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The definitive expat shopping list


By Peter A. Carrigan
First Published: January 14, 2007



Peter Carrigan reads over all the those invaluable items difficult to find in Egypt while keeping his shisha in hand

Even though it is my fourth Cairo winter, I and the rest of Cairo’s population, forget just how bone numbing cold it gets on the banks of the Nile, let alone on the water, where I first lived on a houseboat – four degrees colder.

I was feeling a little more than smug at Christmas when a blanket of fog covered Heathrow and I was flying to the beach and 33 degrees, and colleagues and friends flying west had to wait all day, and well into the night, before landing in the depth of an English winter.

Last summer a friend of a friend contacted me and asked for advice about moving to Cairo. “Cold,” I said. “Bring a scarf and gloves, you’ll need them.”

Her name is Carolyn Scott and she sent me a SMS this week saying that she had bought her thermal underwear back after Christmas. Garments she retains for skiing usually.

When I first embarked for Cairo I asked my employers for one piece of advice about what to bring. “Mosquito net,” they said. And they were right. I may have survived the cold on the houseboat and the thieving landlord, but I would never have survived those swampy lovin’ sporn of Satan.

So I tucked myself up in my bed, the only warm spot in the apartment, and I messaged friends and colleagues and asked: “What should people not forget to bring to Cairo?”

“That is easy,” said Tony who is a tour guide. “A sense of humor.” In fact four people gave the same response and two said anger management techniques.

Cairo is an international city, doesn’t it have everything?

Well it doesn’t always have tampons according to some. You have to keep your eyes open and then bulk buy. So number two on our list is a year’s supply of feminine hygiene products.

Marmite (for the English), ear plugs and blu-tac. You may wonder what is the point of such a list, but a former teacher in Cairo, Sarah Sawtell, was told to bring pens, rulers, erasers and pencils because it was difficult to buy such things in Cairo!

Possibly this will be useful for all office managers that facilitate new arrivals.

Pork sausages (for the English again), a quality cork screw and pants. You cannot buy acceptable pants, male or female — acceptable, that is, to your partner or comfort.

Toys: rugby and riding boots, cricket bat and there is no Ann Summers (for the English). Americans should bring a softball mitt and everyone should stock up on New World wine at duty free before landing.

Light bulbs don’t last long here, but that would just be silly. Though a quality screw driver wouldn’t be, according to one Scottish woman. “Useful for all sorts, repairs and fending off dodgy men,” her text read.

Though Cairo is regarded by many expatriates as the safest place anyone has ever lived, it doesn’t mean the urban grouper, flasher or fondler isn’t around at the next Maadi corner.

The SMSs keep arriving: Money clip, savlon – antiseptic cream (The message reads, “such things are unheard of here” – OK, Lyn would know, she’s heard it all), and a new pair of lungs. Pollution levels in Downtown Cairo are 100 times greater than those recommended as safe by the World Health Organisation.

Quality towels and sheets. Now that is true. Like raw materials all over the developing world, Egyptian cotton is exported to Europe where they pay the highest price. But Egypt imports its cotton from Pakistan.

A good pair of walking shoes, your favourite jeans and Calpol (baby medicine of some description I believe). There is probably an entirely different list if you are bringing babies. You can’t leave them at home, sorry.

Travel insurance. I heard during the week about tourists dieing in hotels and others being pregnant, all without travel insurance. If you think your embassy will bail you out, well that is just another urban myth. So, don’t leave home without it.

This column was inspired by a CNN report, which was inspired in turn by a story from Vietnam by Tim O’Brien, titled “The Things They Carry.” The CNN report asked the same question of a US Marine platoon in Baghdad. But it wasn’t that interesting actually. This list is much more fun.

Thongs (for the Australians), a quality potato peeler, mini-size national flags to trade for souvenirs, one thousand LE1 notes for taxis, woolly socks, DVDs and finally a hat. Because it’s not this cold for ever you know!


http://www.dailystaregypt.com/article.aspx?ArticleID=4960


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Which other things should be definitely brought along and are hard to find or non-existant in Egypt???

Posts: 30135 | From: The owner of this website killed ES....... | Registered: Feb 2004  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
annie_81
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-vanilla extract for cooking (theres only the powder stuff here and it doesnt taste at all)

-Shaving cream, although available, it is really expensive here

-(good quality) Contact lenses drops and related products

-ADVIL!

-Bailey's (Irish cream), my favourite, but I have yet to see it at the airport duty free shop or Drinkies

Posts: 370 | From: Montreal, Canada + World expat | Registered: Apr 2004  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
Josette
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tequila
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daria1975
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quote:
Originally posted by annie_81:
-vanilla extract for cooking (theres only the powder stuff here and it doesnt taste at all)

Can you find the actual vanilla beans there? You could make your own extract.
Posts: 8794 | From: 01-20-09 The End of an Error | Registered: Dec 2004  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
newcomer
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One of the reasons vanilla may not be available is because it is usually extracted using alcohol, and in the liquid form the alcohol is still there:

Question: Why are pure and artificial vanilla Haram?
Answer: Vanilla is a plant product, however, it is taken from the vanilla bean using alcohol. Vanilla is available in powder or liquid form. If you look at a bottle of liquid pure or artificial vanilla extract, you will find alcohol listed as an ingredient, along with the percentage of alcohol it contains. Some people may feel it is okay to use baked products containing vanilla extract because the alcohol evaporates during the baking process. However, studies have shown that the alcohol does not completely evaporate during baking. Vanilla is also available in a powdered form. In this form, the beans are either crushed without the addition of alcohol, or they are crushed and dissolved in alcohol and then purified. During purification, the alcohol is removed. Powdered vanilla is Halal. For specific products, the label will only list vanilla or vanilla flavouring. In such cases, contact the manufacturer of the product to determine which form of vanilla was used.
http://www.toronto.ca/health/nm_faq_halal_foods.htm

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al-Kahina
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quote:
Originally posted by newcomer:
One of the reasons vanilla may not be available is because it is usually extracted using alcohol, and in the liquid form the alcohol is still there:

Question: Why are pure and artificial vanilla Haram?
Answer: Vanilla is a plant product, however, it is taken from the vanilla bean using alcohol. Vanilla is available in powder or liquid form. If you look at a bottle of liquid pure or artificial vanilla extract, you will find alcohol listed as an ingredient, along with the percentage of alcohol it contains. Some people may feel it is okay to use baked products containing vanilla extract because the alcohol evaporates during the baking process. However, studies have shown that the alcohol does not completely evaporate during baking. Vanilla is also available in a powdered form. In this form, the beans are either crushed without the addition of alcohol, or they are crushed and dissolved in alcohol and then purified. During purification, the alcohol is removed. Powdered vanilla is Halal. For specific products, the label will only list vanilla or vanilla flavouring. In such cases, contact the manufacturer of the product to determine which form of vanilla was used.
http://www.toronto.ca/health/nm_faq_halal_foods.htm

Thank-you for providing this. I had no idea that vanilla extract was produced with alcohol. Neither did my ex-husband. To think of all the bakery goods I made in my own kitchen he devoured with relish and within seconds and I was poisoning his deen.

Anyone feel a guilt trip coming on? (Not you newcomer, but onto myself alone) I had given up on Asian food delivered to our home and only eat it out because its not prepared in a Halaal kitchen and couldn't do this to him.

Newcomer please provide us with a list of common kitchen cooking ingredients that aren't considered Halaal. I know eventually my former in-laws will figure out before I will if a kitchen ingredient is Halaal or not.

I have turned into a really good cook over the last few years, but need to pay attention to this type of duty and respect.

Please share with us Newcomer, so many things like vanilla extract comes to me as second nature that I wouldn't think of it.

Posts: 3168 | From: If you don't like it, don't look or read it! | Registered: Oct 2006  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
   

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