July 24, 2012

Alsace Trip - Strasbourg

We really liked the city of Strasbourg. We stayed at the Hotel du Dragon, a small, comfortable, clean and pleasant hotel with a breakfast room and great service.


In the Petite France section of Strasbourg

Strasbourg is an easy city to walk around. There are many restaurants serving traditional Alsatian food and the occasional Asian, Italian, etc. restaurant as well. The Petite France area of the city is popular because of the architecture, great eateries, and ancient towers.



Waterside restaurant

                                     
One of the many Strasbourg bridges


We took a boat tour, which was pleasant, and gave a good overview of the city, but the narrative was not as good as we have experienced in Amsterdam or London or Bruge.


Cave Historique des Hospices de Strasbourg

We stopped in at the Hospital Wine Cellar one morning to see the wine museum with the cask still containing wine from 1472! Bottled wine was also available for purchase.

I checked knitmap.com while at the hotel and visited the shops listed. The one that appealed to me most was Elle Tricote. Unfortunately, we had endless problems getting 3G Sim card service for our smart phones so I was not able to check my patterns and buy yarn in correct quantities. But if you are a knitter and have your pattern information with you, it is worth a stop at this store.




July 19, 2012

Alsace - Colmar and the Wine Route



Train Station in Colmar

We went to France for three weeks toward the end of June and during our stay, we took a five day side trip to the Alsace. The highlight of the trip was a one day tour of the wine region, including a private wine tasting/tutorial. We travelled by train from Lille to Strasbourg and then took a connecting train to Colmar. The Colmar train station has two marvelous windows, painted by the artist Jean le Gac. The front window depicts  two damsels in distress, tied to the railroad track, with a man rushing from the train to save them. The back window shows the girls having been happily rescued by the artist.


Evening in Colmar

On the first morning after arriving in Colmar, we were met by our tour guide, Jean Claude. Our fellow passengers in the tour van were two Japanese women from Osaka and an elderly Japanese married couple. Jean Claude, it turned out, could speak perfect English, Japanese, French, Alsatian, and German. When we asked how many other languages he had mastered, he replied with a smile that the number depended on how much sleep he had the night before!



Chateau du Haut-Koenigsbourg

Our first stop was the Haut Koenigsbourg Castle. Built sometime in the 12th century, it was restored around 1900 by  Emperor Wilhelm II of Germany. The French seized it after World War 1 and have done extensive and ongoing repairs.


Vineyards of Alsace

Ribeauville


A Ribeauville restaurant, where we had baeckeoffe - a hotpot of potatoes, lamb, beef, and pork that has been marinated overnight in white wine.

The wine tasting was in Ribeauville, a very picturesque town on the wine route. Jean Claude's father had been a vineyard owner and Jean Claude conducted the wine tasting in the basement of the Dopff and Irion wine merchants and he proved to be a great tudor. We tasted the main wines of the region - Muscat, Riesling, a Riesling Grand Cru, Pinot Blanc, Gewurztraminer, a late harvest Gewurztraminer, and Crémant d'Alsace - the French alternative to champagne.

Then on to Riquewihr




Riquewihr


Kaysersberg


Stadtplan Church


Stadtplan