Thursday 27 November 2014

Head, tails and blind tasting…



I was recently invited to a fundraising event in support of St Mungo’s Broadway. This event, organised by SA Law, took the form of a contest: a blind wine tasting… clearly my favourite type of contest!

After the welcome drinks, we were divided into teams and sat around tables laid with platters of cheese and crackers. We first listened to a presentation of St Mungo’s Broadway's initiatives to help the homeless and after the introductions, we started !

Believe it or not, there is a true art to taste a wine blind. It is like a puzzle where colours, aromas and tastes make up the pieces. It is a challenge which requires concentration and immerses you in remote memories.

The oenologist who had chosen the wines started to give us elementary tips: how to stick your nose in a glass of wine, to give it a couple of sniffs, swirls and sips; how to look at a wine, its viscosity, pigmentation and color which is usually the first clue to find out the variety of grape used in its production.


We were given charts with several suggestions for the country, the name, the year and the price. We started with a white wine: it was not so easy! We got the country, the year and the price right… not the region! We were then offered two glasses of sparkling wine: one was Champagne, the other was a sparkling wine processed according to the ‘Méthode Champenoise’. Our first, instinctive choice was unanimous and... correct. However, when we started to apply the techniques of smell (yeast versus fruit), sights (small bubbles versus bigger ones) and got into the intellectual – if I may call it so – approach, we ended up with the wrong result! We still got the correct price and year. The next test was not wine… We were given a small box with 4 tiny jars. Each jar contained the aroma of a common fruit we had to recognise. This was baffling: the fruits were pear, blackcurrent, raspberry and grapefruit. Though we were all familiar with these fruits, it was truly difficult to recognise them by just smelling them. The toughest was undoubtedly black current despite being one of the most popular fruit juice in the UK: Ribena!


At this point of the contest, the general atmosphere was merry, chatty and... bubbly! The last wine was a red… the toughest one! The aspect of the robe and aromas were clearly misleading… We ended up with the correct price and age but the wrong country and region. How frustrating!

This great evening was drawing to an end. We had a raffle and ended with ‘Head or Tails’ which I had never heard of.

We all left with the curious impression that we were parting from dear friends… Truly there is nothing like a wine tasting evening to make friends and enjoy the lightness of life!




Written by Florence Tilkens. Florence is Social Media and Marketing Manager at FOCUS.

For more information please visit www.focus-info.org

Should you wish to share your expat experiences in the UK, please contact us: office@focus-info.org

Thursday 20 November 2014

International women invading the Ritz!





On Monday, 10 November 2014, The Federation of International Women’s Association in London (FIWAL) hosted its Annual Presidents’ Luncheon at The Ritz Hotel. FIWAL has 33 clubs under its umbrella and every year invites all the Clubs Presidents to lunch. As FOCUS is a member club, Alessandra attended together with me as an Executive Honorary Treasurer of FIWAL.

After a very warm welcome at the door, we were escorted to the Music Room of the William Kent House (acquired in 2005 by The Ritz), and handed a fruit cocktail. Whilst I attended to my duties, checking names off the guest list, Alessandra mingled with the other guests, all fellow members of FIWAL,  also greeted FIWAL Founder members, Past Presidents and other Dignitaries – wives of the Italian, Chilean, Turkish Ambassador and Australian High Commissioner in London.

Lunch started at 12.30, Roast Halibut with Mushroom Puree or Artichoke Royal with Seasonal Vegetables, Perigord Truffle and Mushroom Veloute for the vegetarians…….yummy!!!! Over lunch, I chatted with Sophia (from Greece) and Laura (from Italy) and had a wonderful discussion about holidays and cuisine in both these countries. Alessandra sat with Benedetta (Italian) and Laura (American).


Over dessert which was a really scrumptious exotic fruit soufflé with banana ice cream, washed down with more petits fours, tea or coffee, our guest speaker, Brigid Keenan, had us all in fits of laughter as she relived some of her adventures as a diplomatic wife. Being an author and a journalist, she had used her talents and had written two books, 'Diplomatic Baggage' and ' Packing Up', based on her experiences of being a 'trailing spouse of a diplomat'.

It was such a wonderful day spent in a very special Music Room at The Ritz, with close camaraderie and fellowship of women from all cultures and countries. It was really sad to say goodbye when it was time to leave but thank you Fiwal for organising such a fantastic luncheon!



http://fiwal.org.uk/

Written by Irene Kuan. Irene is Director of Finance at FOCUS.

For more information about FOCUS visit:  www.focus-info.org





Thursday 13 November 2014

It’s a small world… of SMILEY FACES!




This week I had the privilege to be invited to attend a very Malaysian morning at the High Commission. I had been invited by my Malaysian colleague and what a delightful event it was! Arriving at their grand house on Belgrave Square, accompanied by my perpetually grinning friend, I was greeted by some of the most smiley hosts I have ever met, who directed us to their main room where we were to watch a typical show.

The event started with a Master of Ceremony who concisely explained the different cultural influences that this multi-coloured country has been through the centuries, until it became independent in 1957. An initial ‘speech’ which could have been a somehow tedious affair, ended up being anything but, thanks to this witty, understated smiling MC. He explained that even the very typical performance of music and dance we were about to see was influenced by Dutch, English, Indian, Chinese, Portuguese, Sri Lankan and Indonesian cultures; the melting pot which is this vibrant country. And so the band began to play and the dancers came in, one by one, all with colourful and beautiful smiles on their faces.

When I looked at the audience around me I noticed that, like me, they were also made up of representatives of very different and sometimes exotic countries. But what really struck me was the fact that the Malaysian smile is contagious. At the end of the performance, and after most of the audience had clapped and chanted at the lovely music we were listening to, we were all invited to join in on the stage (or should I say dance floor). For another 20 minutes most of us were having so much fun dancing with total strangers…and every single person was smiling.

As the party continued we were invited for a typical lunch, with several dishes and deserts, again influenced by very different cultures. So, different tastes, different looks, different religions, different music and instruments, all mixed up in a melting pot that defines this country: welcoming, warm and accepting of all kind of differences…with an inviting and colourful smile!



Written by Valeria Fleury. Valeria  is FOCUS Director of  Membership.

For more information about FOCUS visit:  www.focus-info.org

Thursday 6 November 2014

The 311 steps… (not exactly a Hitchcock movie !)





October is a fantastic month in London… As the summer turns into autumn, the great city’s colours dramatically change from green to copper and red and London welcomes a new guest: Fog! October is also when British schools break up for a half-term holiday and many London attractions – Natural History Museum,  the Tower of London, London Bridge - put on special family-friendly events.

My 9 year-old niece visited us for half-term and we decided to spend her last day in Tower Hill, almost a ‘time travel machine’ with its concentration of medieval, Tudor, Victorian, 20th century and futuristic samples of London. We started with the Tower of London’s amazing exhibition of over 8,000 ceramic poppies. Planted in the dry moat around the Tower, these poppies commemorate the death of each soldier from the UK, Australia and the Commonwealth killed during World War I.

When we arrived, hundreds of tourists were already there. The spectacular display, visible from all around the Tower, was baffling and was a powerful evocation of World War I’s toll on the army. 

The crowd was so thick that we did not stay for too long. After a few photos, we quickly moved to the Victorian Tower Bridge. We started with the North Tower that showed an animated video where spectators were invited to experience the story of the Bridge as part of an audience with Queen Victoria, Sir John Wolfe-Barry, the designer of Tower Bridge, and his architect Sir Horace Jones. Short and funny, the animation appealed to both adults and children and explained why the construction of a new bridge was a dire necessity for Londoners. The South Tower offered a bespoke video which depicted the construction of the bridge. Then we walked to the Bridge’s high-level West Walkway, enjoying a spectacular panoramic view of London… much better and less crowed than the Millenium Eye! We ended our visit with the Engine Rooms. The atmosphere there took us back to the Victorian era and its taste for science, progress and technological improvement, an era when steam was everything ; we even experienced a virtual bridge lift! 

We came out at dusk ; the fog had already ‘swallowed’ the Shard. A typical October evening in London! 

On our way back, we stopped in Monument Street to climb the 311 steps of the colossal doric column built to commemorate the 1666 Great Fire of London and the rebuilding of the City.  The view from the top was worth the climb: totally breathtaking… and not just because of the climb ! Funnily enough, when coming down, we were offered a certificate confirming that we had climbed the 311 steps of the Monument… We did not count  but I reckon that our muscles understood! The trip ended in the nearest pub where we discussed our afternoon full of sensations, emotions and discoveries in the great city!




Tower Bridge:  http://www.towerbridge.org.uk/TBE/EN/
The Great Fire of London: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00ft63q





Written by Florence Tilkens.  Florence is Social Media and Marketing Manager at FOCUS.
 
For more information please visit www.focus-info.org