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Monday, June 4, 2012

HEALTH - ~ Powerin a puff

When the round piece of dough emerges from hot oil, looking all brown
and puffed up, you can't help succumbing to the temptation.
Last Sunday my little sister-in-law invited us to lunch. It was
getting on to 45°, it was dry as only Delhi can be in May, she lives
on the top floor of herapartment building, and the loo was blowing. In
other words, it was blazinghot. And she stood in the kitchen and made
us, with her own fair hands, hot pooris with the traditional rase ke
alu , dahi and achar the only other accompaniments.
That was a memorable meal, for many reasons: The company was easy
andcomforting, she had chilledthe house with the air conditioner set
to glacial, and the menu was just perfect. To have added or subtracted
from it would have been criminal.
The boiled potatoes, roughly broken by hand into a thinnish
orange-yellow gravy of tomatoes and dahi were flavoured with just
zeera , cumin and haldi . Just a hint of hing (asafœtida), garam
masala and freshly chopped coriander. The dough, the poori atta , had
been kneaded with dried methi , fenugreek leaves.
Family choices
I asked for mine puffed butsoft, her brother for his crisp, and our
niece for her solitary one without the methi . We all ate till we
collapsed and a crane had to be brought in to lift us.
The main reason was that in my house pooris are inedible ("but why,
bhabhi , there's nothing to pooris — why can't you?") and so I've
given up. The second was the purity of the alu , and the crowning
taste was the aam ka achar . For years I've annually suffered"hints"
about the best raw mango pickle being the one with no stone, no
saunf-methi-kalonji (fennel-fenugreek-nigella), only red chillies and
hing and I've turned a deaf ear because I don't like it. It's cut into
long, limp, thin slivers and tastes only of its ingredients, which
don'twork for me, they're too unconnected, too raw.
But the pickle at Chhoti's house had small triangular pieces of mango,
positivelyreeking of hing , but sweet and hot. The texture was firm
and crisp and naturally the taste was sour, but a large amount ofsugar
added an unexpected kick. With that savoury meal, sweetness did the
trick. I'm still waiting for a consignment and the recipe.
A few days later I went to a mall for a movie, the planwas to eat a
large breakfast and skip lunch. So I filled up on the mandatory
popcorn and then politely agreed to share a sandwich or pizza after.
One look at the menu and sure enough, all three of uswanted to eat
many things. I'm a sandwich fiend, am supposed to avoid red meat, so
ordereda tuna sandwich. Tuna is supposed to be a good source of
vitamins D, B3 and B6, and, in any case, it has a flavour that I like.
Unlike most shop-bought sandwich fillings, which taste and smell of
pink reconstituted plastic, tuna has character.
Tuna sandwich
This came in toasted brown whole wheat bread,cut into four large
trianglesand filled almost to bursting. The filling was held together
by mayonnaise — probably eggless — and its flavour and crunch
explained the name they'd given it: Colaba tuna sandwich. They could
as well have named it Nungambakkam or Defence Colony Tuna Sandwich, or
anything else desi . But to non-Mumbaikars, Colaba has a certain ring.
In it they'd mixed fresh chopped dhania (coriander)stalks and leaves
but there was also the pungent, unmistakeable bite of finely sliced
raw purple onions.
I like onions as much as the next person, but only with hot food, and
only with meat. We were tortured as children and not allowed onions at
lunch, which was usually vegetarian, but they were served steeped in
malt vinegar at dinner — which was always mutton in some form — and
the habit has stuck.
The onion in the sandwich was crisp in the middle of the squishy tuna
salad and its flavour balanced the smell of the tuna without
overpowering it. Occasionally a succulent stem of coriander would
burst freshly into the mouth. Both onions and coriander are "ornery"
and a part of all our larders, butthe unexpectedness of the
juxtaposition was what wrought the magic.
All unusual combinations don't necessarily succeed, sometimes they
manage tobe only just edible. But some act like a magic wand,
transforming pumpkins to carriages and scullery drudges to belles of
balls.
I find that with saunf , fennel. The humble every day dhuli moong
(yellow, hulled mung ), often cooked in combination with masoor ki dal
(red split lentil) is usually tempered, like most other dals in the
North, with cumin.
In the South it's most likelymustard seeds. This one is boiled with
saunf . Sautéing saunf changes its smell completely — it becomes
smoky, crisp, fried.

NEWS - ~ Technical fault possible cause of Nigeria plane crash

2012-06-04 02:19:58 GMT 2012-06-04 10:19:58(Beijing Time) SINA.com


People gather at the site of a plane crash near the Lagos airport in
Nigeria, June 3, 2012. A passenger plane carrying 153 people crashed
into a two-storey building in Nigeria's southwestern Lagos State on
Sunday, killing all the people on board and 40 others on the ground.
At least four Chinese were among the passengers, the Chinese Embassy
in the West African country has confirmed. (Xinhua/Ezekiel Taiwo)
The wreckage of the crashed plane is seen near the Lagos airport in
Nigeria, June 3, 2012. A passenger plane carrying 153 people crashed
into a two-storey building in Nigeria's southwestern Lagos State on
Sunday, killing all the people on board and 40 others on the ground.
At least four Chinese were among the passengers, the Chinese Embassy
in the West African country has confirmed. (Xinhua/EzekielTaiwo)
According to preliminary reports, Sunday's plane crash in Nigeria
could havebeen caused by a technicalfault.
The airliner operated by the domestic carrier Dana Air, crashed into a
crowded residential neighborhood of Lagos onSunday, killing all 153
people on board and at least one on the ground. The plane was making a
landing approach at the end of a flight from Abuja.
President Jonathan has declared three days of national mourning for the victims.
Flight recorder from crashed Nigerian plane found
A Nigerian airliner crashedinto a crowded residential neighborhood of
Lagos onSunday, killing all 153 people on board and at least one on
the ground.
Reports say the plane, operated by the domestic carrier Dana Air, was
making a landing approach at the end of a flight from Abuja.
One of the plane's flight recorders has already beenfound.

Quates :->

b like a candle which burns itself bt gvs light to others
@
A teacher is just like a ladder who stands at his place but helps
other 2 go higher and higher
@
Change and growth take place when a person has risked himself and
dares to become involved with experimenting with his own life
@
Just living is not enough. One must have sunshine, freedom, and a little flower
@
I slept and dream that life was joy. I awoke and saw that life was
service. I acted and behold service was joy

Communication and Signalling in the Language of Birds

Scientific research has revealed that throughout the living world,
communication is just as important as it is to human beings. Countless
living things lack the capacity for human speech, yet they employ
entirely different methods in order to communicate with each other—and
even with other species. Some of the most dramatic examples of this is
displayed by birds.
All forms of life on Earth have been created with miraculous
properties and astonishing abilities. The examination of just one
single species is enough toreveal hundreds of proofs of Allah's
magnificent creation.
In one verse of the Qur'an, Allah reveals that:
There is no creature crawling on the earth or flying creature, flying
on its wings, who are not communities just like yourselves—We have not
omitted anything from the Book—then they will be gathered to their
Lord. (Qur'an, 6: 38)
The birds to which this verse draws our attention notice are one of
the livingcommunities that we needto examine and reflect upon.
There are roughly some 10,000 species of bird in the world, each of
which possesses its own miraculous features. Wherever you may live,
you can see a great number of these featheredcreatures and can observe
different and extraordinary properties in each and every one. With
their attractive appearances, flawless flight mechanisms, expertise on
the routes and timing of migrations, ability to build nests and
altruistic behavior toward their young and to one another, birds
possess countless proofs of the fact of creation. Their ability to
communicate is another of these.
Birds' Sense of Hearing
For birds to display their talents in communicating by sound, song—and
in the case of some birds, words— they require excellent hearing. At
critical times in their lives, their sense of hearing becomes
particularly important. Experiments have shown that in order for birds
to learn the distinctive song of their own species, they need an
auditory feedback system. Thanks to this system, young birds learn to
compare the sounds they produce themselves with the patterns of a song
they have memorized. If they were deaf, it wouldn't normally be
possible for them to sing recognizable songs.
Birds' ears are well equipped for hearing, but they hear in a
different way from us. For them to recognize a tune, they have to hear
it in always the same octave (a series of seven notes), whereas we
humans can recognize a tune even if we hear it ina different octave.
Birds cannot, but can instead recognize timbre—a fundamental note
combined with harmonies.The ability to recognize timbre and harmonic
variations lets birds hear and reply to many diverse sounds, and
sometimes even reproduce them.
Birds can also hear shorternotes than we can. Humans process sounds in
bytes in about 1/20th of a second, whereas birds can distinguish these
sounds in 1/200th of a second. This means that birds are superior at
differentiating sounds that arrive in very rapid succession. In other
words, a bird's capacity to perceive sound is approximately ten times
greater than ours; and in every note heard by a human, it can hear
ten. Moreover, some birds are also able to hear lower-frequency sounds
than weare. Their hearing sensitivity is so finely tuned that they can
even tell the difference between pieces by such famous composers as
Bachand Stravinsky.
Birds' extremely sensitive hearing functions perfectly. Clearly, each
of this sense's components is created by special system, for if any
one failed to work properly, the bird would not be able to hear any
sounds at all.
Bird Sounds Are Not Haphazard
Usually, birdsong is not composed of randomly produced sounds. Songs
are exceptionally diverse melodies of specific meaning, sung for a
purpose, and are much more complex than the calls used for signaling.
They are generally used bymales to advertise and defend a territory,
or in courtship. It is also believed that songs serve a social
function. When a pair is building their nest, they also establish
communication by song. Experiments on caged birds have also
demonstrated that birds find it easier to learn songs if another bird
is present, but out of sight, in another cage.
Male and female songbirdshave different brain structures, particularly
in the regions related to sound production. With many songbird
species, the males can sing, but thefemales cannot. The malesuse
"song" to call their mates or designate a tree, pole, or electrical
cable as a place to perch.