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Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Sunday Lunch Menu

We are having lunch this sunday and our group is being asked to do the Sunday lunch, after a couple of weeks of take-away pizzas and hot dogs. I thought this week would be a good week to try something new.

I have been watching the Great British Menu and was pretty inspired by Sat Bain and Richard Corrigan, who did a take on a salad dish which involved poached eggs. I would like to have a go at this and see if i can come up with something really unique

The first dish is - Warm Bread Salad of Crispy Pancetta, Parmesan and Poached Eggs.

Ingredient

1. Ciabatta Loaf
2. Crispy Pancetta
3. Parmesan Cheese
4. Eggs
5. Olive Oil
6. Garlic
7.Lemon
8. Oak Leaf Lettuce
9. Rockets
10. Salt and Pepper

The main dish - Wild Mushrooms and Spicy Sausage meat Pasta served with Paprika and Parmesan Cheese sauce.

1. Onion
2. Sausage Meat
3. Wild Mushroom
4. Parmesan Cheese
5. Dried Pasta
6. Salt
7. Pepper
8.Paprika
9. Olive oil
10. Pasley
11. Chilli
12. Thyme leaf

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

FRENCH GASTRONOMY -More Details I found

FRENCH GASTRONOMY

For many generations, the French have lived convinced that French cooking is the best in the world. In fact, France is the European country which gives most importance to its food. 84% of the French reckon that "French cuisine" is the best in the world, only 4% give their preference to Chinese cooking, and 2% to Italian or North-African cooking.We're going to try and see what makes French cooking so special, give you regional examples and write down a few recipes.

In France, people use all their five senses when eating, these must be in perfect harmony:

SIGHT: The French have to like the look of what they're going to eat. You'll notice, in a good French restaurant, plates are always decorated, and the food is beautifully dispayed on them.

FEELING: A special effort is made to make the meat tender, the sauces are supposed to be creamy, the vegetables are usually "al dente". In a restaurant, the tablecloth is often made in a soft material, and the cutlery is well polished and smooth.

HEARING: Soft background music such as classical music or jazz is usually played in restaurants. It helps create a relaxed atmosphere, so that people enjoy their meal.

SMELL: Of course, the importance of how food smells doesn't need to be reminded. Except that in France, our tastes are regarded as strange in that respect. For example, we have an expression which says: "The more cheese stinks, the better it tastes!!"

TASTE: Well, that's what eating is all about, isn't it? In fact, the French have a few rules as far as taste is concerned: one should not mix salty dishes with sweet ones; sweet and sour is very rare in French cooking. Other countries tend to think we use a lot of garlic...

Auguste Escoffier (1846-1935), creator of the Pêche Melba, and one of Europe's best chefs, said:

"I am often asked why French chefs are superior to chefs from other countries. The answer is simple to me: one just has to realise that the French soil has the privilege of producing naturally, and in big quantities, the best vegetable, the best fruit and the best wine in the world.France also has the best poultry, the most tender meat, and the most varied and delicate game. Its location between three seas provides us with the best fish and seafood. It is therefore natural that a Frenchman should become at the same time a gourmet and a good cook."

He then adds:

"However, in order to have a good cuisine, a nation needs to have a long History of life in royal court, which creates a culture of enjoying a festive meal among friends; it also needs deep domestic traditions, which transmitt from mother to daughter all the secrets of a good table. I regard the reputation of "French cuisine" as a proof of our civilisation."

It now seems obvious, though, that French cuisine has had many foreign influences: North-African, Italian, Jewish, american.... Indeed, French cooking would lose a lot of its characterisics without tomato, corn, strawberries, oranges...these all come from America.

Elizabeth David, a famous British writer, has recently written:

"One of the great characteristics about "French cuisine" is its extreme variety; it seems to possess an inexhaustable collection of recipes to discover."



A LITTLE HISTORY...

Our gastronomy is known abroad mostly for its variety and refinement. This takes its origin in Paris, which was very much a central city in the 17th century. Brillat-Savarin wrote: "A meal such as one to be had in Paris is a cosmopolitan composition, in which each part of the world is represented by its products." Very early, Paris created commercial relationships with the North of France. Then, regional specialities were brought up to Paris from the other regions. Those were, for example: Foie Gras from the Périgord, wine from Bordeaux and the Beaujolais, cheese from Auvergne, fish from the Mediterranean and the North sea...Other more exotic goods were imported from the rest of the world.

Some historians have suggested that the refinement of French cooking comes from the fact that women were invited to feast as well as men. This theory doesn't seem quite right since in most European countries, women were also included at table, and Marrocans and Japanese have an equally sophisticated cuisine, and they never shared their meals with women. However, this could be a factor to explain why table manners improved so rapidly at that time. Our king François 1er (Francis the first) introduced the fist plates in 1536, and then Henri III started using forks.

In fact, our famous king Louis XIV is often presented as the promotor of Haute cuisine. In History classes in primary schools, the children are often taught that he was a greedy king, ever since he was a child. That seems to be true. He liked to eat food in great quantities, for he needed a lot of energy for his work and amusement... But because he wanted to give an image of prestige of France, the cooking needed to be original and sophisticated. His meals were a whole ceremony: he ate alone, but in public. Visitors would stand behind bars and watch him. During his reign, a new style of cooking, "à la Française", appeared; new cookbooks are published as of 1651. What were the transformations?

__ Oriental spices, which were until then sign of wealth and nobility, aren't used so much. They are replaced by French herbs (shallot, chive and above all the black truffle, which then becomes the symbol of luxury and haute-cuisine)

__Sauces, which used to be lean and acid, become richer and are prepared with butter. Butter becomes a major ingredient in French cooking. (At that time, beauty standards changed: the fashion turned to rounder, plumpier women)

__Sugar is more and more used in desserts and sweets, but disappears from salty dishes.

Many other events followed this revolution: people don't cook directly on the fire anymore, the ancestors of our cookers start appearing in all households, rich and poor. People arrange their homes a room to have their meals in, before that, they would ea t in their bedroom or in the kitchen.

During the XVIIIth and the XIXth century, many European kings and noblemen would employ French cooks, paying them heavy sums of money to come to their country. Even nowadays, many chefs of official palaces travel or have training courses and can therefore learn the French methods.

These feasts used to have several courses,and last for hours. Nowadays, the French still frequently have three-course meals, and even sometimes four or five course meals. Within those courses, a good cook or chef will try and make the diet as balanced as possible: for example, if one has salad as a starter, one may have heavier food such as potatoes or pasta with the main dish. If both the starter and the main dish are a bit "filling", then the dessert will be lighter, a fruit salad or sorbet, instead of cake or chocolate mousse.

The word RESTAURANT is French... It meant at first a rich and fortifying stock, then different dishes which helped revive the energy, and at last became the name of the place where these dishes were served, at the end of the XVIIIth century.



SPECIALITIES FROM DIFFERENT REGIONS

Auvergne is famous for its consistant food . In the region people are very found of dishes with potatoes and bacon mixed with cream. A typical dish in Auvergne is the "truffade" that consists of potatoes,bacon ,garlic and cheese. Another Auvergne speciality is the "potée". It is a main course that consists of bacon, pigham, beef added with cabbage and potatoes. The "soupe aux marrons" is also well-known; it's a soup made out of chestnuts. We also have to underline that Auvergne is famous for its cheese, especially three that are considered amongst the best in France: Cantal, S:t Nectairre and Bleu d'Auvergne; all three made out of cow's milk.

Bretagne is the region where you can find the most delicious crêpes. But be careful, these are not to be mixed up with pancakes. The experts refuse with an obstination that honours their gastronomic harshness, to assimilate the crêpe with the pancake.Crêpes can be eaten sweat or salted, cold or hot. In Brittany they often come with sausages, but are also eaten with eggs, salted butter,onions and even tripes! How the crepes are made and what comes with them depends on each region.They are usually made with water,flour,egg, butter and sometimes cream or milk.In Perigord,in the south-west of France crêpes are made of anise and cornflour. In Auvergne they are made of buckwheat or wheat and in Alsace they use cinnamon,chocolate or nuts. It is important to mention the most famous crêpe of them all; the crêpe "Suzette",invented in the beginning of our era and named after a lady.

Bourgogne is the most famous region when it comes to French gastronomy. Burgundy's culinary and wine reputation is knowned all over the world. A typical dish coming from this region is the "Boeuf Bourguignon" ,a piece of beef cooked in redwine.The real burgundy vinesnails come from this region.There is also a sophisticated starter :"jambon persillé" that consists of ham sprinkled with parsley with the taste of garlic,white wine and pepper.

THE BLACK TRUFFLE

The truffle is known as the diamond in French cuisine. The most famous ones comes from Perigord , a region in the south-east of France.The mushroom comes to life by a mycelium who lives in symbiosis with a tree, preferably a variety of oak.The truffles are not easy to find since they grow below the earth and over the years various techniques have been used to find these "precious pearls" , such as finding the truffles with the help of sows, dogs and even flies.

The most old-fashioned way to search for the truffles is with a sow, who has got an unquestionable sense of smell.One problem though, is that the sow is often clumsy and there is a risk that it destroys the mushroom.Today trufflehunting with sows have been replaced with trained dogs that are often hunting more for their master than for themselves which is the case of the sows.

An other way to find the truffle is actually with the help of flies.This requires a lot of patience and observation. The fly in question has got a green-bronze colour and long wings. Like the sow its quality is its sense of smell. It can smell the mushroom and then gets closer to it to finally sit down on it. After this the hunter in question has to wait to see if other flies are joining the first one. If they are, he can be sure that the truffles are nearby. He then marks the place for the mushrooms and goes to get them.

Nowadays truffle is becoming more and more rare in the region of Perigord. The reason for this, according to specialists, is that modern agriculture machines are sticking more deeply in the soil than old ploughing implements and are destroying the truffles growing underground. In France truffle has become a luxury product because of its rareness, the decreasing production and an increasing demand. The mushrooms are very expensive and are only eaten on special occasions.The price can today go from 500-1000 Francs for 1 kg of truffles!!!



FOIE GRAS

Like the truffle the foie gras has its origins in Perigord.This speciality can be made of either goose or duck liver.Geese are force-feed with the help of a pipe that sends food directly into their stomach, to make the liver fat. Nowadays geese are feed with an electrical instrument, but previously they were force-feed by a longpiped funnel stuck in the beak. This process was made with the help of a woman who helped the goose to make the food ( corn dipped in hot water) go directly down in the stomach by massing its neck. This procedure did not take more than 3-4 minutes.

The force-feeding takes place for about 4-5 weeks and the geese become feed 3 times a day. The daily ration consists in about 1 kg and 500 grams of corngrains. When the process is finished the weight of the goose can go up to 9 or 10 kg!! It can't stand on its feet anymore, it staggers and have breathing problems.

This is the right moment to sacrifice it. The opening of the goose is always a big moment of suspense , because you never know how the liver will look like. The slaughter goes on very carefully not to damage the liver.

This is a really cruel way to treat an animal and the International Animalright Convention have already raised their voices against the inhuman way of treating the geese. Despite this French people are very proud of their foie gras and the force-feeding tradition that they refuse to abandon..

THE BEGINNING OF FRENCH GASTRONOMY

I have heard this term so many times, i thought i should research into this. I hope one day i am able to open a restaurant that will bring in tastes from around the world. But now i am still learning, next dinner will hopefully be when Kris comes back.


THE BEGINNING OF FRENCH GASTRONOMY

The real turning point in the French gastronomy was the arrival from Italy of a plump fourteen-year old girl named Catherine de Medici. She came to Paris in 1533 to become the queen of Henry II. It was not she who revolutionized the tastes of France; it was her retinue of chefs, pastry makers, and gardeners, the finest from Florence. To realize what an impact this made, it is necessary to examine the culinary accomplishments of France's neighbor.


At the time of Catherine de Medici's arrival in Paris, the gastronomic arts had reached their epitome in Florence. The first modern cooking academy, the Compagnia del Paiolo ("Company of the Cauldron"), had been founded there in the early 1500s. Cookbooks had been commonplace in Rome since the first century C.E., with the writings of Apicius. Consumption of vegetables, especially cabbage, common boiled greens, and fava beans were all commonplace, as was the consumption of a variety of fruits such as apples, apricots, peaches, cherries, figs, and many types of melons. Herbs, spices, and many blended sauces were used both in cooking and as flavoring to be added at the table.


The Romans are said to have invented cheese-cake, both a savory and a sweet dessert type using honey. More than a dozen varieties of cheese were known; they were used often after the meal as a dessert with fruits. Breads made with flour and yeast, pasta made from flour and water and shaped in a variety of ways then dried, even the use of tomatoes and corn, newly arrived from the ships of the conquistadores, had some of their first experimental tastes in Italian kitchens.


While Catherine de Medici dazzled the French court with her sumptuous banquets of unusual dishes, the greatest shock must have been her introduction of the fork. Spoons and knives had been used before, but to dine with a fork was revolutionary. The art of making breads, cakes, and pastries, the preparation of fresh vegetables, and the serving of fruits and cheeses were appreciated, but a great favorite was ices and ice cream. There is some disagreement as to whether the first ice creams were introduced by Catherine de Medici or by a Sicilian in Paris, Francisco Procopio, who reputedly opened the first cafe selling ice creams and ices of many flavors. It is certain that Catherine introduced the French court to the iced delicacies, but perhaps Procopio deserves credit for presenting it to Parisians.


From the kitchens of Marie de Medici, Catherine's niece who married Henry IV came the present French classics: sauce bearnaise and sauce mornay. By now the culinary arts gained even wider appreciation, and while the next king, Louis IV, gorged on endless courses and enormous quantities of foods, Parisians were beginning to enjoy a new stimulation: the first public cafes (in 1669) serving coffee.


The 1700s saw many fads and fancies such as bombe glacee, petits pois (actually introduced by Catherine de Medici), animelles (ram's testicles), and truffle foie gras (imported truffles from Italy had started the French on a search for their own underground delicacies).


But it was through the efforts and writings of a French agronomist and economist, Antoine Parmentier, that the humble potato was finally accepted as a food. About the same time, restaurants began appearing, much to the consternation of the traiteurs or caterers who had more or less a monopoly on the selling of cooked meats. In 1765, an innkeeper named Boulanger is said to have used sheep's feet to flavor his soups which he sold as restorantes. This was construed by the traiteurs as an illegal way of selling cooked meats, but once the furor died down, more and more Parisians were enjoying eating out, and by the turn of the century more than 500 "restaurants" had opened their doors, each boasting long and different menus. This was the period of the development and codification of French gastronomy by four of the greatest French chefs and gastronomes: Jean Anhelm Brillat-Savarin (1755-1876) who labored for twenty-five years to produce Physiology of Taste (La Physiologic du Gout); Antonin Careme (1784-1833) who wrote volumes on everything from the chronicling of menus to the construction of confectionary architecture and was called "the king of chefs and the chef of kings"; George Auguste Escoffier (1847-1935) who was regarded as "the emperor of the world's kitchens," a title conferred on him by German Emperor William II; and the author of Larousse Gastronomique, Prosper Montagne (1865-1948). It was not uncommon, then as today, that cooks trained in the palaces and wealthy homes opened their own fine little restaurants when they retired.

Premier League Game

Yes to all soccer fans, we are in this season as well, we are playing the online soccer manager organised by the premier league, there is prizes to be won both monthly and also for the whole season.

Sign up and join us ! A private league have been set up, we shall see whose premier league knowledge and analysis is the best.

So where is the Arsenal, Liverpool and Chelsea fans .... lets test our Soccer knowledge.

Here is the website : http://fantasy.premierleague.com

Heres the code to join :406641-85899

Truffle Galore

Yes, I have heard so much about truffles and watched countless cooking show where the chefs were using truffle oil, truffle sauce and truffle shavings. Well, apparently Mandarig is having a truffle festival.

These fine delicacies are very much sought after in Europe and all the top restaurants around the world. Because they grow underground, to harvest the truffles its like mining for diamond. Truffles only grow in the wild, which makes it even more difficult to find.

Well, for $150 per person, there a restaurant who will do a 7 course meal. This will be our next food and wine tasting, possible in August. I will provide a full review once i have tasted it.



I shall try one day to use truffle in my cooking.

Monday, July 28, 2008

Sick on the weekend

I was abit under the pumps this week, I think i had head cold, if there is such a sickness. My head was so heavy and painful the whole week. The only bad thing was it was during the weekend. It would have been better if i could take a day off during the week. Free rest day !

But today i decided to plan for my December holiday and also convention plan for next april in Melbourne. With the holiday plan i bought, we've decided to try and use the freebies and points we got. We plan for a group outing to the south during the December break , possibly to Margaret river (25 -28 Dec). If anyone is interested do let me know.

Also in April we plan to do a week long stay in Melbourne, and enjoy the scenery. Something which i missed the last time i was there.

Below is the pictures from the Firehouse outing, which a group of us went.




Sunday, July 27, 2008

Is there life in the universe ?

This has often been a very touch question and issue. Some christians say God did not specifically mention so its an open topic, while others say we are the only one in the universe. Sometimes i wonder how big actually is the universe ? What is beyond the universe ? If i can be on a spaceship to travel the galaxy, i would certanly jump at the chance.

Apparently Nasa says that there is ailen lifeform... but how true is it? Below is an article for your viewing pleasure



Hollywood, not NASA, reveals alien truth
By Geoff Shearer
July 28, 2008 09:25am
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''THE craft was triangular in shape and had at least three white lights that alternated indiscernibly and perhaps one light in the middle.
"I know it was triangular because it would block out the stars that were illuminated behind it. "It moved very slowly and made absolutely no sound and seemed to move in any direction in an indetectable fashion. "It seemed to be 'searching' or 'surveying' the area around our land ..." That report was posted by Janet Hahn on ufoevidence.org as her description of what she saw in the sky over Port Angeles, Washington, US, in September 1990. Let's take her report - one of thousands of similar unsubstantiated reports that are available on the web - as truth. The whole truth. Nothing but that same truth Mulder and Scully were looking for. UFOs and aliens exist. And we can make that leap - with certitude now - because former NASA astronaut Dr Edgar Mitchell says it is so. The Apollo 14 moonwalker announced late last week that not only do aliens exist but they have visited Earth many times, for cups of tea and cake and a quick tour of the Smithsonian, one assumes, and governments have been covering it up for decades. Now, mind you, this is the same moonwalker who dabbled in a few private extra-sensory perception experiments with his friends back on Earth during the Apollo 14 flight. Not sure what you'd say - or telepathise, for that matter - from up there. "Could you check if I left the oven on?" or "I'm thinking cheese, I'm thinking cheese ..." But there you go. Anyway, let's accept aliens are here - Janet saw them and Edgar says it's true. The question then begs: why haven't we been told before? The answer, remarkably, is even simpler than the long-held suspicion that the US Government thought we'd panic and go running around gibbering, pulling at our eye sockets and using it as an excuse for criminal acts. The answer lies in a far more powerful force than the US Government - it lies in Hollywood. For if we knew that aliens were here and we knew what they looked like, it would rip the forks out of the nighties of a plethora of celluloid legends. We'd all know that aliens don't punch their way out of your chest like a mutant sock-puppet as they do in Alien. Nor would we find the depictions in Men In Black all that humorous. On your bike, ET, we've got the real thing at our local zoo. Gone too would be much of the point and a lot of the fun of Star Wars, Star Trek and Doctor Who. It would be like making films about September 11. They can never be as powerful as the news footage of the actual event. And films such as Tim Burton's Mars Attacks, which ridiculed alien life forms on Earth, would be legal minefields if a Martian, now a resident Earthian, was to bring a racism claim against Burton in the courts. Best for Hollywood to keep a lid on the whole thing - even throwing a few red herrings into play such as Roswell to keep both the sceptics and the believers confused. Keep the alien hidden, downtrodden, enslaved and watch the box office continue to pay. Oh, the inhumanity of it all. But now that Edgar has opened the door on the closed encounters, things are beginning to unravel. Even the Vatican's got a whiff of what was on the wind. The Pope's chief astronomer - probably sparked into action by the Mars landing, quite literally, attempting to dig up the dirt on extraterrestrial life - came out last month to say the search for other beings does not necessarily contradict a belief in God. "Just as there are a plethora of creatures on Earth, there could be others, equally intelligent, created by God," said Jesuit priest Jose Gabriel Funes, who mans the Vatican's space observatory near Rome. And, he reckons, some aliens may even be innocent of original sin. All of which sounded like the Vatican was priming us for something. Or hedging some bets of some kind. Either way it was a radical departure from the "we're the only ones" spiel of previous centuries. If we accept the overwhelming evidence (from Janet and Edgar and their mates) that aliens exist and the overwhelming conspiratorial conclusions as outlined to why their presence on Earth is kept quiet, why then do we continue to send probes into space? Is that just another part of the ploy? Another red herring? Really, such pretence is a sad reflection on humankind. The greatest thing that has happened to this planet - we receive visitors from another world - and what do we, as a human race, do? We go "shuuusssh, don't tell anyone, it'll stuff our economy and Nicole Kidman will be out of a job".
Shame, shame, shame. It leaves you then with that last line in Monty Python's Galaxy Song from The Meaning Of Life which so aptly sums up the situation: "And pray that there's intelligent life somewhere up in space ... 'cause there's bugger all down here on Earth."

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Tour De France

Wow ! If you have not watched tour de france before, this year has really been a roller coaster ride. I have not watched the Tour since Lance Armstrong retired, but this year Australia have a representative in the tour - Cadel Evans who might come this weekend be the tour De France champion. Of course he is no Lance Armstrong, Lance is a one-off a phenom who by all accounts would not be matched for a long long time. Lance was an excellent climber and also a great time-trialist. Unforuntately, there is no one else in this tour who is good at both.

This year, the yellow jersy have changed 7 times and hopefully come this weekend will change for the eighth and final time. I will be sure to cheer on our Aussie man and hope that for once a champion will come from the land down under.

Below is a report of the current race :

Cadel's time to shine: trial to determine Tour

BY JUSTIN DAVISCYCLING
25/07/2008 12:00:00 AM

Cadel Evans faces a huge test of his renowned time trialling prowess in tomorrow's ''race of truth'' as his Tour de France title bid hangs in the balance.
Evans finally succumbed to the combined climbing might of the Danish CSC team led out by fellow Australian Stuart O'Grady on the final day in the Alps, though he did a good job of limiting the damage.
But after starting eight seconds from the overall lead he dropped to 1min 35sec behind the new leader, Spaniard Carlos Sastre of CSC, who scorched ahead on the legendary 14km closing climb to the summit of l'Alpe d'Huez to win Wednesday's 17th stage.

''It's not so bad but I'd rather be five minutes in front,'' Evans said.
With little expected to change on the next two stages, the race looked likely to be decided in tomorrow's penultimate 20th stage time trial, known as the race of truth. Commonwealth Games time trial gold medallist Evans will be in his element.

The question was whether fourth-placed Evans had given up too much time to Sastre, who led by 1min 24sec from teammate Frank Schleck with Bernhard Kohl third at 1min 33sec.
The good news for Evans was that major time trial rival Denis Menchov of Russia was a further 1min 05sec behind him in fifth, though still an obvious threat.
In normal circumstances, the Aussie would hope to take at least two minutes from Sastre in the 53km race from Cerilly to Saint-Amand-Montrond.
Even Sastre doubted his prospects. ''In the time trial, against riders like Evans and Menchov, I don't think I have much of a chance,'' Sastre said.

''Right now, I don't want to think about 1:34. All I want to do is recuperate ahead of Saturday.''
Yet Evans's Silence team manager, Marc Sergeant, is an anxious man.
''Less than a minute's deficit to Sastre would have been better, but we're still in contention,'' the Belgian said.

''If we still have a 1:34 deficit on the morning of the time trial, we could be okay. It's 50-50.''
In the shorter fourth stage time trial raced over 29.5km, Sastre finished 1min 43sec behind winner Stefan Schumacher with Evans fourth, at 21.
It's all too familiar for Evans who faced a similar scenario last year when he was runner-up to another Spaniard, Alberto Contador, despite taking 1min 27sec off him in a similar distance time trial to finish just 23sec behind.

''Last year it was a bit of a Hollywood ending, in fact it was too original for Hollywood. I have a knack for this at the Tour,'' Evans said. ''We'll see on Saturday. This will really become the race of truth.''

Evans's countryman O'Grady played a key role for Sastre and his CSC team on stage 17, helping set the pace on the early ramps of the Col de la Croix de Fer climb before letting Fabian Cancellara take over to set a more punishing pace.
O'Grady went up the last climb at his own rhythm, but listening with delight as he followed Sastre's progress in his earpiece.

''I was hearing it [the time gaps] over the radio, it was awesome. It was giving me goosebumps,'' O'Grady said after finishing 38min behind Sastre. AAP/AFP

LETS CHEER OUR AUSSIE MATE.

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Funny from My friend

Fw: Ah Beng's e-meow... Coool........^_^


Dear Ah Lian

Thanks you for your letter. Wrong time no see you. How everything? For me, Iam quiet find.You say in your letter your taukeh soh want you to chain your look? Somemore you must wear kick kok soo, hope you can wok properly.You know, Ah Kau Kia working in a soft where company now. Last week, he takeI, Muthu & few of his friend to May Nonut to eat barger. After that he take we all go to kalah ok.Muthu sing and sing no stop until the sky bright.Next week, my father mother going to sellerbread 20 years annie wear sari.My father mother going to give a fist to all the kampong people. So you must come with your hole family.I only hope one day we no need to write and send letter to you and to me.Better I e-meow you, you e-meow me. I will ketchup with you soon. And whenyou got time, please fewfree to call me.

Goo bye.....

Worm regard,

Ah Beng

Be careful when buying IPHONE plan with Telstra

There is no such thing as a good deal, so it goes to show when Iphone in Aust are so cheap, there is always a catch. Good luck for those unwitting people who signed up without looking at the pricing plan carefully.

Below is a report :

Watchdog warns on telco tricks and iPhone fees

David Flynn22 July 2008, 11:57 AM (1 day 1 hour ago.)
The ACCC is warning iPhone purchasers not to get burned by telco billing tricks.
The ACCC has suggested that iPhone buyers take a closer look at the data allowance on their plans, and also written to carriers regarding concerns over what it calls “the potential for consumers to be misled about mobile data usage charges.”

The move has been triggered by anxiety over relatively low monthly download limits and high excess usage charges, as well as an inability for consumers to accurately gauge their true data needs.

This has been underscored by the insanity of Telstra’s entry-level iPhone plans, which come with a meagre 5MB of data – sufficient for browsing less than a half-dozen Web pages or watching a ten minutes of video on YouTube. Once over that limit, customers are slugged an excess data charge of $1/MB.

It’s an identical play to Telstra’s mass marketing of BigPond broadband – a low up-front fee coupled with a minimal data allowance which unwitting users quickly exceed, leaving them to face excess usage fees that are multiples of their regular monthly bill.

Optus’ cheapest $19/month plan comes with only 100MB of data, which many users would still blast past in the course of a month, and attract an excess usage charge of 35c/MB – almost a third of what Telstra levies, but still enough to pack a significant sting at the end of the month.

Vodafone’s plans being with a more realistic 250MB of data for $69 per month with excess data costed at only 12c/MB. All three carriers offer heavy-duty plans of 1GB to 3GB, but with high monthly fees starting at $149.

The ACCC’s warning isn’t restricted to the iPhone but applies to all 3G smartphones, many of which make it easier than ever to access the Internet on the go (especially when coupled to a laptop) – and in doing so, download high amounts of data that can blow out your monthly mobile bill.

“Consumers can download greater amounts of information from the Internet than ever before” said ACCC Chairman Graeme Samuel. “With this comes the potential for them to exceed their phone plan value and incur considerable additional charges.”

“The ACCC is particularly concerned that consumers may be misled if they are not made sufficiently aware that their data allocations can be exceeded – at significant cost” Samuel warned. “Not all carriers offer high volume data plans, so we encourage consumers to compare the offers of each carrier, taking particular note of the excess data usage fees.”

APCmag.com's own independent comparison of iPhone plan value from every carrier can be found here.

The regulatory body also expects carriers to do their part in making data limits and excess fees more transparent.

“Earlier this month the ACCC wrote to telecommunication carriers alerting them to concerns about the potential for consumers to be misled about mobile data usage charges. We have asked carriers to advise how they intend to deal with this issue and what information they will be providing to consumers.”

Saturday, July 19, 2008

The Dark Knight (2008) - Not a movie for the fainthearted



The movie came out in Australia on Thursday, but since it was near to the weekend, we decided to organise a group outing and 10 people turned for the dinner and movie night. We book the Firehouse Bar and Bistro situated in Belmont and was pleasantly surprised by the food on offer.
That review I will save for another day, but if you must go try the BBQ Ribs, its "heavenlicious"
The ribs were grilled to perfection and the the meat just falls off the bone when you bit into it. It is a must try.

But in anycase, we did not forget about tonight's main event which is Batman - The Dark Knight. Especially after the untimely death of Heath Ledger, which leads to the movie's mystique. You can't help but wonder if there was a link between his death and that of Brendon lee, both wore quite similar make-up, one in Batman and the other in Crow. Maybe we should scarp the make-up altogether. Though Heath is gone, his legacy will remain, will this be his finest film ? Many argue that it certainly is, well that was what i wanted to find out.

The movie directed by Christopher Nolan was the sequel to Batman Begin, what i really like in this new installment is the continuity of the movie instead of the usual cut and chop of the previous installment that sometimes makes no sense.

The movie took off where it ended in Batman Begins with Christopher Bale " Bruce Wayne" living in his penthouse instead of the usual Bruce Manor because in the previous movie, it was burned and razed by his mentor Henri Ducard. The love of his life on the other hand have found another man and left Bruce a little bruised in his ego.

While the mob bosses, have turned from lions to mice, scurrying away at the sight of the Bat signal lighting the Gotham sky. In comes the Joker, trying to get a piece of action. This time round the joker was darker and edgier. In my opinion much better than joker in the first installment with Jack Nicholas, this is not to say Jack was a bad actor, but just that this time round Batman was a movie meant more for the grown-up child within all of us "Gen-X"ers, who was raised on a staple diet of cartoon comics, then the little kids of today. This is NOT a family movie so if you think about bringing your little toddler, I'd suggest you leave them at home.

The first joker Jack did a good job, but Heath just took it to a whole new level. The joker was not only evil but a real psychopath, who would kill to get what he wants. You just would never expect what he would come up with. Just when you thought he was caught, then came another twist and another turn in the movie.

Kris my buddy pointed out this was close to the comics as the true origin of the Joker was never truly discussed in DC comics, when he first appeared in Batman #1 ( 1940). But I must say Heath outdid himself, in his attempt

The story actually have 3 themes running - One which discusses about Bruce and his coming to term with his role as Batman, the second is the appearance and the ultimate apprehension of the Joker and third the first appearance and story behind Harvey "2 face", Bruce's rival in love. A man who who Gotham's shining knight but in a twist of fate become Gotham's dark knight.

For those who have not watched the movie be prepared for a long long night. This movie is over 2 hours long. And is deep and dark through and through. But ultimately a great movie to watch .
If you decided to watch, remember to take a big bucket of pop-corn and a large coke. Its going to be a long ride, but a really good one.



Thursday, July 17, 2008

Rambo (2008 ) - Blood fest




In recent months, some of the oldies decided to relive their former glory by taking on another installment of their previous blockbuster. First Sylvester Stallone did Rocky, then came Harrison Ford with Indiania Jones, but stallone did one up on him by adding Rambo to his list.

Well this movie came and went without much fanfare, I heard about it but did not went to watch it at the cinema. The movie came out yesterday at the movie store, so i thought why not give it a go.
With a nice sumptuous dinner laid at our house, it was a perfect ending to a nice and quiet night.

Kris was excited like a baby when we told him about the movie and i am pretty sure he will have done his review on this. The movie certainly did not disappoint with tons of mindless killing and "graphic death". Heads were blown, limbs were torn apart, a very typical Rambo movie.

The movie line was a little shallow and the budget certainly was small. I was half expecting Rambo to do one those big mission and more action to the final battle. But all i saw was Rambo sitting at the top of a gun truck for 10 minutes and shooting the bad guys. - You can tell when heros get old. The action gets lesser, the guns gets bigger.

But overall if you are after a action shootout with lots of death, i suppose this is a pretty enjoyable movie. That said i must say the movie was a little short only 1hour 17 min. But i think most guys would like this movie. So if you have the time, get it out from the store today.

Monday, July 14, 2008

Curtin Ball 2008

A night in Paris

Its been a while since i went for a ball, the last one i had was during my university days at the raffles ball. So i never thought, i would have to revisit this area of my youth again. But life has a way of bringing you back to your youthful days. I was having trouble trying to find something decent to wear. Thank God, i found a suit that still fits me. After this ball i have decided to go on diet and be a little slimmer. I was trying to 2 pair of pants i bought but never had a chance to wear. I need to remind myself to loss abit of bulk to make me look good again, but for now anything will do.

The night was It was a really fun time as we got to dress up and let our hair down. We had a wonderful time dancing and also catching up with friends.

One thing i notice is the Aussies are not shy in going to the dance floor like us Asians. I am sad to admit that it took alot of coaxing before we actually went to the floor and did out thing.









Below are the food for the ball




Mushroom soup ! This was really nice one of the best i tasted



Chicken breast cook in french style - delicious !




Creme Burlee - This one not one of my favorites


Will put in more photos next round ....

Food and Wine Show 2008

Its been a fun weekend for me, having been to my company's Christmas in July function on friday, i knew this was going to be the start of a really hectic weekend. Our company held this special event at the Minq bar in Burswood. But this was just the start of a wonderful weekend to come. Then came Saturday, and the food and wine festival was something i had been pinning for all these months.

It has been so long since i went to such a festival that i actually was planning for a great tasting. Just like the last time when i found a gem of a winery called Woodland wines, i was actually hoping to find another gem amidst all the commercial winery and might i say I found one which was quaint and unique. It was a boutique winery which makes one wonder why its not been picked up by the wine connoisseur, it certainly has some interesting wines like a sparking merlot, which is hand-turned.

Another great little surprise was the fresh oysters being sold there, me and chong yee ordered 18 oysters for a tasting. I highly recommend for those who have yet to go, to at least visit the exhibition once in their lifetime. Lets just say, there are not many places, you get to taste so many variety of wines


Here are some photos of the exhibition



Me and chong's trying some wines



Pittano's delicious soup - better than heinz !



THE SUPER FRESH OYSTERS



Really delicious Beef jerky !




Free Beer !!


Too bad for those who couldn't make it. Make sure you book a date next year !

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

CIV 4 - My Archilles Heel

If people have been wondering why my blogging got a little lesser. Its because of the game i happen to buy recently at EB Games for a sales price. Unfortunately, one of my bad habit is I need to win the game at least once, before i can put it down. That is always been my big problem but what should i do, life is certainly more challenging now.

I have always enjoyed turn based strategy games since Romance of the 3 kingdom and it has been something i always try to get when I want to buy a game. Since i have played the last 3 Civilization this one was a no brainer.

Civ 4 is a great game to play if you need to exercise your brains.

I have decided to keep the game to 30mins every couple of days, but this game is quite fun to play because it needs some planning and strategy. I have played the last 3 Civilization games, so this was something i cannot miss out. and it is proving more fun than the last 3.

The game developed by Sid Meiers is truly a remarkable game.

Hancook from Zero to Hero



The movie staring will smith, jason bateman, eddie marsan and Charlize Theron is a movie that starts off well but fizzles out in the end. Yesterday as there was no cell meeting, my wife and I decided to go for a movie and since we have watched most of the good ones, we decided on watching Hancook.

Directed by Peter Berg this movie leaves more questions than answers. It does not give us much answer to why he has all these super powers. I think what i would have liked was some glimpse of how it all began. Maybe this movie was a teaser but without a history of how he came about, it just feels like reading a book from the middle and not understanding the full plot at all.

If you can imagine how you would feel taking a book and reading it from the middle, then you must know how i feel when i went for the movie. I have no clue as to why he was boozy and irresponsible. How he was created, what happen between him and his wife ? This were questions i wanted to know but never got a chance to.

But though the story plot was a little thin, i must admit Will Smith did put in a stellar performance as usual. His presence alone carried the movie and helped breathe some life into the otherwise uninspiring movie. Will Smith i must say have come a long way from the young comedian in the Fresh Prince of Bel Air days into a possible Oscar nominee.

This is a possible great DVD to rent when it does comes out. Wait for it







DIRECTED BY

Peter Berg

SYNOPSIS

Unpopular superhero Hancock saves the life of a PR executive who attempts to salvage his public image

Sunday, July 6, 2008

My housemate is descended from Royalty


I was watching the movie Queen Elizabeth : The Golden age, and had a conversation with my housemate, Mr Victor Stewart, who mentioned that he was descended from a royal line. I am pleasantly surprised, a descendant of the Kings is staying with me.

But if you did watch the show, Mary Queen of Scott would then have been his ancestor, though she came to a tragic end. But her descendants have lived on, in places all over the world and one of them is staying with me. Possible i would have to stop my ribbing and be more respectful, who knows maybe he will confer me a knighthood.

The movie was definitely not penned for general public, though the critics raved about the movie, it was definitely not one for the box office.. The performance was great but the plot was just too melodramatic

I was wondering if I too came from a royal line. I know my surname is Han, wonder if i am related to the royal line of the Han dynasty kings. It would be good to search my family tree and find out.

Below is a history of Mr Victor Stewart family tree. So next time you see him. wave at him politely, like you would for a royalty

HISTORY OF THE STEWARTS

The Stewarts were originally descended from a Breton noble family and came to Scotland with David I when he returned from England to claim his throne in 1124. David made Walter fitz Alan the hereditary Lord High Steward of Scotland and it was from the name of this great office of state that the royal dynasty took its name. By the judicious marriage to the daughter of Robert the Bruce, they secured a route to the Scottish throne to which Robert, the 7th High Steward (or Stewart) succeeded in 1371 on the death of Bruce's only son, David II.

So began a dynasty of 14 monarchs, five of which ruled on both sides of the border (starting with James VI of Scotland and I of England and ending with Queen Anne in 1714). For the 200 years that the Stewarts held the office of High Steward, their star was in the ascendant: their power and influence increased and their possessions multiplied. Having secured the throne however, the fates began to conspire against them.

On their accession the Stewarts inherited a land struggling to come to terms with emerging nationhood and torn by powerful noble factions; over the next 400 years they unified it, brought it under central control, and guided it through periods of renaissance, reformation and finally union with England. In the course of this, of the crowned Stewart monarchs, four were murdered or beheaded, two died in battle, one in exile and two reputedly of broken hearts.

Stewart ambitions to regain the throne that they had lost to their Hanoverian cousins were finally extinguished at Culloden in 1746. The last recognised male of the line, Henry, Duke of York, died in Italy in 1807.

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

ONE DAY & ONE DOLLAR








Below is an article i found from Newpaper, it just reminded me what happens when people follow their dream. Hopefully, my brother Kris will read this and be inspired to put his film up for competition.

Its really great to see people willing to pursue their dreams to what they believe they were destined for. What is your dream ? What is your life goal ? Keep focus and plough along until it finally comes to past.



ONE DAY & ONE DOLLAR

HIS FATHER wanted him to be a lawyer.

Click to see larger image
Mr Saleem says his team used their digital cameras to shoot the short film. -- TNP Picture: CHOO CHWEE HUA

But Mr Mohamed Saleem Abdul Hadi, who is passionate about design, film-making and theatre, decided to follow his heart.

This May, the SIM communication design degree student, 26, two of his friends and his younger brother, produced a five-minute documentary about people's views on death called Take.

They took only a day to film, using their own digital cameras, and spent only $1 - on some flowers which they used as props.

But it went on to become one of three films to be given the distinguished community documentary award in the Reel Ideas Studio short film competition held in conjunction with the 2008 Cannes Film Festival.

There were 36 entries for that category in all. The other two top community documentaries came from Brazil and the United States.

UNBELIEVABLE

One of the judges include two-time Academy winner Rob Epstein, a renowned documentary film-maker.

Mr Saleem said: 'When we checked the website, we couldn't believe that we won. So we e-mailed the studio for a confirmation.

'It took us one week to confirm our win. It's unbelievable.'

Mr Saleem recalled how they had to approach strangers for their film.

He said: 'The sun was out and people were playing on the beach that Saturday morning.

'We then asked them what's their take on death and what would they do if they were given half an hour to live.

'Some were quite shocked by that question. We were scolded, shoo-ed off and ignored.'

After editing the raw copy down to about five minutes, the team - which comprised Mr Nallu Dhinakharan, Mr Saravanan Siva and Mr Saleem's younger brother, Mr Mohamed Kamarudeen - submitted it a week later.

About a month later, in June, they found out they had won.

It was obviously well-worth their effort, as each of them won an Adobe professional production software suite worth about US$1,500 ($2,000).

Mr Saleem, who also has a polytechnic diploma in information technology, said that IT was not his cup of tea.

But he got interested in filming in his early '20s. And he likes design and playing with colours.

When he was considering furthering his studies after a diploma in communication design in early last year, he said: 'I just wanted to go some place that would allow me to be creative.'

It then happened that he saw SIM's brochure for the SIM-RMIT Bachelor of Design (Communication Design) programme.

The slogan 'Think for yourself' jumped at him and so, he signed up for the programme.

Apart from 'un-learning' the bad habits that he had picked up when he was freelancing as a video and film maker, he said: 'It's through the course that I realised my strength is in film.'

Mr Saleem's team is not the only one making creative waves internationally.

The Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts' (Nafa) Symphony Orchestra is also taking to the international stage.

The 40-member orchestra was the first non-European group to play at the Gut Botersheim Festival 2008 in Hamburg, Germany, on 21 Jun.

They were invited to play there by the musical director of the Hamburg Arts Festival, Professor Prosper-Christian Otto.

Prof Otto had visited Nafa last year to conduct a master class for its students. He was so impressed by their talent that he asked them to play at the Hamburg festival.

The performance was part of a two-week Europe tour that the orchestra embarked on for the first time in its six-year history, said a Nafa spokesman.

INSPIRED

The week before the tour saw 'arduous preparations' for the concert programme, recalled concert master Ng Wei Ping.

Mr Richard Adams, head of Nafa's music department, said: 'The purpose of the visit was to give the students a first-hand experience of the country whose music and culture they have been studying about.

'The trip is also one of the first steps we're taking to establish the reputation of our orchestra beyond the shores of Singapore.

'The students were thrilled at the opportunity to perform six concerts in some of Germany's most prestigious and beautiful venues.

'They've returned from the trip enriched from the exposure and exchanges, and recharged with new-found inspiration.'

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Bye Bye Jay







One of good friend Jay is going back to Korea for 6mths to 1 year. Its sad to see him leave, but yet at the same time we will get a tour guide if anyone happens to go Korea. The flights was so early in the morning, i almost missed it, as you can see on the guys were there to say goodbye, as the ladies were still sleeping in bed.

Hopefully Jay will enjoy his time in Korea with his parents and find new friends in Hope Seoul. This will be a good opportunity for him to spend time with his family

The movie list

If you are a movie buff like me and regularly watched movies. Its always good to create a list of must watch movies. There was a couple of hits and misses this year and its important not to waste time watching duds.

Even apparent movie greats like Indiana Jones was pretty much a flop, and I would probably recommend to get it on DVD.

These are the 4 movies which i would like to watch this year and hopefully they will not disappoint. The trailers have been included and when it comes I would be the first in line to watch it.

1. Harry Potter and the half-blood prince - Release date: Nov 21, 2008



2.The Mummy: Tomb of the dragon emperor - Release Date: August 1, 2008



3. Wall.E- Release Date: June 27, 2008



4. The Dark Knight - Release date: July 18, 2008



If anyone is interested please let me know early as we will get the $10 movie tickets.

REMEMBER TO WATCH KUNG-FU PANDA !