Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Ok then!

We are off tomorrow.

We arrive in Addis Ababa at 6pm Friday night via Frankfurt. Ethiopia is 7hrs ahead of us.

We will unpack, eat and sleep. Or what will pass for sleep.

In the am on Saturday we will shop for some baby essentials and then go meet our girl!

For the most part I'll keep in touch by posting to this blog. We will have internet access although we may not always have electricity!

Thank you all for your support and kindness throughout this process.

Until we are four,

L

Monday, March 22, 2010

We're leaving

...on a jet plane!!

YIKES!!!

We have so much to do!! And I can't walk!

But my baby girl will be in my arms on Saturday! Even if I have to sit down to do it.

Humorous story--SO MUCH shopping still to do and I cannot walk or stand for long. So J took me to Target and we got one of those motorized scooter carts. Let me tell you. That baby hauled! It was FAST. I flew around the store tossing things into the cart. I may have to buy one of those. Sure, it was embarrassing especially the beep-beep sound it makes in reverse. And my husband running ahead of me to take pictures of me. I wish I rear ended him!

L
New Mommy and cleared to travel!

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Time

I saw this sentiment expressed by a dad on another blog:

With children, the days are long but the years are short.

I look at my 15 year old son and I realize how true this is. The years have just kept marching along. Soon he'll be in college and we will be vacations in his life. If we're lucky. People say it all the time but it is important to stop for a second and think about it. Time passes quickly. The kind of time you wish would pass slowly.

There is a kind of time you wish would pass fast--waiting in line, bone healing, time until vacation, teething.

Then there is the time you wish would creep--vacation, time with your parents on a deck in the sun, that beautiful time between 4-6pm in the summer, ice cream in the back of the jeep with your son after a baseball game.

But you can't have it both ways, right?

As we look at the time ahead which will surely have some trying moments, trying moments in raising a baby at this time of our lives, I tell myself to keep this in mind.

Just as there were times when I'd turn to J and say:

I love this stage. You think if we stop feeding him and put him in a bell jar he will stay just like this?

There will certainly be times we can't wait to have pass. Tantrums anyone? Pubertitious rebellion?

Two more sentiments from dads come to mind.

My brother has said--A baby is a blessing.

And my Dad--Children fly out of your hands.

They are. They do.

I plan to try my best to keep this in mind through both kinds of time.

Until then, I hope the next 24hrs pass fast!!!

L

Friday, March 19, 2010

Give Me Liberty or...

Grandma hightailed it over to Target to score four of these babies for her granddaughter! They have been flying off the shelves... I think they'll look great under her daybed. And they match the chair.

Hey! Grandma loves matchy-matchy so maybe that is why she tore out to get them! :-)

Thanks Ma! Couldn't do it without you!

L

The last few "steps" (a term used loosely)

On Monday we should hear from the US Embassy in Addis Ababa that M's case is cleared and we can travel. Our flights leave Thursday at 5:30. We are hopeful!

Left to do--

Finish nursery: paint, rugs, wire lights, build out closet, window treatments, trim
Bathroom: Put decals up on walls, all hardware installed, shower curtains

Pack: this will be monstrous. We have 6 suitcases that need to go and 6 carry on. We have a lot of stuff to get over to the orphanages.

Tons of errands!

All this and I still can't walk or stand--bad foot injury this weekend in Pittsburgh. J is threatening to get a double stroller now to wheel me and the baby around. It is mortifying and couldn't have happened at a worse time!

L

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Liberty

Every one deserves to have some liberty, right?

Isn't that why our forefathers threw caution to the wind?

Well our baby girl just got some liberty.

Liberty of London that is!!

Target is doing an awesome line right now with famed British store and fabric house Liberty of London. Gorgeous stuff! Clothes, housewares, decos. Limited time!

We scored one of the last of these in Massachusetts.

It will totally go with the 60s mod vibe in her room!

(There may have been a large dress haul too. Can't have the girl running around bare butt!)

Get thee to Target!!

L

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Embassy

Today our paperwork will be filed with the US Embassy in Addis. They will do their investigation and let us know in one week if we are cleared to travel and pick M up. We are scheduled to leave that Thursday!

A nail biter to the end!

L

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Getting excited!

In a tad over 3 wks we will have our daughter in our arms!

What is left to do?

Finish the nursery: Paint trim, move carpets in, build out closet. Paint some of the furniture, assemble and move in furniture. Hang window treatments. Put on wall decal. Wall paper closet doors (J's way cool idea). Hang art. Put in lighting.

Finish Bathroom: Install sink and faucet. Paint trim. Put on wall decals. Hang shower curtains. Put up hooks.

Buy stuff for the trip.

Finish vaccinations.

PACK! This will be somewhat monstrous.

We have most of the baby stuff, thank goodness.

Lauren

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

In this corner, tipping the scales....

at 16 pounds...



It's M R D! (@ 8mos)

I think the caption of this picture should be:

"Enough already with the pictures, when are you picking me up??"

and

"Bring a hat, I have no hair!"

Monday, March 1, 2010

laid low

Those vaccines kicked my butt!!

And we need to get two more this week!!

Waaaah!

Lauren

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Travel Vaccines...and we leave in 4 wks!

We go tonight to get our vaccines. Fortunately our trip to Africa in 2005 leaves us in good shape, we got most things then. We need HepA booster, HepB and Yellow fever. Some good news on that front--we were enrolled in a yellow fever vaccine clinical trial so J and I will make $575 for our trouble.
Not bad windfall $$ for the trip!

Bought our plane tickets--we fly out 3/25 and arrive 3/26 on Lufthansa (let's hope they resolve their strike), one stop, and best news--the lowest price I have ever seen to ET--$1200, and very best news--we got two sets on our credit card miles (good thing J and I are spendy and have lots of reward miles stored up on the credit card) and A is coming with us!

We are getting seriously excited. Mimi girl will be in our arms in no time!

Lauren

PS: We also needed Meningococcal. That one was the worst!

Monday, February 22, 2010

A video snippet!



Her brand new mobile, and crib toy!

I could be imagining it but doesn't she do a double take when she hears "mommy"?

Lauren

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Embassy Date

Looks like we will move forward with the March 29 Embassy date. We want to get Lil' Mimi into our arms as soon as possible.

Reservations are not bad, one stop, through Frankfurt on Lufthansa. A has Good Friday off so he would only miss 5 days of school. We are waiting for his Principal to approve his absence.

Starting to mildly freak OUT.

Lot's of reno still to do.

Lot's of gear still to be gotten.

Ranger is a little concerned that he will have to sleep in the dog crate with Mimi like had to do with puppy Skyler. Or have to sleep with her draped over his belly like Jem and Scout did (and still do). We have assured him that he has done his part in raising the little ones, we'll take over now...



Lauren

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Court

Court was to have been today.

But the Court closed! No reason given! Must have been sunny, or rainy! Beach day! Who knows? Those crazy kids...

Any way, we are rescheduled for tomorrow.

They asked for it:



They had better get their act together.

Lauren

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

From Jenny!

My e-friend from Italy is in ET to pick up her 10 mos old daughter H from an orphanage named Miskaye. D is at an orphanage called BZ but Jenny joined some other families at the goodbye coffee ceremony at BZ. Jenny is also a pediatric nurse. I asked her to hold D and cover her with loud sloppy kisses. Here is her report!

Lauren, we went to the goodbye ceremony at BZ today. They did a coffee ceremony and the nannies said goodbye to J and Y.

I held D for a long time. They call her Doo, Doony, and Dun-ee-ya, and Dunya. Very cute. She's petite and serious most of the time, but I saw her smile several times, especially for the nannies. They feed the babies every 2 hours even at night with fast flow nipples. (AHA! That's why they get so chubby!) The bottle they gave to me to feed Dunia was 4-5 oz and she drank about half of it and fell asleep and they were ok with letting her not finish the bottle.
I saw her butt-naked while we were there for a diaper and clothes change and I got 3 naked photos of her on Lissa's camera. She will send them to you. D looks great. She is alert, makes eye contact, babbles and coos, raises her chest and head while on her tummy, is not quite sitting unsupported yet, and puts some weight on her feet when you hold her upright. She has a bit of a belly but is not chunky like J and Y(yet). She is light skinned but not pale in my opinion. Whites of the eyes are white. Her eyes are watery (clear) and her nose is crusty with dried boogers. No cough. Very tranquil. The cribs are small and have a solid dividing wall between them so the babies don't interact with one another which is a shame. Definitely don't get much stimulation but I do not think they are neglected, so I know whatever delays she may have she will catch up. The mobiles are a fantastic idea. They need them. Her photo book of you guys is in her crib and we looked at it together. I gave her several wet loud smooches and millions of smaller kisses and told her over and over that you are coming. She liked that.


Gosh, my heart is breaking with joy and love.

The network of mom-friends that forms around adoption is a blessing. We keep each other propped up in so many ways. Thanks Jenny for this simple joy!

Lauren

PS: Just about every photo we get of D she has a dried booger in her nose! To be honest I have been photoshopping them out to spare you all, and me! When my lil' booger gets home she won't have those any more!! Enjoy the pic above of milky bliss!

Monday, February 1, 2010

another tidbit....

From a different traveling mom--

The orphanage is beautiful and clean and bright. The nursery is clean and there is someone in there constantly....the older babies are sitting, etc....which is great news!! Their cribs are clean and orderly and they seem very well cared for...




I still want to grab her and run.

Lauren

PS: I sent over a crib mobile and another mom did too. My goal is to have two per crib rig. I just scored four more on Ebay. The kids really need to have more stimulation. We are getting crib mirrors too. If you have anything you don't need, send it on to me, I'll get it over there.

Saturday, January 30, 2010

a tidbit!

One of my adoption e-friends, B, is in ET right now picking up her two(!) infant boys. One of the boys is from the same orphanage as D. Becky got video of her and said that she has "gained weight, is growing hair, and looks really good"! We can't wait to see the video!!!

Lauren

Friday, January 22, 2010

What does the rest of the process look like?

After a satisfactory court ruling D is legally our daughter but still a citizen of Ethiopia. We need to get her a visa issued by the U.S. Embassy in ET that will allow her into the U.S. This is how I understand it works:

-After we pass court, the Ethiopian government has to issue a birth certificate for D. Children in Ethiopia don't automatically get birth certificates when they're born (birth dates aren't kept track of there like in the U.S. Indeed, D's birth date is estimated). By the way, D's name on her Ethiopian birth certificate will be "D J L" Kinda cute. It follows the ET'ian custom of giving a child a first name but her last name is her father's first name.

-Once D J L gets her birth certificate then she can get her Ethiopian passport.

-Next, the court decree, birth certificate and passport are submitted to the U.S. embassy (keep in mind that all this stuff has to be translated from Amharic to English first).

-D must have a physical exam performed by a US approved embassy doctor. She'll be screened for HIV, tuberculosis, etc. (she was tested for all these things at the orphanage before we got her referral, too). I imagine they would deny her a visa if she had certain diseases (I'm not sure what though. But I do know that being positive for TB gets her a 6mo quarantine).

-Finally, a U.S. embassy appointment is scheduled (this is when we get to travel). We accompany Dunya to the US embassy, answer some questions, and a visa is issued allowing her to enter the US!

-Once in the US we will need to get her a US birth certificate, US passport and go through a "re-adoption". This is a formality as she is already legally our daughter.

Right now we are tentatively scheduled for an Embassy date of 3/29. But things don't always go through court perfectly the first time so we'll see. Also, we may want to go two weeks later so A can travel with us.

Lauren

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Oh YEAH!

A court date!!! Seems like blowing your top off once in awhile gets results!! Who knew?? ;-)

FEBRUARY 9 2010.

If all goes well that day, D will legally become our daughter.

Everywhere.

A few images to sum up my emotions today...





and whaddaya know!



Lauren

Happy D approved this message:

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Still nothing.

We should have our court date by now. It has been a month. I am getting peeved. Downright ticked off.

The process works thusly--

We sign our CPR. We did this on 12/21/09.

A case is opened in the court.

Once opened, MOWA (Ministry of Women's Affairs) must issue a letter allowing the adoption to go forward. They consider things like the circumstances through which the child has come to be available for adoption and if things are in order. In our case this should be straightforward. It is more likely that MOWA is behind, or going through one of several trainings, overhauls, etc that have repeatedly slowed things down with them. But this has been too long.

When the MOWA letter is sent to the court we get the next available court date. For most people this is within a week or three of the case being opened. And the date is usually a month+ out.

Where we appear to be stuck at the MOWA step, my agency's attorney in ET has petitioned the court to find out what is holding MOWA up, this alone usually gets their attention. We did this on Tuesday.

So we'll see.

We want to get our D home. This is a needless waste of time and all I can think about is her in the orphanage, though a nice one, and not getting the stimulation and loving care we can provide.

This week another set of new parents travel so luckily we will get some new pictures and hopefully a video. I have asked that they cover her with loud, sloppy kisses from us.

Still.

Lauren

Friday, January 8, 2010

D's Monthly Update!

We got D's update (our agency sends out monthly updates). She has gained weight and is doing age appropriate things!

Tipping the scales at 12.79 lbs....Our New Year Baby D!



Still no court date...arrrgggghhh.

Lauren

Monday, January 4, 2010

It's a very happy new year!

We had a great Christmas! 12 adults and 4 tots for the seven seafoods on Christmas Eve at our place and a nice get together at my brother's on the big day. Santa showed up, made my niece cry, and beat a hasty exit.

New Year's was spent up in Maine with N here and the four guys snowboarding everyday; big pot of stew, some rib eyes, a birthday dinner for J, chicken and dumplings and we came home to a broken furnace! Yup, home at 10pm to a house at 50 degrees. We all piled into the master with a space heater, which got up to a toasty 57.

As for Little Miss D, we await news of her court date which better come soon... so we can turn this:


into this!

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

DON'T WAKE UP D!

A fellow adoption Mommy who just went to ET to pick up her twins (!) took some more pictures for us.

She warned us that D was woken up for these pictures as will become plain when you look at them! Check out this progression, D is on the right, as Laurie tries to draw her out:









The cutie patootie on the left is J, she is being adopted by a family in Colorado.

The look on D's face in the third shot cracks us up! This is the same face A used to make when he was fussing at us. He would screw up his little face and stick out his lower lip. And did A hate to be woken up!!! Still does. My brother Thing 1 loves to tell a story about picking up A from preschool once. When he got there all the kids were playing in this big room where against one wall there was a lump on the floor with a sign above it on the wall that read:

"DON'T WAKE UP A!"

We'll consider ourselves warned!


















Lauren

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

An Update on Fitsum

A is sponsoring a boy in Ethiopia so that he may go to school. In Ethiopia going to school costs $25/month.

Today A got this brief note:

Fitsum is in Grade 4 and doing well. He wishes to thank his "American brother" for this wonderful gift.

And these pictures, the posed one with the book made me smile:





Beautiful boy! We will put together a package for him when we go to get D.

Lauren

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Some deets--

They estimate D's birth day to be 6/27/09. She is almost 6 mos old!

She was 10.8 lbs on 12/7 and 24.5 inches long. Not bad considering she probably was not getting fortified formula, or formula at all. She'll start growing like mad now though! Parents caravan formula over there when traveling. L took 8 cans for me to put in the kitty.

Her hair is probably short because they shaved her head to control/prevent lice.

She is from Djimmah (Jimma), a city south west of the capital Addis Ababa. It is in this region where coffee was discovered and Jimma is a trade center for coffee. See the map on my "coffee" post below. We will try to travel to Jimma when we go to get D, although she is now in Addis.

J and I keep going back and forth on names. When we had A we were RELIEVED he was a boy for the singular reason that we could NOT agree on a girl's name. So we'll have to get back to you on that---because Bronwen is RIGHT OUT!

Lauren

Signed sealed and delivered!

We have sent in our signed CPR for D. Now the ET representative of our agency will ask the courts in ET for the next available date for the adoption hearing. These are typically scheduled two months from right now. So February for court! If so, then maybe March for holding our baby girl and smelling her neck and kissing her cheeks.

On our side of the pond we have almost finished the bathroom for our little one. It is all up to me now, J has finished the plaster work and the rewiring: Girls need lots of outlets in their bathrooms Daddy! And a vanity lite and a cool jazzy chandelier. Geesh! I need to paint and then we can put up the decals and style the room (code for buy all the cool decorative items).

The nursery is coming along too. J has started plastering--a new feat!--the walls to rid the room of the dangerously sharp stucco. Not kidding, when we first moved in A skinned a set of knuckles on the walls. Then we paint the walls. Some of the furniture, besides the crib and changing table, I want to put in there needs to be painted, so that'll be me too. IKEA will be supplying the cool window treatments for the 10 foot slider/sidelight combo in the room. Then Daddy will build out the closet to support the clothes habit mommy has, er, clothes baby girl will require.

Enough to keep us busy during the wait!

Lauren

Monday, December 21, 2009

An update from a traveling new Mommy--

Lauren,

D  is a beautiful little girl! I quizzed the manager on her and her name does not mean greyish-brown baseness and worldliness :-) In her case the name is an Oromo word that she claims she gave her because she felt blessed and lucky to receive her and knew that the child was blessed and lucky to arrive. D is Oromo for "Blessed" or "Lucky." :-)

I held her and checked her out and she appeared to be very healthy to me. She is small, but not in an unhealthy way. I think she's just playing catch-up. I did not have a measuring tape with me, so no measurements, but she's wearing 3-6 month clothes, smiles readily, and there is no yellowing or paleness in her eyes or gums. I think she's a good one! I got pictures of her with the manager and J. She would not let me hold her once the camera came out :-) Oh, the manager and nannies were thrilled by your family book! The manager opened it immediately and called the nannies in for a look! Good move making it chewable ;-) I used a hug and kiss from you as a covert way of checking breath sounds. No problems there.

The orphanage was clean, tidy, lots of laundry hanging out, and all the nannies were friendly as can be. It's in one of the more impoverished sections of town and, being new, needs a lot still. She requested that I put the word out that they need practical items and food for kids aged 0-7. She was very intent about that. She also requested a camera. Still, I got the strong feeling that this woman would go without food herself before allowing the kids to do so. I was impressed.

L

Our baby girl!

Isn't she the cutest!!




This is another new Mom holding D.


Such lips! Such eyes!!! We can't wait to get our bundle of baby girl home!

Lauren

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

We have a referral!

She is a 5 mo old girl, named D (for now). We got news of her before Thanksgiving but waited for her medical report before saying anything. It has been hard!

She is healthy, tall, but a little underweight for her age. A little anemic, but that is easily mended. They say she is happy and social! She's a cutie. We are over the moon! I'll post a picture later.

Next step--our International Adoption Pediatrician will review her medical file and render an opinion. If positive, and I expect it will be, we will officially accept the referral and await a court date in Ethiopia where the adoption is granted. It will probably take 2 mos for that. Then we will travel to get our daughter 4-6wks after that! So March?

Lauren

Monday, November 30, 2009

Introducing the newest member of our family!

Misty:
The Mistral Vacuum by Miele. Purchased for less over the border. (Canada!)

  • 1200 watts of sucking power. Variable down to 200.
  • Swivels. She can glide around the house like Ginger Rogers.
  • Telescopic wand at the ready.
  • Can lie flat on the floor to get under furniture.
  • Does not clog with pet hair.

I am in love! We will be setting a place for her at the table and she will have her own room, no dark closet for Misty!

Merry Christmas to me! Merry Christmas to me!

Hey, waitaminute, I'm getting a vacuum for Xmas???

Lauren

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Blanket time!

I bought some yarn to crochet Baby Girl a blanket. I got a great chenille, I love chenille! In bold colors--but you already figured that right?

Lion Suede yarn:



plus a gold I can't find a pic for.

Here is the pattern:

Cute huh?

I have two ten hour rides to Canada ahead of me this weekend and hope to get a lot done!

Lauren

Monday, November 23, 2009

Thanksgiving!

Our mostest favoritest holiday of the year!

This year I will be heading to Canada where John's sister and her family will meet up with us at John's mother's house in Stratford. The kids really enjoy seeing each other, I cook the meal, and the dogs get to go to the best dog park ever. They have sooo much fun at the park it makes us feel great.

Our dogs are very social, all labs are really, they have one mood, happy. My pooches love it when dogs come to visit. They don't feel territorial or threatened at all. Ranger has so much fun being a host, you can just see it in him, and Skyler attaches easily to a new best buddy.

This weekend our friends brought over their new dog, Bella. Bella lives up to her name, a sweet beautiful little chow.


Bella had to contend with a great deal of sniffing but she held her own with the big rumpusing boys. As Ranger said afterward in his blase matter-of-fact way, "Yup, she digs me. All chicks do."

There was a corgi up in Maine that adored Ranger and he would come by our place looking for him, and just follow him around. But it all stopped at the dock when Ranger would go in swimming and the corgi couldn't swim. Then one day Ranger left the property, as usual--he "ranges", and John headed to the boat launch looking for him. As he neared it he could see all these Mainers laughing their heads off and pointing out in the lake. John asked what was going on? "Darndest thing", a man replied, "there's a yellow lab teaching a corgi how to swim!" And he was. Darned little corgi was tipping port and starboard but he was determined to learn; with Ranger swimming around him.

If any of our visitors to Maine have dogs that are ok with cats, we tell them to bring them, the dogs all have a blast up at the lake.

And when dogs are having a blast, as when kids are having a blast, it makes me really happy.

Lauren

Friday, November 20, 2009

So, what did we accomplish this weekend??

Leaves, gone for now.
Thanks A!

Bathroom wall completely repaired. Electrical work started for lights and outlets. Re-plastering experiments come to a conclusion! Thanks J!






More art and lighting goes up.








Another trip to IKEA--
to purchase cubby units
for the mudroom and other
organizational tools!








Window panels in bathroom and
dressing room. Finally!











Lauren

sssshhhh my number one household secret

My number one tool, the weapon with the most utility in my arsenal is this:
They have many different formulations so I use Scotchguard to treat just about everything.

Area rugs, couch cushions, dining chair cushions, throw pillows.

Placemats--sheer brilliance. Spills just roll off, don't need to do much more than dab them up, or worse case, sponge them off.

Table cloths, same deal.

Fabric purses, diaper bags, car seats (if fabric), you get the idea.

It can be laundered but then you may need to spray on another coat. But things do not get stained, how great is that! Pass the red wine!

There was a scare in our home awhile back,  that 3M was cancelling the product line. Some hubbub about the chemicals. Bah! Turned out to be a false alarm. Good news for you messy beet eaters out there!

Lauren

Coffee, Ethiopian style

Coffee is Ethiopia's largest export and generates 60% of its export revenue. It is thought that Ethiopia is the birthplace of coffee and not South America:
The story of coffee has its beginnings in Ethiopia, the original home of the coffee plant, coffee arabica, which still grows wild in the forest of the highlands. The indigenous coffee trees (which some experts say, are the only native coffee trees in the world) first grew in ancient "Abyssinia," which is now present day Ethiopia. These trees blossomed in an area called "Kaffa" and the trees were called "Kafa," which may as well be the root word for coffee. Its cultivation and use began as early as the 9th century. The only thing that seems certain is that it originated in Ethiopia, from where it traveled to the Yemen about 600 years ago, and from Arabia it began its journey around the world.

There are two varieties of coffee in the world: Arabica :-) and Robusta :-( . Arabica is considered the superior variety for flavor, but Robusta is gaining market share due to better yields and hardiness (read: cheaper). Arabica is fine enough to drink on its own; Robusta you will find in a blended coffee. If you find Robusta beans in a blend do me a personal favor and throw it right out. Right out.

Back to the regularly scheduled history/world economy lesson.

Ethiopia is Africa's largest exporter of Arabica beans. Coffee is grown on small farms completely "by hand", from planting to harvesting and is a major source of jobs in Ethiopia.
Some 12 million people are dependent on Ethiopia’s coffee industry, managed by the Ethiopian Coffee Export Enterprise – ECEE – formerly the Ethiopian Coffee Marketing Corporation. An independent, profit-making organization, ECEE trades on the open market and controls about 50 per cent of the market following liberalization.

The three main regions where Ethiopia coffee beans are cultivated are Harrar, Ghimbi, and Sidamo (Yirgacheffe).

Ethiopian Harrar coffee beans are grown on small farms in the eastern part of the country. They are dry-processed and are labeled as longberry (large), shortberry (smaller), or Mocha (peaberry). Ethiopian Harrar coffee can have a strong dry edge, winy to fruit like acidity, rich aroma, and a heavy body. In the best Harrar coffees, one can observe an intense aroma of blueberries or blackberries. Ethiopian Harrar coffee is often used in espresso blends to capture the fine aromatics in the crema.
Washed coffees of Ethiopia include Ghimbi and Yirgacheffe. Ghimbi coffee beans are grown in the western parts of the country and are more balanced, heavier, and has a longer lasting body than the Harrars.
The Ethiopian Yirgacheffee coffee bean, is the most favored coffee grown in southern Ethiopia. It is more mild, fruitlike, and aromatic. Ethiopian Yirgacheffee coffee may also be labeled as Sidamo, which is the district where it is produced.
As if this weren't already music to my ears, I bring to you the Ethiopian "coffee ritual". Part hospitality, part cultural, part darn fine refreshment:
No visit to Ethiopia, is complete without participating in the elaborate coffee ceremony that is Ethiopia's traditional form of hospitality. Invariably conducted by a beautiful young girl in traditional Ethiopian costume, the ceremonial apparatus is arranged upon a bed of long grasses. The green coffee beans are roasted in a pan over a charcoal brazier, the rich aroma of coffee mingling with the heady smell of incense that is always burned during the ceremony. The beans are then pounded with a pestle and mortar, and the ground coffee then brewed in a black pot with a narrow spout. Traditional accompaniments are popcorn, also roasted on the fire, and the coffee is sugared to be drunk from small handless cups.

I cannot wait! Pass the popcorn!
Giving coffee as a gift this season?
Consider this variety at your corner Starbucks--








Lauren

Thursday, November 19, 2009

We are...

Approved.
Nice ring to it.

The US government feels that we can parent an internationally adopted child. We have our I71H.

Next step: Referral!

Lauren