contractor was scratching his head, “Hmm, you do have a lot of stuff”, this man with an empty wagon rolled our way.
Müsait misiniz?” I asked hopefully. (“Are you free?”)
He was, so we loaded everything onto his wagon and he got an excellent workout pushing it up the short but steep hill. He seemed pleased with the 10 lira I gave him for his help. The taxi driver had suggested I give him five!

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Van Show

I hadn’t heard of Van until a year and a half ago, when the area suffered severe damage, injuries and deaths from a major earthquake. It’s a city near the eastern border of Turkey, about an hour and a half from Iran. When I accepted a gig there, my friend said, Van? That’s the city Turkey forgot about. Why are you going there?
Well, there are plenty of people who haven’t forgotten about Van, namely those who live there, and the those who live for Van-made herbed cheese. The show was a kadınlar matinesi. The closest translation I can come up with is a “ladies’ luncheon”, which took place in a hotel ballroom.
I loooooved the hotel, a five-star ordeal called Rescate, facing the impressively huge Van Lake and breathtakingly beautiful, snow-covered mountains,

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and employing the Best Staff Ever. We (the event organizers, one of the other performers, and I) arrived a day early, so I got a chance to enjoy the Friday night entertainment: live music in the top floor bar. The other entertainer who arrived with us to perform at the matinee was VJ Bülent, the first VJ on Turkish television, and also the first openly gay man on TV in this still rather homophobic country.
I popped out of the hotel early-ish on Saturday morning to visit an esthetician. There was a salon in the hotel, of course, but it wasn’t full service. I made fast friends with the girls in the local Van salon. One of them took me for a quick stroll around Van’s main drag (okay, we went to the bazaar and I bought a colander) and then, of course, we had a photo shoot.

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After heading back to the hotel, I popped into its salon to have my makeup done by the resident makeup artist.

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While I waited backstage, in walked the event organizer, Tayfun, with a man dressed in a black on black suit and with a dimple in his chin. Tayfun introduced me to the man as though I was already supposed to know who he was. As it turns out, it was Atilla Taş, a well-known and well-loved Turkish pop singer.
The show went off without a hitch. It was a packed ballroom of well-dressed ladies on their feet dancing, singing and applauding for four hours. My portion of the show was a 25 minute performance. I listened to Atilla from back stage. One of his songs was an amusing Turkish rendition of Gagnam Style. Not sure if he performed the accompanying dance as well.
That night, our flight was grounded due to cloudy weather. No biggie. One more sleep in a lovely hotel, and one more shower in a bathroom twice as big as my kitchen.

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Life

On Friday I confided in my playsister that I was feeling a teeny twinge of kıskançlık in my heart. She said, “Don’t be jealous. You have a good life.”
Looking back, it has been a great week.
Khadijah, a dancer from Denver, by way of Saudi Arabia, was in Istanbul.

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We squeezed a lot into her visit–costume shopping, a visit to musician Raquy’s Darbuka Ofis for a bit of drumming and henna,

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a show at Gar Muzikhol where we saw Athena perform,

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a photo shoot with photographers Beatriz (Brazil) and Kareem (Egypt), mutual friends of Athena and Khadijah, but who I was only just meeting, and the Fındıkzade bazaar.
Khadijah left on Saturday and I met up with a few people to visit a smallish club, which was overly crowded and a bit smoky, but otherwise good, then to a huge club, which was also overly crowded, but had some flexible trapeze artists performing above us.

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Today I met up with dancer friends Athena and Leeann for brunch and a trip to the salon, where I got a magenta lock of hair!

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Now I’m at Hits On Air, where my percussionist friend Coşar (formerly of Baba Zula) is recording an album.

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Tomorrow, a trip to the bank and tax office. Woo hoo!

What fun things did you do this week?

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