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Photo from Cooky Cat blog |
This is my little homage to my favorite vodka – for the memories more than for the taste, which took a little while to grow on me. If you have Żubrówka stories of your own you’d like to share, please send them to newswriterana@gmail.com. I may want to feature them on this blog.
Dear Żubrówka,
You meet so many people I
doubt you remember me. The first time I saw you was in the hands of an
Argentinean from my Wrocław dorm, on a movie night where about 10 people from
various nationalities squeezed into the not-so-big room I was sharing with two
other girls. We had barely moved in. How did he find you so fast? You looked
strange to me as you settled down with the Argentinean in the middle bed, our
makeshift couch, sporting your yellowish coloring and blade of grass inside bison are supposed to like. (I
had always known vodka as colorless.) The Argentinean was more familiar. He had
been the first person I met with whom I’d be spending that semester – he just
happened to be sitting in the wagon I got into, of the train from Berlin to
Dresden to Wrocław. I had immediately struck up a conversation with him as he
chivalrously helped me with my bags, and found out we would be going to the same
Polish dorm and university. We talked all the way to our destination, and the
person picking him up brought me and my bags and a new Ukrainian arrival and
her bags along as well to the dorm. Us three international students wouldn’t
shut up on the way to the dorm, despite the exhaustion, and kept going all
evening looking at churches and monuments and drinking beer together at Rynek
(the central square). We were instant friends. She became my roommate. We would sometimes walk to
Polish class together in the yellow Baroque university building, passing 70’s communist-style buildings and then across
the Old Town with its Gothic cathedrals and metal bridge with love-vow-inscribed padlocks hanging all over (diverse architecture here, indeed). Then we would
hang out after class as well, doing some pretty universal stuff – talking
bullshit, watching bad YouTube videos, cooking together, trying new alcohol. But
despite all the alcohol I would meet in Poland, you, Żubrówka, would become the
most memorable.
So the Argentinean and
Ukrainian and I, as well as a few Germans and an American and for a while Czechs
and Slovaks, I think, were all there watching the movie – “Scott Pilgrim vs.the World.” All I remember about the movie is a boy falling for a girl “out of
his league” and getting her interest only to find out she has evil ex-lovers
he has to fight videogame-style. (And perhaps that’s all there is to it.) I was
doing my best to pay attention, really, as you, Żubrówka, worked your magic. I
had my first sip and didn’t like you much then – you were like a grass and butterscotch shake (not that I’ve ever had one), but also intensely dry and
burning. But I decided I’d give you
another chance. Over time I have been learning not to dismiss people or things
on a bad first impression, to be open to acquired tastes. With the shitload of chances
I gave you that night, I think I drank at least a third to half of
you. The Argentinean and American helped finish you off, but I don’t think
anyone in that room got as drunk as I did that night, and I don’t think I had
ever been as drunk before or have been as drunk since. I started getting very
philosophical and told one of the German girls she needed to pursue a major life
change, and I remember her agreeing with me (I don't know if she did that to humor me or because she actually believed). Then I started
talking about the affinity I have with German people and Germany (without ever
imagining I would move to Germany one day), and my friends and I decided I had
been a German cat in my past life. Perhaps, Żubrówka, you are a religious
experience too. I also sang, and one of my friends captured it on video. I don’t
remember singing, but watching the video, I decided I had never sounded so bad
in my entire life. I don’t remember two hours of that night, but at least my
bed was right next to me and I woke up in it the next afternoon. But I do
remember throwing up into my Ukrainian friend’s laundry basket as she rushed to
me with it, and my then-boyfriend calling mid-barf (I can’t believe I picked up
the phone and even managed to make sense for him). For I while I wanted nothing more to do with you, Żubrówka – but like
a rollercoaster relationship one keeps returning to, I couldn’t let you go. And
things worked out more smoothly between us as I got used to the way you are,
and learned to savor rather than inhale you.
You and I would come to share many other noteworthy moments. Like that time of the 90’s costume party at a Polish friend’s house, when a German guy and I quickly hit it off as acquaintances and spent the whole night dancing together as he proceeded to give me every other shot of the Żubrówka bottle he toted in. And the time during a get-together in my apartment when my Polish roommate’s friends scared off my international friends (who had brought in a Żubrówka bottle as their contribution to the evening) by joking about orgies. And how, in my latest trip around northern Europe, I filled up my one clear plastic bag allowed as a carry-on item on flights with four Żubrówka bottles (bison grass and clear varieties) instead of toothpaste and deodorant. I gave the bottles as gifts to my hosts in different countries, and in Finland it helped lead to conversations into the night and a taste of Finnish schnapps to return the favor. In Riga, another stop on the same trip, I didn’t have any Żubrówka on me to share, but did talk about you and this helped establish a common like between me and a cute guy I met. You have become my Polish greeting card, Żubrówka, and will forever be linked in my memory with Poland and making new and interesting friends and experiencing a wonderful mix of epiphanies and embarrassment. Can’t wait to taste, and share, more of your kind. Friends and I will spend time with your sister brown Żubrówka tonight.
Yours truly,
Ana
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