Author: Line West

Beautiful Maine

Oops it has been a while since my last post! August and September have flown by with family visits and my sister-in-law’s beautiful, fun and magical wedding on the island of North Haven, Maine. With the cool climate, the crisp blue fall sky and the charming clapboard houses it felt like being, maybe not in Denmark, but on the rocky coast of Sweden or Norway – and that is close enough for me 😉 I will let the photos speak for themselves – they are that beautiful. In the pictures below I am trying to capture the beautiful arrival scene by ferry from Rockland to North Haven, Maine.   I can’t decide if Maine is more beautiful in rain or shine. As you can see on the photos below we had a stormy and windy ferry ride back home from the island. But after having safely arrived on land, that rocking rainy boat ride almost struck me as more full atmosphere than in the bright sun light. As if rain and storm is just right …

Cape Cod – and a Danish Nursery in MD

    We just spent a week in Cape Cod and it was overwhelmingly beautiful with all the cute Cape houses, abundance of flowers and beaches everywhere you go! It is a lot like Denmark where you are never more than two hours (which is very rare) away from nice sandy beaches. The beaches have dunes with wild vegetation and only a few summer houses can be spotted along the shoreline. On the Danish as well as the Cape beaches everything is neat, cute and natural. I saw lots of pink wild roses with a scent that brings me right back to the Danish summer by the sea. Hydrangeas are the predominant flower in Cape Cod and people grow them in large rows in front of their houses or along the road as the impressive flower bed in the photo (above and below). They really know how to make things look pretty up there in the Cape! Luckily, this weekend my husband and I discovered a Danish nursery “Sun Nurseries” in Woodbine, MD. The owners …

Danish Midsummer in America

  We celebrated Sankt Hans Eve (Midsummer’s Eve) last night with a bonfire and bread baked on wooden sticks over hot coals (called “snobroed” in Danish, literally: “twisted bread”). Snobroed is super easy to make. It is a basic bread dough with milk in that rises for about an hour and then you divide it into the number of bread sticks you want, roll them with your hands into long rolls that you then twist around bamboo sticks and bake over the hot coals until golden brown and they sound hollow. Serve with ketchup. Pretty tasty and always a hit with kids around.  

Midsummer Eve Bonfires and Witches

  Around Summer solstice in late June, Danes celebrate Sankt Hans Evening (St. John’s Eve) with bonfires and sometimes witch dolls! This was originally a pagan celebration of summer solstice and the magical shortest night of the year but after the introduction of Christianity it also became the celebration of John the Baptist’s birthday which is supposedly June 24th. There used to be a lot of superstition related to this night. Evil was was fought away with bonfires and sick people travelled to holy springs hoping their illnesses would be cured on this night where light was stronger than darkness. As a symbol of chasing evil forces away, Danes started burning a hay witch on top of the bonfire in the early 1900! Real humans, believed to be witches, were not burned in Denmark after 1693. Nevertheless, the story goes that on the evening of Sankt Hans: “the witches are being sent off to Brocken” (the highest point of the Herz mountains in Germany). Interestingly, this pagan/Christian tradition is still highly popular in Denmark, although …

Romance When It Is Best

Do you know that feeling where you can’t put a book down and then after you finished you miss it and wish you hadn’t been in such a hurry? That’s exactly how it is for me when I read Emily Duvall’s books. First there was “Inclusions” and now “Cut” about the Cahill sisters and the Harrison brothers. It must be the great mix of well-written romance and suspense combined with very likable and realistic characters. While the men are certainly attractive and the women beautiful no one is just perfect in her books. They all have flaws that make them even more likable and easy to identify with. They don’t always do or say the right thing and that is just what makes me love them even more and feel so good when I read about them – because isn’t it good to be reminded that nobody is perfect and we all make our mistakes…;)

How Unhappy Stories Make Us Happy

  Generally speaking Danish novels and movies tend to be on the not so happy side. Complicated relationships, unhappy endings and as I wrote in my last post, dark crime stories seem to dominate the Danish world of fiction. It seems like a mystery in itself why the happiest people in the World produce such dark dramas?! Why do so many scary, if not depressing, stories come from this country and how does that go along with being such a happy country? You wouldn’t really think that anyone is happy in Denmark based on those crime stories and movies about unhappy families. Or, are these dark stories part of the reason why Danes are happy/content? Reading about someone who is doing worse than ourself in life might actually make us feel better about ourselves. It puts our life into perspective and can make us appreciate what we have and feel thankful that at least we don’t have as big problems as the people in the story.     The authors of “The Danish Way of …

Danish Crime Show on Netflix

You can’t really write about Denmark without mentioning the Scandinavian crime shows and novels… I just found the Danish TV show “Dicte” on Netflix. It offers a “hyggeligt”/”cozy” trip to Denmark’s second largest city, Aarhus, which the New York Times has nominated as number 17 of the best places to travel to in 2016! Read about Aarhus here The show stars a lot of great Danish actors, like Iben Hjejle who is the main character crime reporter Dicte. It is based on Elsebeth Egholm’s thriller books about Dicte. You can read about Dicte here This show is great for someone like me who isn’t into scary stuff (I steer far away from the Swedish ones!) as this one is more on the cozy side. It is not too scary and revolves a lot around personal issues such as love, divorce and friendships – the Danish way;) So for me it is great taste of Danish culture. But if you are really into Scandinavian crime shows “Forbrydelsen”/”The Killing” is probably the best and has been made …

Nyons and the taste of Provence…

  Nyons, that’s where we lived and that’s the town to be in. They have local markets – with everything from the classic Provence baskets to locally made sausages, French nougat and rose wine – twice every week. And, a farmers cooperative in a beautiful modern building where they sell local wine, specialties and all-natural beauty products etc. Smart way of giving local businesses a better chance to market their products. France really has a lot to do with eating lots of delicious food and drinking wine from surrounding wine castles… Nyons also has a local olive mill which is now a store with all those local specialties – olive and lavender soap, French nougat, olive oil and what not. We actually stayed in a Danish-owned architect designed apartment near downtown. With it belonged a beautiful olive field, gazebo and veranda overlooking the olive field with mountains in the background. This place was such a perfect mix of classic Danish interior design and the beautiful landscape of Provence.         I have to …

Back from France

We just came back from a family wedding in Paris and vacation in Provence. It was so exciting and beautiful that I have to write about it even though this blog was supposed to be about Denmark only. But France is Europe…and it was great to be back! Not really sure where to begin so lets just start with some pretty pictures from the trip…   Paris is beautiful and so is Provence. No surprise there. I am in love with the Tuileries garden, Louvre and the area around the Eiffel Tower – we stayed in hotels both places. And, I want olive trees and lavenders in my backyard ala Provence:)   Also, there is absolutely no going back to buying bread from supermarkets anymore. Any little French town seems to have at least one “boulangerie” (bakery) and I just have to learn to make bread like that! More to come about Paris and the town where we stayed in Provence…

How to be Happy as a Dane

What is so special about that Danish happiness that the news media has been talking about over the last few weeks? Here are my suggestions to what makes Danes so happy – besides a welfare system that leaves everyone pretty safe and secure. This guideline should be taken with a grain of salt and I hope you will view it just as some ideas on what that Danish happiness is all about. I am not saying Danes are better than other people and we can definitely learn a lot from the world around us. But who knows – maybe you can use a few of these suggestions to add a little of that unique Danish happiness to your life. As a Dane in America I use it as a checklist whenever I need to get back to my cultural roots. Guideline to Danish Happiness “Hygge” – this is the unique Danish term that combines coziness with togetherness. Danes often do this by enjoying relaxing and fun times with family and friends. So bring out the …