May 28, 2014

travel noms

As a slight apology for all the late posts and the future late posts I've decided to compensate with food recipes of the past things that I have baked.
I've taken pictures of some of the things I have baked/cooked so I substitute them with Google Images again I apologize but my iPhone was either covered in flour and sugar or in my room at the time of cooking.

One day I was grocery shopping and feeling adult because I had a set grocery list and a budget, but obviously that went away fast when I bought a kilo of carrots for 10SEK when I didn't even need carrots, let alone a kilo of them.
Thinking I would need them for something I bought them and then they stayed in my fridge for a week and then it was time to do something with them. So I made carrot cake cupcakes using the kilo of carrots that I had. 
I made a note to my corridor mates who were going to eat them that if they were too carrot-y tasting that it's because I put a kilo in them.
I had to do something with the carrots guys.


Carrot Cake Cupcakes
3 eggs
1 1/2 cups sugar
1 1/2 cups flour
1 tsp, vanilla
3 tsp baking powder
1 1/2 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp ginger
1/2 tsp cardamom
1 pinch of salt
1/2 cup vegetable oil
2 cups grated carrots

Whisk eggs and sugar.
Mix all dry ingredients
Pour dry into egg mix
Add oil and carrots and mix
Bake for 55 minutes at 300F

Lately, here in Sweden and also in California, I always tend to run out of eggs faster than I run out of milk. I have no idea why, it just happens.
So when I'm craving to bake something but don't' have eggs, Google becomes my friend and I search for 10 minutes on how to make a simple eggless desserts, thus leading to the brownie recipe below.


Eggless Brownies (for the times I have opened my fridge and realized that I don't have eggs)
1 cup flour
1/2 cup cocoa powder
3/4 cup powdered sugar
pinch of salt
1/2 cup oil
1 cup milk
1 tsp vinegar
1/2 tsp coffee
1/2 tsp vanilla extract

Preheat oven to 350
Mix milk and vinegar and set aside.
In bowl, sift together flour, cocoa powder, coffee and salt and mix powdered sugar. Mix all well.
Mix oil and vanilla to milk mixture
Add the wet ingredients to the dry ingredients and gently fold to combine
Bake for 25-30 minutes.

When I was little and my mother would make lentils during the wintertime, I refused to eat them. The thought of eating little beans that resembled pebbles along with vegetables was not on my top food palette. But now being an adult and living on your own and having a half bottle of wine sitting your room that you don't feel like drinking, lentils in red wine seemed like the wise adult thing to do.
Lentils braised in red wine 
1 onion chopped
1 carrot chopped
1 celery stalk chopped
3 cloves garlic, peeled and left whole
1 1/2 cup lentils
2 cups red wine
salt and pepper

In saucepan add onion, carrot and celery and cook for at least 5 minutes until vegetables are soft and lost their crunch.
Add 3 cloves of garlic 
Add lentils, wine 2 1/2 cups of water and salt
Raise the heat and bring to a boil
Cover and reduce heat to low
Let it simmer for 45 minutes until lentils are tender

I found this recipe on the Internet (as I find many things on the internet) and decided to be fancy and make a fancy soup. Also it was right before I left for London and needed something that would last me the couple days before I left.
This soup took at total of 2 hours because I timed everything that the recipe said and in between that explain to my corridor mate what French Onion Soup is, also he had some type of Biology or science type test to study and was procrastinating and my soup seemed more interesting than his test. My french onion soup was more interesting than science. Obviously.


French Onion Soup
6 large onions, sliced thinly
1 cup heavy cream
2 tablespoons butter
1 teaspoon salt
2 cups white wine
2 quarts of chicken stock
5 ounces of cheddar chefs
4 slices of country bread

In a large pot, combine onions, cream, butter and salt.
Cook, stirring occasionally until onions are soften and cream reduces to its solid (10-30 minutes)
Turn heat up slightly so onions and cream bubble- cook without stirring for 6-7 minutes until onions are browned
Stir onions and add 1/2 cup of wine
Scrap all the burnt and browned bits
Leave onions without stirring for another 6 minutes
Repeat until all 2 cups of wine are used
Add chicken stock and bring to simmer (15 minutes)
Preheat oven to 200
Toast the bread until dry
Ladle the soup into an oven proof bowl
Float the bread on the soup and sprinkle with the cheese
Bake until cheese is bubbly and browned about 20-30 minutes.

I had a can of chickpeas sitting in my pantry and had no idea what to do with them. I didn't have a blender or a food processor to make hummus so there went my yummus idea, so I made another soup with chickpeas.
Moroccan Spiced Chickpea Soup
1/4 cup olive oil
1 large onion, diced
6-8 cloves garlic
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon paprika
1 can of chickpeas
chicken broth
1 teaspoon of sugar
salt
pepper

Heat olive oil in a large pot over medium heat
Add onion and garlic and sauté until onions begin to turn translucent
Add chickpeas, broth and sugar 
Season with salt and pepper
Chickpeas should be covered with liquid
Bring to simmer and lower the heat and let it sit for 45 minutes
Season again.

I discovered this recipe on Pinterest made it many times in the states and then brought it here in Sweden at 11PM one night and the next morning at 10AM the whole plate was gone. A little note about these cookies: they have a ton of chocolate in them plus Nutella in the middle, they are ridiculously intense.

Nutella Stuffed Browned Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies
2 1/4 cups flour
1 1/4 teaspoons baking soda
1/4 tsp salt
1 cup butter
1/4 cup sugar
1 egg
1 egg yolk
1 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
1/2 cup milk chocolate chips

In a large bowl mix flour, baking soda and salt until combined
In saucepan, melt and cook butter until little brown bits appear in pan.
Remove from heat

In bowl, mix butter and sugars until fully incorporated.
Beat in egg, egg yolk, vanilla until well combined
Gradually add dry ingredients
Fold in chocolate chips
Place cookie dough in fridge for 2 hours.
Preheat oven to 350F
Roll 1 1/2 tbs of dough and flatten dough to make a flat circle
Place 1 tsp of Nutella in the middle then place another flat cookie on top
Crimp edges
Bake 9-11 minutes.

I made these cupcakes for my friend Jenn's birthday well because, every girl deserves cupcakes and Nutella on their birthday. Point blank.

Nutella Frosting Cupcakes
1/4 cup butter
1/4 cup vegetable oil
3/4 cup sugar
3 eggs
1 tsp vanilla
1 3/4 cups flour
2 tsp baking powder
1/4 salt
Nutella

Preheat oven to 325
In bowl, beat butter, oil and sugar until fluffy
Add eggs, vanilla until smooth
In small bowl, stir flour, baking powder and salt
Add butter mixture until combined-batter will be thick
Divide the batter
Drop spoonfuls of Nutella on batter add Nutella and add another layer of batter on top.
Swirl batter and Nutella
Bake 25-30 minutes.

For Easter, my mom sent me a package of Easter goodies and cake mixes from home, one of them being a box of Funfetti cake mix. Not being aware of what funfetti was, I decided to make them for my corridor mates, where one of them called it "funny-fetti" cupcakes even after seeing the note I wrote.
::Sigh:: I guess some Swedes aren't that perfect.
Funfetti Cupcakes
3 1/3 cups flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
2 cups sugar
1 cup butter (melted)
2 eggs
1/2 cup yogurt
1 1/2 cups milk
4 teaspoons vanilla extract
1 cup colored sprinkles

Preheat oven to 350
Whisk flour, baking powder and salt in a large bowl.
Mix sugar and butter until combined
Add eggs one at a time
Mix until just combined
Add vanilla
Add 1/3 of dry ingredients to mixing bowl followed by yogurt
Add another third of dry ingredients then add milk 
When incorporated add dry ingredients 
Mix until combined, stir sprinkles
Bake 18-22 minutes

On Easter Sunday, I offered to make dessert for my friends and decided to be an adult again, I looked in my fridge and pantry and wondered what I could bake with the stuff I already had (Look at me all grown up!)
This maple cake had appeared on the Internet and I had a huge bottle of maple syrup from Minnesota and cake and syrup mixed together the whole thing tasted like a pancake. 

Maple Cake
2 1/2 cups flour
2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1/2 cup butter
2 eggs
1 1/2 cup maple syrup
2 teaspoons vanilla
1/2 cup water

Preheat oven to 350
In a medium bowl, sift flour, baking powder, salt and cinnamon
In a large bowl, beat butter and sugar for 1 minute
Add eggs one at a time
Add flour by thirds alternating with water and ending with dry ingredients
Bake for 30 minutes

I was at the grocery store once again and this time with no list but tons of items at a low price. And as a student on a major budget, I was excited. 
I bought 2 zucchinis for 15 SEK again, like the carrot incident, not knowing what I would do with them but would figure it out later.
Then a movie night with friends came about and zucchini bread (with chocolate chips) came to mind.

Zucchini Bread
3 cups flour
1 tsp salt
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp baking powder
3 tsp cinnamon
3 eggs
1 cup vegetable oil
2 1/4 cups white sugar
3 teaspoons vanilla extract
2 cups grated zucchini

Preheat oven to 325
Sift flour, salt, baking powder, baking soda and cinnamon
Beat eggs, oil, vanilla and sugar together in large bowl
Add sifted ingredients to creamed mixture and beat well
Stir in zucchini until well combined
Bake for 40-60 minutes

In my last post, speaking of Eurovision (okay guys I swear this is the last time I'm mentioning Eurovision I SWEAR!). I made these little bars for my friends while watching the song competition show that I just promised I wouldn't mention also M&Ms were on sale at the grocery store and any American product on sale at a Swedish grocery store is a major sign that I need to buy it.
M&M Cookie Bars
2 1/8 cups flour
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp baking soda
12 tbsp butter
1 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup white sugar
1 large egg
1 large egg yolk
2 tsp vanilla extract
1 12 oz bag of M&Ms

Preheat oven to 325
Line 9x13 pan with foil, letting excess hang out
Mix flour, salt and baking soda together in medium bowl
Whisk melted butter and sugars in large bowl until combined
Add egg, egg yolk, and vanilla and mix well
Using rubber spatula fold dry ingredients into egg mixture until just combined
Fold 1 cup of M&Ms and turn batter into prepared pan
Sprinkle remaining M&Ms on top and press slightly
Bake 24-28 minutes

Recently, I got an email stating that I was accepted for a job. I'M EMPLOYED AND FEELING SO GROWN UP LIKE BETTER THAN MAKING A GROCERY LIST THAT SORT OF GROWN UP.
And so to celebrate I bought myself Oreo ice cream and made my corridor mates these cookies, because good news brings happiness and happy people make cookies and everyone likes cookies.
White Chocolate Chip Oatmeal Cookies
2 eggs
1 cup butter
1 1/2 cup oats
3 cups flour
1 tsp baking powder
1 tsp baking soda
1 cup brown sugar
1 cup white sugar
1 tsp salt
2 tsp vanilla extract
2 cups white chocolate chips

Preheat oven to 350
Beat butter until creamy
Gradually add sugars
Add eggs one at a time
Stir in vanilla
Combine flour and next 2 ingredients ( baking powder, baking soda)
Gradually add to the butter mixture
Beat until blended
Stir in oats and white chocolate chips
Bake for 12 minutes

I had a pack of Oreos, a full set of baking ingredients and cocoa powder and decided to really indulge and make an intense triple deck major brownie recipe that would drive everyone crazy and it totally did. These brownies even had one of my corridor mate's boyfriend's say that it was the best thing he had ever tasted, so there you go, a complete to the Swedish Chef.

Brownies, with Cookie Dough and Oreos a.k.a "Slutty Brownies"
To make the brownie
10 tbsp butter
1 1/4 cups sugar
3/4 cups cocoa powder
1/2 tsp salt
2 tsp vanilla extract
2 eggs
1/2 cup flour

1 package of Oreo

To make the cookie dough
1/2 cup butter
1/4 cup brown sugar
3/4 cup white sugar
1 egg
1 1/4 tsp vanilla extract
1 1/4 cups flour
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp baking powder
1 cup chocolate chips

In medium sauce pan, melt butter
Add sugar and cocoa powder and whisk to combine then remove from heat
Add salt, vanilla and eggs until combined
Add flour and mix 
Set aside

Cream together butter and sugars
Add eggs and vanilla
Add flour, salt and baking powder and mix until incorporated 
Fold in chips

Preheat oven to 350
Line bottom of pan with foil
Layer cookie dough on bottom
Layer Oreos
Pour brownie batter on top
Bake 30-35 minutes

Enjoy these treats and hope I didn't make your mouth water too much to the point where it went on your computer to your keyboard and know the letters G, H, B or N don't work and have to embarrassingly explain to Apple what happen.
Goodnight and Good noms

Eurovision

I have mentioned this event many times in previous posts and on May 10th, I had my first experience.
For those who are just reading this blog for the first time or if you don't have time to go through my many posts, here is the description of Eurovision one more time.

Eurovision is an annual song competition held between the countries of the EBU (European Broadcasting Union). 37 countries come and compete in one country and perform in front of millions of people.
Each contestant is selected to represent their country and compete in 2 semi-finals and then the last final where the winner is chosen. To decide the winner each country votes for their favorite by points starting from 1( the lowest)- 12 (highest). Countries cannot vote for themselves so they chose another country that is the favorite. A representative from each country appears and states that home countries top 3 favorites. The country with the most votes, win Eurovision.

Hosted in Copenhagen, Denmark 27 performers performed back to back until it was time to vote.
Here are the list of countries that performed, the names of the performers and the song they sung (BONUS: click the name of the song to hear it yourself!) and the points.

Armenia
"Not Alone" Aram
4th place with 174 points










Austria
"Rise Like a Phoenix" Conchita Wurst
Winner with 290 points










Azerbaijan
"Start a Fire" Dilara Kazimova
22nd place with 33 points








Belarus
"Cheesecake" Teo
16th place with 43 points








Denmark
"Cliche Love Song" Basim
9th place with 74 points










Finland
"Something Better" Softengine
11th place with 72 points










France
"Mustache" TWIN TWIN
26th place with 2 points










Germany
"Is It Right" Elaiza
18th place with 39 points









Greece
"Rise Up" Freaky Fortune feat. Risky Kidd
20th place with 35 points










Hungary
"Running" András Kállay- Saunders
5th place with 143 points








Iceland
"No Prejudice" Pollapönk
15th place with 58 points










Italy
"La Mia Città" Emma
21st place with 33 points










Malta
"Coming Home" Firelight
23rd with 32 points











Montenegro
"Moj Svijet" Sergej ćetković
19th place with 37 points








Norway
" Silent Storm" Carl Espen
8th place with 88 points










Poland
"My Słowianie (We Are Slavic)" Donatan & Cleo
14th place with 62 points









Romania
"Miracle" Paula Seling & OVI
12th place with 72 points










Russia
"Shine" Tolmachevy Sisters
7th place with 89 points










San Marino
"Maybe" Valentina Monetta
24th place with 14 points










Slovenia
"Round and Round" Tinkara Kovač
25th place with 9 points








Spain
"Dancing in the Rain" Ruth Lorenzo
10th place with 74 points










Sweden
"Undo" Sanna Nielsen
3rd place with 218 points









Switzerland
"Hunter of Stars" Sebalter
13th place with 64 points









The Netherlands
" Calm After the Storm" The Common Linnets
2nd place with 218 points










Ukraine
"Tick Tock" Mariya Yaremchuk
6th place with 113 points










United Kingdom
" Children of the Universe" Molly
17th place with 40 points








The Winner was Austria with singer Conchita Wurst or as you may know her as "the Bearded Lady" with the high points of 290.

If you are curious, here are my thoughts of my first Eurovision experience:
1- I'm still questioning as to why Azerbaijan is calling a girl a "Cheesecake"
2- In the first 20 minutes of the show, Iceland was my favorite and still is and I'm still disappointed that they weren't in the top 10.
3- TWIN TWIN of France is the French version of LMFAO
4- Malta is the wannabe Mumford & Sons
5- The Netherlands were the wannabe Civil Wars
6- Sweden's Sanna Nielsen's song "Undo" gave me goosebumps and almost made me cry
7- One of the Danish hosts would not stop talking about China even though China is no where near the EU or EBU. Get your countries straight bro.
8- No matter how good their song was, people disliked Russia and booed at any country who gave them votes
9- The motto of Eurovision was #JoinUs and according to Amy Poehler's brother, Greg Poehler, on twitter, it was pretty much #JoinU.S.
10. My knowledge of European geography was put to the test, as I had no idea where some of these countries were.

My first Eurovision experience in Europe and it was just as entertaining as I hoped it would be. Do yourself a favor and experience Eurovision at least once.

Valborg & Visitors

April 26th-May 1st
I'm cramming in 6 days into one post to make up for the lack of posts, so buckle your seat belts and let's go.

April 26th, 2014
Before I talk about April 26th, there is one thing you should know about me, if you are not a family member or a person who has lived with me.
I am not a morning person. Like not at all. When I wake up, I don't speak or look at people, I have uncontrollable bed head and if I do speak, it's in mumbles.
Well, here is some surprising news that may come as a shock to many people.
Sweden has made me a morning person.
I know it's weird and shocking, I'm still processing it myself, the main reason for this new transformation is that the sun now rises at 4:30AM and doesn't set until 10PM, so I'm woken up by the sun at 5AM almost every morning.
Which is what happened to me on Saturday April 26th. Scheduled to work, Lördags Fika at 8:30AM, I woke up voluntarily at 6:30AM an hour before my alarm went off and was wide awake. A normal human being would roll over and go back to sleep, knowing that he/she had an hour left of sleep. But then again, Sweden has made me into a morning person, so in this situation, the normal person in me is gone.
I took my time getting ready at 6:30AM, doing my hair, putting on makeup and actually thinking about my outfit (let it be known that I'm working in a cafe wearing a work t-shirt and a bandana and will not be seen by people until 1PM, so appearance is not an important factor here).
I left my apartment at 7:30AM (when I was supposed to wake up) and happily walked to work in the bright sunshine, with no coffee or breakfast in my stomach (I get free coffee and breakfast at work, FYI).
When people say that studying abroad has changed them, they are not kidding, studying abroad in Sweden has changed me in that I'm happy in the morning with no coffee or breakfast and voluntarily wake up an hour before my alarm. I'M REALLY CHANGED GUYS.
Anyway getting to work at 8:15AM (15 minutes early, I know) I assembled sandwiches and desserts took money transactions and even got to bring food home. Per usual.
Then...at around 7PM, Kacey and I headed off to our friend Camilla's to have a BBQ and introduce s'mores to Swedes.
Since graham crackers, to my discovery, don't exist in Sweden, Maria Cookies are the semi-okay substitute for s'mores. Luckily marshmallows and chocolate bars do exist and let's be real. Those are the best part of a s'more. 

April 27th, 2014
I HAD A VISITOR!
Early in the fall, I got a message from a friend, saying that she would be in Sweden in the spring with undetermined dates and if she could stay at my place for a few days, still in my "I can't believe I'm in Sweden"-high, I said yes.
Fast forward to the morning of April 27th, when I'm cleaning my room, putting in a lightbulb in my bathroom because it had been out for a month -that's another story, borrowing a bed from my corridor mate and putting on clean sheets and making my room look presentable and grocery shopping.
Arriving at the train station at 3PM with "Welcome to Sweden" chocolates in hand, my friend Anne-Marie came. Helping her get situated in my room, we walked back to downtown to take her to her first Fika (coffee & pastries with friends).
As a newbie to the FIKA world, I recommended a kanelbulle (far right), which in Swedish means cinnamon roll, and I, as a pro in the FIKA world, had a cinnamon and apple roll which is the gigantic pastry.
After fika, I showed Anne-Marie around Uppsala and then headed home for dinner and prepare for more FIKA and Uppsala the next day.

April 28th, 2014
Waking up at 10AM despite the sun shining so bright in my room, we got up make Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Pancakes (recipe to follow in future post) and then headed off to introduce Anne-Marie to Swedish waffles.

When I told Anne-Marie that it was unlimited waffles for 40 SEK ( around $6) she took the challenge of eating as many waffles as she could, but what she didn't know was that as delicious and beautiful as Swedish waffles are, they are dense and filling and after 2 your done, which she was. It's okay, I've been there.

After sitting in a waffle coma for 30 minutes, we headed off to downtown to show a little bit more of Uppsala and then went to ICA to get food for another BBQ that we were going to and then decided to take a pit stop at the river to enjoy the sunshine.

Despite it being muggy, it was actually really bright for us as seen in this picture taken by my friend:


After getting our Vitamin D, we headed off to Rackerbergastan (I think that's how you spell it), another student housing complex where the BBQ was taking place.
This specific BBQ involved the International Media Class that have been through the program for the past 10 months and realizing that the year is coming to an end and we haven't done anything together a BBQ during the Valborg week was a must.
Now when I saw International, I mean that the majority of the class is American/Swedish with few people from other countries, but I mean it's still International.

BBQ-ing hotdogs covered with fried onions (which I found out is a thing to do in Sweden when eating Hot Dogs), and introducing S'mores to Swedes, which to the American's appreciation were highly accepted, hashtagAmericanwin
This is Alice from Sweden, trying her first s'more, and loving it afterwards, and of course, she had s'more. 
After the BBQ, Anne Marie and I headed back home to get an early night's rest so we could head to Stockholm for the next day.

April 29th, 2014
Up at 7AM to get ready and help Anne Marie with her laundry, eat breakfast and head off to Stockholm for the day.
Our itinerary consisted of going to the VASA museum, Swedish meatballs and then an alternative tour of Stockholm.
We attempted to go to the VASA museum, but ended up getting lost and confused. But we took advantage of the extremely nice weather and took some pictures.


Please mind the small piece of hair sticking out the side of my head. I didn't have time to do my hair that morning and put it up in a ponytail. That piece of hair has a mind of its own.

Walking around some more, we decided to have some lunch and trying to be as Swedish as possible, we went and had Swedish meatballs.
Called Bakfika and rated highly on Yelp, we enjoyed endless amounts of bread, meatballs and mashed potatoes with lingonberries on the side.
The waitress literally handed us a huge basket of bread and told us to take as much as we wanted, I took one of each type. And with butter that had sea salt in it ERMAHGERD, Swedish bread had never tasted so good.

A direct quote from the Swedish Chef 
"Flugfie floggie gershy germie meatballs"
With full, satisfied stomachs we walked around the Old Palace and to Old Town Stockholm and then headed to have some fika and some delicious kladdkaka ( Swedish chocolate cake)



I've seen these buildings so many times and have many pictures of these but they still surprise me every time.



Chai Tea Latte, Regular Latter and a kladdkaka 


and a kanelbulle of course
After fika, we met up to take the alternative tour of Stockholm, having been to Stockholm a few times, it was nice to take a tour so when I come back to the states (which I still don't want to talk about) I can actually know what I'm talking about when showing pictures of Stockholm.
Here are some of the things that I learned (and remember a month later) about Stockholm
1- The majority of the kings in Sweden were named Gustav.
2- As stated before in my Copenhagen post, Swedes and Danes do not like each other, which the tour guide emphasized many times throughout the tour. 
3- Swedes love Eurovision! Which I have mentioned before many times and which I will mention in detail in a future post
4- When the present King and Queen of Sweden got married, ABBA performed at their wedding, singing the hit song "Dancing Queen".
5- The only subject that Alfred Nobel did not accept as a Nobel Prize was Mathematics. Legend has it that the reason why was the woman that he loved left him for a Mathematician. The moral of the story to this, Math ruins everything. 
6- There is a concept in Sweden called "Latte Dads" in which men are on paternity leave and take their children and meet up with other men on paternity leave and have coffee with each other and their children. This concept is important because in Sweden, everyone is equal, so when a women is on maternity leave so is the husband, and it's not just a 3 month leave like in America, it's a year. #reasonswhyilovesweden. 
7- The picture below is the tiniest statue in Stockholm. Called the "Moon Boy" it is placed so the boy is looking at the moon and its head catches the sunlight. During the dark, cold winters, some people will knit sweaters and hats for him to keep him warm. The tour guide also stated that if you rub its head and make a wish that your wish will come true, but to not rub too hard or you will get pregnant. 
I didn't rub the Moon Boy's head hard, so Mom and Dad you can breathe now. 

8- Unfortunately, the tour guide hadn't had very good experiences with American visitors, due to the fact that the questions they asked were a little embarrassing (there were 5 Americans in the tour when she stated this). For example, while discussing the Vikings, an American (in another tour, not this one) asked (in a Valley Girl accent) "Do Vikings still exist?" "Where can we see the Vikings?"
Anne Marie and I looked at each other and shook our heads and one American face palmed. 
As much as I love America, sometimes I just have to shake my head.
So if you are wondering, according to the tour guide, all Swedes are Vikings. Vikings do exist, they are just not in the stereotypical outfits of horns on their heads and fur shawls. Swedes have the Viking spirit in them.
So there you go. 
9- Below is the narrowest street in Stockholm, only 3 meters wide, claustrophobic people are not recommended to come down.

Once the tour was done, it started to rain so Anne Marie and I headed home, made hamburgers and apple pie and hung out with my corridor mates until the next day when Anne Marie had to leave.

April 30th, 2014
Waking up at 8AM, helping Anne Marie pack and making Mickey Mouse shaped pancakes, we headed out to Centralstation, said goodbye to Anne-Marie and then headed off to Sofie's house to celebrate Valborg.
Valborg is the celebration of spring. Since Sweden has limited sunlight during the winter, celebrating sunlight and more hours of sunlight is important.
The day is filled with people celebrating and hanging out outside soaking all the sun that they can.
Arriving at Sofie's house at 10:30AM, there was French toast made by Ali, shot Parchisi, mimosas, cider and then shot Twister which I participated for the first time.

After shot Twister, we headed out to Ekonomikum park (where I attend my classes) and laid out in the sun and hung out.


Also, everyone had the same idea to hang out in the sun.




This is Cassie and Kacey, as you can see Cassie really likes milk. Trying to be the healthy one in the group, she got her Vitamin D, Vitamin C, and Vitamin B(ailey's).

Left to right: Sofie's friend Elin, Jenn (who is not paying attention) and Madeleine.

Kacey

The Sun! 
Ugh it's so beautiful.
After hanging out in the sun for a couple of hours, we headed off to ösgöta Nation for the champagne gallop.
The Champagne gallop consists of buying a bottle of champagne for 100 SEK ($15) and spraying it all over people and getting them wet with champagne. However, if you don't feel like getting soaked in champagne, water is provided as well.
This is Cassie and I before and after the champagne gallop. Note how happy we are despite the fact that we are drenched in bubbly champagne.
The rest of the gallop consisted of dancing to house music and just soaking in the moment and soaking in the alcohol.




Semi-dried and hungry due to all the dancing that was done, we headed off to ICA to get some food and then went to Sofie's friends house to eat and play shot parchisi.

At around 10PM we headed back to ösgöta nation to their club danced until 12:30AM until the exhaustion hit and my friend Jenn and I headed home.

May 1st, 2014
After the long day and long week filled with events, trips, people, champagne, lots of sunlight and dancing, today was a day to just sit and relax. 
12PM I headed to my Sofie's house
1- she was hosting a shrimp dinner
2- my kitchen was being filled by my German corridor mates and I needed somewhere to bake a cake.
At around 1PM, people started to come over and Sofie, Kacey and Elin prepared the food.
What seemed like endless shrimp, with bread, garlic butter and flavored mayo, we filled our stomachs to the point where it left some of us to take a nap.



This is the sunset at 8PM. From May 1st to today 27 days later, the sunset has increased to set at 10PM with leaving hints of blue at 11PM-2AM. 

Valborg tired not only myself but the citizens of Uppsala, as it was dead quiet for a week straight, which goes to say that Valborg did us well.