Germany

Was Wir Essen

Day five in Luneberg and things still continue to surprise me. As a completely irrelevant tidbit, which may only be impressive to me, the toilets in Germany are quite efficient! To flush, there’s a large button above the seat with a “stop” function – so you can stop the release of water if it’s sufficiently flushed the toilet. Brilliant. I am glad I am related, if only tangentially, to these people.

I have found myself rather unsatiated in this country, eating-wise. Our hostel actually serves three meals a day, though breakfast is the only desirable meal. Then, you can find literally every toast spread you could want – blackberry, raspberry, and strawberry jams, honey, butter, Nutella, and “beet syrup” (which I have yet to try…but need to). And there’s a great assortment of oatmeal, muesli, and cereal. Sadly, lunch and dinner consist of mystery meats, limp salads, and either potatoes or pasta. Hunger has naturally ensued and eating out once a day has become almost a necessity.

Luckily, there’s plenty of delicious, cheap street food in town, particularly in this season in the Christmas markets. At various booths, you can purchase all sorts of fantastic potatoes, mushrooms, cabbages, crepes, doughnuts, and bratwursts (which make even me, a vegetarian, drool). Along the streets, there’s also an abundance of bakeries and coffee shops, where you can buy flaky, cinnamon-y things with names you can’t pronounce and get a steaming chococino sprinkled with cocoa. One thing I particularly appreciate about German coffee shops is that they have only whole and skim milk, and plain white sugar. None of that soy, almond, artificial nonsense.

Today was a particularly good food discovery day, not necessarily for the food itself, but for the ambience. We decided to push through extra material in class this morning, and consequently, missed lunch at the hostel. The class dispersed, and I was walking back, I caught a classmate meadering in a different direction on campus, saying he was searching for a new place to eat. I decided to join him in his pursuit. We didn’t walk long before we came upon a cafe, but not your regular cafe. A cafe with a literal beach. Inside, you order your coffee and bagel at a normal counter. Take a right, and you can enter one room with only cushions on the floor for you to kick your shoes off and read. Enter the room beside it, and you find the floor covered in a thick layer of sand with makeshift boardwalks upon it. The tables are just small, square wood crates, and the seats are all beanbags. We sat inside for hours, reading and drinking coffee; it was as if we had left Luneberg altogether The students at this school are lucky to have this getaway.

It is this aspect of travel I enjoy most: being on your way to do one thing, and then stumbling on something completely unexpected. I was simply walking along to see what I could see at Leuphana University, and suddenly, I was on a beach in the middle of Germany, on a cloudy, chilly winter day. Life just seems improbable to me at times (and it doesn’t matter where I am), and I love it. If I had no obligations, I would simply walk endlessly, exploring the world, to see what I would stumble upon. I hope these experiences keep coming during my time here.

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Ich Liebe Luneberg

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