Daily living

Things Are a Little Different Here…

When I found out we were moving to England, I had a lot of different emotions: scared, nervous, excited… I was thankful that if we were going overseas, that it was to a country that spoke the same language! Well…pretty much.

Before we came here, my sister and mother-in-law threw me a bridal shower. Amanda had us play a game where we had to try to figure out different British words/slang. It was pretty hilarious! I still will occasionally watch a British TV show where something will be said, the audience laughs, and I sit feeling dumb, because I have no idea why it was funny. My friend Steve sent me this to help out, but it’s a pretty lengthy list!

The language isn’t the only thing that’s different here. I mean, there is the obvious one: driving on the left side of the road. But I continue to find other little differences that make life more interesting. I think one of the first “weird” thing I noticed was the lack of outlets or lightswitches in bathrooms. The only outlet you will find in a British bathroom is for an electric shaver. That’s it. And most of them have this:

That would be a pull cord in the bathroom to turn on the light. On base, the bathrooms just have the ligthtswitch on the wall outside the bathroom. When I Googled this, I read several things about British children turning off the light while their sibling was using the bathroom because of this. So I’m glad our bathrooms have the pull cord! I’ve been told that it’s a safety practice to keep the light switch away from the moisture, to lessen the chance of electrocuting yourself when you use it. I’ve also heard that it’s because British people are paranoid about being electrocuted in the bathroom, but I have no idea if that’s true.

Another interesting thing: no screens on the windows. I guess since I have always had screens on my windows growing up, I have a low tolerance for insects (flying ones more than anything else) in my house. Apparently, it’s also an annoyance for British people, but not a big enough one to warrant covering their windows with “ugly” screens. They say that having no screens makes it easy for that annoying fly to fly out, just as it flew in.

Look, ma, no screen! Yes, I think I'm funny.

I also read that screens were developed in the US, and they just never caught on in the “old” countries. Another reason? Windows did not all used to be the same size. In very old buildings, all the screens would have to be custom-made. And apparently, everyone in Europe likes to stick their heads out of their windows to say hello to people they know, but I’ve never actually seen anyone do this. The most common reason I read for not having screens? They’re ugly and unnecessary.

Another obvious difference: the oven is in Celsius, not Fahrenheit. That was hard to get used to at first, but now I barely even think about it. When I see 350F on my recipe, I automatically think 180C. The convection oven was also an adjustment for me. My first few dishes came out burnt on the top, and my cookies were done in half the time (so yes, that first batch came out a little crispy!). But now, I love my convection oven. The top oven we have is normal (what is a non-convection oven, anyway?), and I very rarely use it unless I’m baking two things at once. I think the convection oven is much more efficient, and now that I’m used to it, I think the things I cook/bake turn out better too.

Now an another annoyance: concrete walls. I was excited to start hanging up pictures and photos, as well as my floating shelves. That quickly got put on hold when we realized a hammer and nail just wasn’t going to cut it. Andrew even broke a masonry drill bit in the wall trying to hang my shelves. Thankfully, he got two of the shelves up. I’m still hoping we can hang the third one eventually… But then a friend informed me of these:

They are small plastic hangers that you can hammer into the wall. They come in different sizes to hold different weights, but so far the small ones have done fine for hanging my pictures!

I’m sure there are more differences that I’m not even thinking about, but these are some of the big ones for me. Sometimes the differences are a little irritating, but overall, I like living in a foreign country and learning about the little quirks that make different places unique.

Daily living · Recipes

Thanksgiving 2011

So, I mentioned that Andrew invited a lot of people over for Thanksgiving, right? I can’t say I was too upset… I had also been thinking that we should have a group over for the holiday, I just had been concerned with how long it would take to make everything look decent after our household goods arrived. I think Andrew & I probably just work really well with deadlines! Procrastination happens, but it always gets done in time. 🙂

Once the house was looking like an actual home, I presented Andrew with the next task: decorating. His take on decorating for Thanksgiving? “You can do whatever you want, just don’t spend a bunch of money.” For reals? So I had to think creatively. I’ll admit, I did spend more than I wanted to on candles. But that was because we weren’t allowed to pack any of ours from home. So I had to start from scratch there. And when I was browsing stores for Thanksgiving-y decor, I found that there wasn’t much to pick from. I mean, Thanksgiving isn’t celebrated in England, so they jumped from Halloween to Christmas. And the stores on the bases didn’t have much to pick from either.

When I woefully told Andrew that I couldn’t find anything good, he told me we should just go get things from the woods. Brilliant! I started looking online for cute ideas using pinecones and branches. Andrew was a big help too — sometimes I think he is more of a perfectionist than me! He shook his head a lot of my branches & leaves for “better” ones. So I stuck to pinecones. 🙂

I had left the majority of my vases back home to be packed into storage, but I did bring a couple of them with me. They ended up looking really nice on the mantle filled with pinecones and branches.

We rented some tables and chairs from the rec department on base to seat everyone for dinner. Andrew set up the branches on the buffet table — I loved how it looked!

Yes, we opted for paper plates for easier clean-up. Plus I didn’t have enough actual plates for everyone. Andrew & I were really glad our conservatory was big enough for all of this!

Once decorating was taken care of, it was time to focus on food. I really didn’t have much to focus on, since Andrew was cooking the turkey. So I made us a yummy casserole for brunch and a dip in a bread bowl as an appetizer. Andrew made the bread bowl — it was so yummy!

I was really thankful that Andrew wanted to take on the turkey. I have never cooked a whole bird of any species before, and I didn’t think a big ol’ bird (the one Andrew got was 24 pounds!) was going to fit in one of our little British ovens. Well, turns out it barely fit in Andrew’s grill!

Andrew also grilled beets as a side dish. And a sweet potato side dish as well. I handled some of the typical sides: mashed potatoes and gravy, homemade stuffing (that was a lot of bread to cut up…), and a pumpkin pie. We had some of our guests bring other sides, like corn and green bean casserole. We even had someone bring a huge thing of Rice-a-Roni. 🙂 I thought we had a lot of food…

…but there was almost nothing left by the end of it! Young single guys can certainly eat a lot of food!

So overall, everything went really well! Yes, a lot of our guests got lost on the way to our house, but most of them made it! And the turkey took longer than expected, but it was the best turkey I’ve ever eaten! Andrew & I are still surprised that we managed to pull it off as well as we did.

Yeah, I know I look kinda goofy!

Happy Thanksgiving from England!

Daily living

Our Stuff Arrives!

I was really peeved when our household good didn’t arrive by the end of October. I thought two months was PLENTY of time to ship things over here, but apparently I was wrong. Once the shipment arrived, it had to go through customs, and then it had to be sent up to our neck of England. When Andrew found out our things would be delivered on November 16th, I was ecstatic! I obviously just wanted to use our own things again, but I was also relieved that all of our kitchen items would be here because… Andrew had volunteered us to host Thanksgiving for 12+ people. Yikes.

We were up before 8am, just in case the movers came right away. They didn’t, but that gave us time to move our loaner furniture into the conservatory and move the loaner bed into our second bedroom. Every time I heard a noise, I was convinced it was the movers. I just couldn’t sit still! And then the big truck arrived!

I really hope they didn’t see me snap this picture… that would have been a little embarrassing. I was probably way too excited to care though! I was surprised by how quickly they unloaded everything, but our movers in Wisconsin were also much faster than I thought they would be. Soon our house was filled with boxes…

It was pretty overwhelming. After the movers left, we both just sat on the sectional for a little bit. Thankfully nothing was terribly damaged. Except for the sectional… the frame was broken in the move. We still have to file the damages so we can get reimbursed though.

Once Andrew & I took it all in, we got to work. We had gotten bedroom furniture as a wedding gift from Andrew’s parents, but we had left it boxed up for the move. So he went upstairs to tackle furniture assembly. I decided to take on the kitchen. We had an entire box labeled “Glassware” — I had no idea where it was all going to go! After some maneuvering of shelves and trial and error, I got it all to fit, more or less. And Andrew got our bedroom ready for our first good night’s sleep in the house!

Having the bedroom and kitchen taken care of helped a lot, but there was still a LOT to unpack. We managed to get the downstairs looking good by Thanksgiving, but the upstairs is still a work in progress!