Category: NOTES

  • Jellyfish awareness

    Over the weekend I went to the beach. The North Sea is too cold for me to swim: I prefer to walk along the shoreline and get into the water when I’m hot.

    While walking, I noticed so many jellyfish on the shore. Going closer to the sea, I could see also many jellyfish floating. They did not seem to swim, but just to be carried by the current, almost relying on it. I touched a floating one, and it did not sting.

    I wondered whether they were all dead, tricked by the tide of the North Sea. They kept floating in the shallow water, too close to the shore, until the ebb tide left them on the sand.

    It is hard to imagine now the world is perceived by a jellyfish.

    I read jellyfish don’t have brains but do have nerves to detect the environment around them.

    Without a brain, they are not conscious and they don’t know they exist. I can imagine they perceive the warmth of the water, the brightness of the sun, and not much else. Do they perceive water as wet? Or do they just perceive the dryness of their surrounding once they find themselves on the shore? Sand must feel horribly coarse compared to the smoothness of water.

    Being made of water themselves, jellyfish don’t last long when they are stranded.

    The ones on the shores had a funny, squishy texture, much like a natural fidget toy. Who knows, maybe jellyfish on a shore inspired the very first stress-release ball.

  • Japanese condiments

    A small research on pastes and sauces

  • panpanya’s rabbit hole

    A couple of weeks ago, I came across “Guyabano Holiday” by panpanya while I was shopping at my favourite comic shop in Amsterdam. I started to read it right away, on the metro on my way home. And I loved it immediately. There are several reasons why I’ve loved panpanya right away: how non-judgmentally they observe the world around them, how the fantastic and realistic coexist seamlessly in their stories, and how nature and urban environment support each other. I like the love for details: the stories and explanations are as detailed as the drawings, without being pedantic, and at times the short stories feel like commentary to a catalogue, or a manual.

    I needed to know more about panpanya and read more of their works: I found and read their blog (google-translating it), and went back to the comic shop and asked for panpanya’s other books. Only “Invitation from a Crab” has been published in English, and they told me they are expecting “Fish society” to be released in October, but the publisher is not very reliable. That made me sad, so much so that I restarted to learn Japanese to read the original versions.

    Then, just two days ago, after I googled once again for panpanya, I accidentally opened a link to the page of an Italian manga and comics publisher, and discovered that many of panpanya’s works had been translated into Italian, years ago.

    I called the bookshop of my hometown in Italy: explained I will be in Italy in some weeks, if they could manage to order for me all the books I could not find in English. They can. I told them if I end up not travelling to Italy next month, I will have my sister go there and pick the books up for me.

    I should not have been surprised to learn that panpanya was translated into Italian: every Italian kid of my generation has grown up watching anime. Mangas are popular.

    I am so relieved, and looking forward to reading more stories by panpanya.

    On guyabano: I actually asked a Filipino colleague about it, over lunch break. She told me she loves guyabano: her father grows them in their garden back home, but she never brings any back to Amsterdam when she visits family. Guyabanos are too big to fit into a suitcase. She knows a Filipino store next to her house: she will bring me some guyabano juice to taste.

  • BREAD MAKING NOTES ZINE

    My sourdough bread obsession has resulted in a zine that sums up all the notes and the basics I’ve learned so far. I made two versions: a foldy zine (A3) and a seddle-stitched one. It can be downloaded, but if you want it printed and shipped to you (for a little contribution), send me an email!

    DOWNLOAD PDF ZINE