Monday, July 28, 2014

Jerez, May 19-25, 2014



May 19–25

JEREZ

We wanted to come to Jerez de Frontera because it is the home to the actual Royal Spanish Riding Academy, the original school of the Vienna Lipizzans. It’s about a three hour bus ride south from Seville, into the heart of Andalucía.  

We’ve booked an apartment in a traditional Andalucían home, in a quiet neighborhood close to the city center. The two-story, stucco home is a collection of apartments where an extended family would typically live, around a pretty interior courtyard. Instead of the relentless IKEA, we have a cozy décor with Moroccan pillows, dark wood tables and heavy shutters. It looks very old world and traditional. The listing notes “No practicing Flamenco in the apartment,” which we thought was a joke, until we were walking through the streets and actually heard someone practicing Flamenco in their apartment. Not something you’d want to hear upstairs.
Our host, Sebastian, grew up in Colorado and works arranging vacations for a boutique travel agency, where his territory is Portugal, Spain and Morocco. It was fun to talk with him, and he had some wonderful suggestions for the best experiences in Jerez. His wife, Carmen, was shyer and quieter, while her Pomeranian, Poncho, was not.

As we walked out through the city in the afternoon, we had our first real experience of the dreaded Dead Zone. The city is vewy, vewy quiet. All the shops are shut down and boarded up. Pretty much everything in the city closes down between 2pm and 5pm, which, unfortunately, is prime time for us. We make our way around the city, trying to get tickets for a horse show, a bodega tour, flamenco show, but anything we try is closed. We’ll need to make some adjustments to accommodate the local customs.

The city is charming and attractive, full of parks and public squares and quiet neighborhoods, with orange trees lining the streets. The orange trees tempt us with heavy fruit hanging just out of reach. We spend a good twenty minutes circling one tree, like feral animals on a stakeout, trying our reach on every low branch, hopping up, shaking the limbs, poking with sticks, maddeningly futile attempts to get ourselves an orange. We move on. They’re probably sour anyways.

By the second day, we’re in the groove and out early. Now the streets are humming with life. The old Mercado is packed with shoppers, and surrounded by street-vendor tents. All through the courtyard are tables set up to sell garlics and caracoles, bags and bags of the little snails. Inside, the Mercado of Jerez is famous for the fish market, and it is one of the best we’ve seen. We stand mesmerized watching one merchant carve up huge fishes for the customers, while others show off some flair as they fillet merluza, or hake, waving the knife with a flourish. There are over thirty stands, selling every kind of fish and shellfish from tiny baby eels to massive tunas.

We’re not going to carry a bag of fish around all day, so we move on and head to the equestrian center. When we arrive, tour buses are dropping off piles of tourists for the noon performance. We’re planning on just getting tickets for a training session, but as the show is about to begin, we decide to go along. We are delighted to find that, despite the many groups attending, we have superb seats at the center of the ring – the fifty yard line, as it were. The arena is not as glamorous as Vienna (what is?) but it’s a very attractive place, not too large, and all the seats are close to the ring.

The Andalucían horses are smaller and lighter boned than the Lipizzans, with their Arabian heritage fully evident. The breed’s signature extravagant mane is beautifully thick, long and wavy. Fun for the grooms, I think. The horses execute dressage movements to music, making complicated team maneuvers. Next, a performance of carriage teams, and finally some “airs above the ground,” always a crowd-pleaser. The arena is located on parklike grounds, with a mansion and small museum. There are several Przewalski's horses kept here also, a few of the mere 1500 said to exist. They are beautiful! It’s very exciting to pet a Przewalski’s snout.

As it turns out, the Sandeman Sherry bodega is just next door, so after our horse show, we take a tour. It’s terribly overpriced, we think, since most of it consists of a mediocre video and some wall murals of peasants, vineyards and barrels, but we enjoy seeing the rooms full of sherry barrels and learning something about the production. We have a tasting, sharing our table with a gruff Italian man on a business trip, and three American men on a road trip. It’s fun to chat in English for a bit.

The city is full of these sherry bodegas, as they are called, essentially blocks-long, low warehouses full of barrels of aging sherry. They fill the air with a fruity-oaky aroma. Some are only known in Spain, others are major brands: Harvey’s Bristol Cream, Sandeman, Tio Pepe. They don’t look like much from the street, but once inside, there’s usually an elegant courtyard and garden.

Sebastian has told us about a small bar that has Flamenco performances, so we hunt through the streets to find it. When we do, it’s closed for the afternoon, naturally. However, we hear music and singing down the alley. There’s a tiny bar, a bodega selling sherry for a local producer, with a lively crew of certified local barflies having a fine time. One woman calls us in, enthusiastically giving up her barstool for me. We order the special, a half bottle of sherry with four appetizers of Spanish prosciutto, for all of 3 Euros. The singing and dancing erupts through the group, they all know the songs. As we pour our glasses of sherry, a third glass slowly slides over to us, as our neighbor begs a small taste for himself, which we happily share. We’re treated to more impromptu performances of singing and dancing as a result. They’re all our brothers now, chatting and laughing, not a dozen teeth among them all.

The next day, Sebastian helps us out and makes an appointment for a tour at the Bodega Tradicíon, a family-owned sherry company. The visit includes a bonus tour of their private art collection, including Goya, El Greco and Picasso. We learn more about the sherry-making process, which is essentially all about aging. The bodegas rarely make their own wine, they purchase it from nearby wineries. It’s blended with alcohol, brandy, and sugars, and sorted out by the sherry master who decides which wines will become which type of sherry: fino, amontillado, cream or Pedro Ximenes, a very sweet style sherry. The sherries are barreled for several years. Every year, portions are drawn off the oldest barrels to bottle, and replaced with portions from newer barrels, mixed to refill the older barrels for a continuous blend of old and new, creating flavor consistency rather than differences in vintage as is done with wines. At the end of our tour we enjoy a tasting that includes some 50 year old sherry that sells for more than $300 a bottle. We’ll not see the likes of this stuff any time soon.

Cádiz, “the oldest continuously-inhabited city in Spain and one of the oldest in southwestern Europe” is a mere 40 minute train ride away, so it makes for a perfect day trip. The city was founded by the Phoenicians, and pokes out from the Iberian Peninsula into the Atlantic like a little thumb. The old city itself, surprisingly, is isolated from the ocean by a great sea wall that wraps around the city. We can walk along it, and look down over the high stone wall to the water, but it’s impossible to get close to the water, except for at the small public beach. We see lots of local guys fishing off the wall, using big chucks of stale bread as bait. There are big fish in the water, although we couldn’t tell if they were more like sea trout or like carp. Overall, though, the city is interesting, historical and charming. There are color-coded paths painted on the sidewalks, with informative brochures from the Tourist Office to  follow each path, green, purple, orange or blue. A fun idea. We walk through the Medieval district, find a pedestrian only street full of cafes, and enjoy a lunch of fresh grilled fish, before hopping back on our train home.

The next day, we need to have a Flamenco experience in this Flamenco Trail city. Sebastian has recommended a small bar, El Pasaje, for an authentic, non-touristy show. We find the place, and are just in time for the afternoon performance. It’s a very small joint, a standing-only rough wooden bar, barrels of sherry filling the wall behind it, and a room big enough for three or so barrels to stand against, and maybe five small sturdy wooden tables before a little stage platform. We grab a table right in front of the stage, for which we pay 20 Euros, including sherries and tapas: fine Iberian ham and Spanish cheese. As the customers start jostling in, the bartenders pour out sherry as fast as they can into small non-stemmed glasses, filled to the brim. The performers are a short, robustly stout, elegant woman and her guitarist accompanist, a sensitive, angular, stringy man. As he waits to perform, he files his long fingernails, getting them just right for the guitar. They begin, both sitting. She performs her songs with a loud, fierce, rough passion, songs of lost love, pain and anguish. She sits until the last song of her set when she explodes onto her feet stamping and waving her arms, bringing the song to a grand crescendo finale. It’s a great show.


















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