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Uganda Hotel Scene :: Upcountry Hotel Breakfast Offerings

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  Site Where: Anywhere outside Kampala, Gulu, Uganda
October 2, 2008 at 1:45 PM | by ScarlettLion | 0 Comments

HotelChatter's newest contributing editor Scarlett Lion is filing her stories from Uganda. Every now and then, she'll be sending us dispatches about the hotel scene here. Got questions? Send 'em to us and we'll get them answered. Earlier this week, we recommended you step out of your comfort zone and check out an upcountry hotel, and yesterday we gave you a vocab lesson to help you along. Today, here's the scoop on upcountry hotel breakfasts. Enjoy.

Breakfast is usually included in the price of an upcountry hotel room, which at JoJo's is 25,000 shillings non-self-contained, and 50,000 shillings self contained ($15 without a private bathroom, $30 with a private bathroom).

Breakfast is almost always the same at almost all upcountry hotels: bread, a boiled egg, a banana, and instant coffee. The bread will not be toasted, and will often be stale. There will also usually be a tub of Blue Band and a can of Zesta at your disposal.

Blue Band is margarine, though the nearest equivalent to the spread would actually be a product akin to "I Can't Believe It's Not Butter!" Zesta is sort of like jelly, but is really more like a fruit spread the color of a melted piece of hard candy. It often tastes like I can only imagine a melted piece of hard candy would taste. It is usually florescent or neon in color. A picture on the front of the can usually indicated the type of fruit this particular Zesta is based on, though I have found no correlation between the image and various flavors of Zesta.

Instant coffee, if you are lucky, is Nescafe. If not, you get Star Coffee, a local brand that tastes more like brown paste than coffee. Accompanying your Nestcafe is Nido, powdered milk, which usually will be the only way to add dairy to your coffee. This time around, I was VERY lucky as the friend I was traveling with brought her very own French Press and little bags of ground coffee so that she and I could share the real thing.

Note to self: Buy mini French Press for all future travels.

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