Remember when the US tried to go metric? Disaster! Just how much is a gram, a liter, a kilo??
One of the vexing aspects of living in the EU is trying to adapt to the metric system. Somehow 27 C doesn’t sound nearly as warm as 80 F, at least not to my American ears. We encounter conversion woes every time we are given a recipe. The result is that we’re living in a half-way house, marooned between metric and imperial measures. An example is the new lasanga recipe over in the Recipes link to your right – I asked Louis to write it out for me (he made it several nights ago and it was very well received , especially by Massimo). When he gave it to me the ingredients were in grams, for both solids and liquids, and the temperature was in Fahrenheit; fortunately a quick visit to a terrific conversion site made it easy to list the imperial equivalents for American and British friends. Somehow I don’t think we’ll ever be completely at ease in this metric world.
Don’t even get me started on clothing sizes (bras come in 1, 2, 3 or 4… what does that mean??). And shoes (my size 39 sounds huge, but it’s really only 8.5).
At least the clock looks the same here – what would a metric clock look like? We’d have to dispense with 2 hours on our clock face and come up with all kinds of strange names. Turns out it’s been done! It takes us about half a centiday (+/- 12 minutes) to drive from our house to downtown Rapallo… I think. No, let’s stick with our present clocks with their friendly faces. It’s hard enough to figure out how many grams of cheese to put in the lasagna!
Hai ragione Louise ,deve essere terribilmente difficile per voi come è difficile per noi parlare di …piedi, once …ecc.ecc. Un disastro ,io non ci capisco niente!
Haha, I am opposite. We Koreans use metric units. Whenever I look at American recipe, ounce makes me bothersome, haha. And when calculated my weight in pounds, wow!, I feel I get fat….