We celebrated the 2010 New Year with a wonderful dinner which included a 13 pound stuffed turkey, potatoes, purple yams topped with multi-colored marshmallows and ending with apple crisp with vanilla ice cream. The only thing we could not find was cranberries.
Turkey’s are very expensive here – imported ones from the USA cost over $50.00USD for a 15-17lb turkey. We opted for the Ecuadorian turkey which comes with feet, neck and head stuffed inside the turkey. Our 13 lb (6.5 kilo) Ecuadorian turkey cost us $23.00USD.
The dinner was absolutely delicious!
We celebrated a rather laid-back New Year’s Eve – none of us are ‘party-ers’ anymore. But, just wait another 10 years when Megan is 19 years old and I’ll bet she’ll be partying. Was a lot of craziness happening in Cuenca last night with lots of fireworks going off for hours before midnight.
Everything which is imported is more expensive than in the USA (one-year ‘temporary’ 22% import tax), so living in Ecuador is not much cheaper than living in Portland, Oregon, but the winter weather is much nicer.
PS Just when I was finally ready to post this, the internet went down for the remainder of Jan 1st, so here it is posted at 7am Jan 2nd.
Yup, it’s been a good day, now time to relax and enjoy some ice cream. Except the ice cream doesn’t melt here — it is something like ‘dream whip’.
November 3rd was Cuenca’s Independence Day. It is a major town in Ecuador, south of Quito.
Today, Mai quickly noticed when she went to the market to shop that almost all of the shops were closed. The Ecuadorian people seem to observer their holidays much more reverently than the Vietnamese who work almost every day of the year. Mai was also amazed at how the observance of one’s ancestors was here in Ecuador (see below) like what is observed in Vietnam.

