"Cafe con Leche" by Reina Resto |
My students, who mostly take their coffee with at least a little milk or sugar, were surprised to learn that despite my sweet and chipper personality (laugh if you must, but I actually am a rather peppy teacher), I like my coffee plain and dark, or simply, cafe solo. To drive this point home, I even recounted a long-running family anecdote. My Aunt Natalie, who would love lagrimas, once quipped that her coffee was, "light and sweet just like me," to which I replied, "That makes sense. Mine is dark and bitter."
The students enjoyed this story enough that they took it upon themselves to teach me a little Argentine Spanish. When ordering a plain coffee with no milk or sugar, one can say, "Amargo como la vida," or "Bitter like life."
And now it's my new favorite catchphrase. I still haven't worked up the courage to actually say it when ordering for fear that the barista will A. not understand, forcing me to repeat myself and causing my Spanish-speaking confidence to drop faster than the peso's value or B. cock a dark eyebrow, chuckle and then begin talking to her coworkers in rapid-fire castellano about the crazy gringa. After all, wouldn't you laugh if someone said they took their coffee bitter like life?
In the meantime I'm content to share this wonderful phrase with other expats, who find it as entertaining as I do. One of my friends even asked, "So can you order coffee dulce como la vida if you like it sweet?" We all glanced at each other, considering the possibility. The quick, unanimous answer: Nah!
It's not like we're in Italy.
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