Hundred Rooms and a Dinner

By Pabster @pabloacalvino
Kindle

I open my eyes. Like every morning, it takes me a few moments to realize where I am. Which room is this? How many I’ve slept in along this journey? And barely one night in each. Maybe one hundred rooms and that many different beds, night stands, ceilings, doors, bathrooms, views… All of them foreign, unfamiliar places. I don’t know how but I’m sure it weighs on one’s spirit, on one’s mind and also on one’s heart.

This time is a hotel in Munster, High-Rhine region, Alsace. Was it yesterday when I fell from the bike? Not even one day has elapsed, yet it seems a week. I grope my right hand: it doesn’t hurt much; only when pressing the base of the thumb. Excelent! I can continue my journey.

I pack my cases in a flash. I could do it with my eyes closed: the routine, repeated over and over, almost daily, has become really mechanised and improved along the last four months. I leave the room – just another room; load Rosaura with the cases and ride away… barely one hundred metres, just to stop by the Hotel bar des Vosgues for carrying out my morning ritual when I travel through France: a coffee and a croissant, nowhere else to be found as good as here. And these rural bars! Usually full of old men, I like them better every time. I’ve counted eight people here, nine with me; mostly retired and some unemployed. Only the waiter is a woman. The morning atmosphere is pleasant, quiet, leasure-like. This is maybe why I value the company of the elderly: because they take their time for everything and don’t rush. Some talk, others read the newspaper, all know one another… It’s an endearing country life, and I envy a bit those who have a place in it; specially since I don’t belong anywhere.

The autumn woods in Alsace

It’s been raining for the past two days and the Vosgues hills are ahead of me, so let’s hope I don’t get soaked. I saddle the mount and set out for today’s route. This High Rhine region is beautiful, twin of the German Black Forest: same geological formation, similar in orography and vegetation, only west of the valley. The rain, though cumbersome for bike riding, helps get the best of fall and enjoy the full glory of its colourful palette: from light to dark green, several yellows and ochres, chestnut, auburn, sienna, brown… Not a tone is missing, not a shade, and it’s invigorating wherever I look at. I hadn’t seen so many landscapes worth being photographed since I left Norway behind. But this region is not too large and, soon afterwards, I enter High Saxony, which isn’t Alsace any more, but part of the Frank-County.

Rosaura among the leafage, High-Saxony

I stop in Mélisey, a tiny village, and pop into a restaurant-bar where I find a curious local scene: it’s lunch time and the local is full of men chowing down; probably workers and regular customers, because there’s a familiarity among them and also with the staff. I order a kir, typical French aperitif, and I get a free appetiser with it, which is rare in this country. Perhaps this region is different. I look through the window: outside it’s still raining. I was hoping for a break, but no game. So I’d rather carry on.

A while later I arrive to Marnay, where I think it’s better to stay overnight because the clouds are getting darker. But the first hotel I check does not offer accommodation; the second one, in the town centre, opens in one hour; and a third one in the outskirts opens even later. It’s quite common for small hotels in France to close a few hours in the afternoon. Shall I wait? But there is no place where to, so I decide to keep going. And now is when a downpour cuts me through to the bone; between Marnay and Pesmes. Thanks God water is -after all- harmless. It’s annoying to drive on drenched clothes, but that’s that: once settled in, you just take a nice shower, dress on dry clothes and put the soaked ones on the heater. Next morning they’ll be ready.

Today’s route: from Munster to Pesmes

This time I don’t go around checking the several lodgings, but just pick the first one I come across in Pesmes: Hotel de France, a bit off the road, quiet and – since I’m the only guest tonight – also silent. Lovely. The landlady is very kind and the room, though basic, does its job, shower and heating working perfectly.

I can’t get tired of praising the temperament of the French: generally they’re polite, fond of saying hello to foreigners and of using courteous manners, kind and serviceable when treating with customers, smiling and friendly. Besides, France takes the greatest care of its towns: vintage looks, old constructions and things, antiques, are respected as much as possible, preserving whatever is not necessary to refurbish; and when there’s no option, they maintain the tratitional style without giving way to bad taste; same indoors and outdoors: streets, buildings, woodwork, furniture, etc. That’s maybe why France is such a charming country, either the countryside or the urban environment. If it weren’t for cars, one would think to be almost in medieval times. Quite the opposite to Spain, unfortunately.

A random corner in Pesmes

Taking a stroll around Pesmes, I pop into a bar called Du Centre. When asking for a local wine (vin du pays), white and dry, the tender serves me a delicious chardonnais, one of the best wines I’ve tasted; and soon we’re engaged in a nice chat with the other guests about wines and countries, about France and Spain, the Basque problem and so on, trying to find agreements. These people know how to befriend a foreigner and make him feel welcomed. When I get out, my nostrils sense strongly that unmistakable village smell; the characteristic mix of aromas like burnt wood, wet soil, vegetation and cattle. Temperature feels good, despite the drizzle.

Dinner at the hotel restaurant turns out to be one of the most folkloric experiences ever, not fit for the fainthearted. It’s a family business in a very rural dining room, with solid wood tables dressed with square tablecloths, over which annoying flies flutter. An older woman serves the food and an elderly man goes around offering more bread to the guests (of course no surcharge; not like Spaniards do) and removing the empty dishes. Crockery and earthenware are genuinely rural: chipped old porcelain, ceramic, wood… As a first course, I’m served home-made foie gras, coarse looking and strong tasted, perhaps not much to my liking but interesting anyway, presented on a small tray with pickles, whereof you take at will. Helping yourself must be, I guess, the local custom, since at a neighbouring table they’re also serving themselves from a cheese platter, the most lavish I’v ever seen. The house wine, rather good, comes in a small glass pitcher. For the main course I blind-order something that, in the menu, sounds to me like tripe but turns out to be some bird, maybe pigeon or quail, absolutely delicious, garnished by two tasty slices of bread with olive oil and, in a separate tray, two casseroles: one with sautéed mushrhooms and the other with lentils. To my greater pleasure, the plate I’m eating at has been pre-heated, so that the food doesn’t get cold when served; which is something I personally value a lot. Unfortunately, most restaurants never do it that way. As a dessert, home made white cheese with sugar and jam. All in all, a great and original dinner, the like of which I rarely find. And the price? Fifteen Euros. Not bad, as for France.

To help digest my meal I stroll around for a while. It’s dark, and rain has stopped. The bar Du Centre is closing down and the streets are solitary. A dog barks in some distant farmyard. Behind the house window panes the homes glow with a warm light. The High Saxony gets ready to sleep. And me… shall I know tomorrow in which room I am..?

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