Friday, August 30, 2013

Allergy free rhubarb and apple pudding recipe


Ingredients
  • Melted Nuttlex or olive oil spray, to grease
  • 500g rhubarb, trimmed, washed, cut into 2.5cm pieces
  • 500g granny smith apples, peeled, cored, chopped
  • 2 tbsps lemon juice
  • ¾ cup caster sugar
  • 125g Nuttlex
  • ⅔ cup goat’s milk
  • 2 tsps Orgran No Egg whisked with 100mls water until thick
  • 1 tsp vanilla essence
  • 1¼ cups Orgran self-raising flour
  • Icing sugar, to dust

Method
  • Preheat the oven to 180°C.
  • Lightly grease a 2 litre ovenproof baking dish.
  • Place the rhubarb, apple, lemon juice and ¼ cup of the sugar in the prepared dish and stir to combine.
  • Cover the dish with aluminium foil.
  • Bake in the oven for 25 minutes or until tender.
  • In a large bowl, beat the Nuttlex and ½ cup of sugar in a large bowl until pale and creamy.
  • Add the flour, milk, No Egg mixture and vanilla.
  • Beat until all the ingredients are just combined.
  • Spoon the mixture over the rhubarb and apple.
  • Bake in the oven for 40 minutes or until a skewer inserted in the centre comes out clean.
  • Dust the pudding with icing sugar.

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Allergy free buttered popcorn recipe



Ingredients
  • 2 large tbsps lactose free butter
  • 100g (approx.) unpopped popcorn kernels
  • 1-2 tsps salt (optional)

Method
  • Add half the butter to a wok and turn the heat to medium- high.
  • Add the popcorn kernels as the butter begins to melt.
  • Place a splatter guard over the top of the wok.
  • Before the popcorn starts popping stir the kernels a few times to ensure the butter evenly coats the kernels.
  • When the butter bubbles and steams begin rolling the popcorn about the bottom of the pan as much as possible.
  • When a third-half the kernels have popped, drop the remaining butter into the wok and continue rolling the popcorn to distribute the melting butter.
  • Keep the popcorn, popped and unpopped, in motion until the popping decreases significantly then remove the wok from the heat.
  • Pour the popcorn in a bowl and discard any unpopped or burnt kernels.
  • Sprinkle over the salt, as desired.

Monday, August 26, 2013

Rosy's scrawled manga recommendation: Mushishi by Yuki Urushibara

Mushishi
Yuki Urushibara


Blurb
Some live in the deep darkness behind your eyelids. Some eat silence. Some thoughtlessly kill. Some simply drive men mad. Shortly after life emerged from the primordial ooze, these deadly creatures, mushi, came into terrifying being. And they still exist and wreak havoc in the world today. Ginko, a young man with a sardonic smile, has the knowledge and skill to save those plagued by mushi . . . perhaps.

Alternative names
Mushi-shi

Status
Ongoing

Manga reader sites (free)
Manga Reader, Manga Fox

Rosy's scrawlings on Mushishi
Mushishi is a strange manga for a few reasons. I should say that it stands out rather than being strange, but either description will do. Mushishi is a slow paced, thoughtful and almost free of action. Ginko is a wanderer who tends to walk in and out of small villages, working on a variety of problems caused by mushi. The mushi themselves are almost intangible lifeforms that aren't normally sensed in any way by people but occasionally they cause illnesses or strange abilities, with many a drawback for humans. Ginko is one who wanders because not only can he sense them but he draws them to him. Staying in any place for too long means risking a build up of mushi and a catastrophe of unknown proportions. These storyline restrictions makes Mushishi unusual as the mood, if not the general plot, is almost the antithesis of popular manga styles, which tend to be fast paced and filled with extraordinary action sequences.
The mushi of Mushishi are interesting life forms. They appear like bacterial ghosts and sometimes take the form of humans or beasts that dwell in a slightly different reality or realm. The mushi are what Ginko spends his life dealing with while others with similar abilities to his own tend to kill them. Ginko is a calm force even within the story's world, his laid back and somewhat distanced nature giving him a perspective on life that almost no other shares. All life is worth saving, wherever possible, and so he strives to find a balance for all.
Otherwise, Mushishi  is constructed of short episodes taking place in different towns and villages. The stories are all rather timeless except through the scattered stories that explore Ginko's past. There's a sense of isolation in each story that heightens the ghostly presence of the mushi, making Mushishi a ghost story with a difference.
The art of Mushishi has a sketchy, scratching style that's smoothed over with extensive shading. The landscape looms large and is often haunting for the snow, rough dwellings, dense forests and scraggly trees. Ginko is eternally smoking a cigarette and studying his surrounds with his one eye. The art has a stillness and calm that is strikingly different from most mangas and is a pleasure to read for it.

I'd recommend this manga to: those who like slow paced thoughtful stories, ghost stories, the "tree of life", philosophy and the wanderers life.

Notes on manga reader sites
The quality of manga readers can vary. The uploads are often done cheaply or as a serious hobby by a collective. Be aware that sometimes licence hasn't been given but the sites noted above, Manga Fox in particular, are extremely careful about adding and pulling mangas according to license agreements. So you shouldn't have to worry too much about the material being pirated. There are also translated works and non-translated. Amongst the translated works you will find that the quality of translation may vary according to the skills of the translators. Usually the works are perfectly readable anyway, with only a few added or dropped words or a word in the incorrect tense or with/out plurals. But sometimes the text becomes gobbledygook. In which case, either seek another version or give up and buy an official copy once a printed translation comes out. The other issue of note is you may need to expand the screen to read the text easily as sometimes the scans are minimised a little.
I find that if a page doesn't download properly or some other issue occurs (too slow or someone ordered the pages incorrectly etc.) with one reader then skipping across to another reader and picking up where I was is quite easy and rarely annoying.
Otherwise, enjoy and watch out you don't get too addicted you forget about the necessary things in life.

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Best quotes from Romeo and Juliet for tattooing


"What's in a name? That which we call a rose
By any other word would smell as sweet."

"But, soft! what light through yonder window breaks?"

"Good night, good night. Parting is such sweet sorrow,
That I shall say good night till it be morrow."

"Thus with a kiss I die."

"This bud of love, by summer's ripening breath,
May prove a beauteous flower when next we meet."

“My bounty is as boundless as the sea,
My love as deep; the more I give to thee,
The more I have, for both are infinite.” 

“Love is heavy and light, bright and dark, hot and cold, sick and healthy, asleep and awake- its everything except what it is!"

“Wisely and slow; they stumble that run fast.” 

“Love is a smoke made with the fume of sighs.” 

“Oh, I am fortune's fool!” 

"What else is love? It’s a wise form of madness."

“My only love sprung from my only hate.”

“Is love a tender thing? It is too rough, too rude, too boisterous, and it pricks like thorn.”

“One fairer than my love? The all-seeing sun
Ne'er saw her match since first the world begun.”

“He that hath the steerage of my course,
Direct my sail.”

“What must be shall be.”

“Ready to go but never to return.”

“How much salt water thrown away in waste
To season love, that of it doth not taste.”

“Thou canst not speak of thou dost not feel.”

"Life, living, all is Death’s.”

“What's in a name?”

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Rosy's scrawled manga recommendation: Black Lagoon by Rei Hiroe

Black Lagoon
Rei Hiroe

Blurb
The story follows a team of mercenaries known as Lagoon Company, who smuggle goods in and around the seas of Southeast Asia. Their base of operations is located in the fictional city of Roanapur in Thailand, and they transport goods in the PT boat Black Lagoon. Lagoon Company does business with various clients, but has a particularly friendly relationship with the Russian crime syndicate Hotel Moscow. The team takes on a variety of missions - which may involve violent firefights, hand-to-hand combat, and nautical battles - in various Southeast Asian locations.

Alternative names
Burakku Laguun
ブラックラグーン
ブラック・ラグーン

黑礁

Status
Ongoing

Manga reader sites (free)
Manga Reader, Manga Fox, Manga Here

Rosy's scrawlings on Black Lagoon
This is yet another manga I learnt about from the social network grapevine. It came up a few times over the last year or two but I hadn't gotten around to reading. There was one failed attempt to but I must have been in the wrong mood, dropping it after about a chapter. This was a mistake, I admit, but then, the first chapter or so are a little lukewarm compared to those that come. What follows though, will have you hooked both for the ludicrous amounts of guns, blood and explosions, the roughness of the various women, the strange array of characters and the fast pace of the world in which Lagoon Company operates.
It is hard to describe Black Lagoon as it is a story that has many twists and turns, a wide range of characters to track and a series of connected mini stories. The best of stories often have such features and often require the commenter to begin rabbiting endlessly in order to explain the story, so it is no surprise that describing Black Lagoon has me facing the same issue. Suffice it to say that there's a group of misfits making an often violent living as traders/deliverers in a city ruled by equally or more violent groups such as the mafia, ex-Russian soldiers come crime syndicate, The Church Of Violence weapons traders (nuns with guns) and the CIA and other American secret service interlopers. The entire world they work within is corrupt and they fit right in, for one reason or another. Respectable lives for each of the crew members was either lost or never had and they each enjoy their life of violence far too much. The main pair of characters to follow are Revy Two Hand (a woman with severe attitude and a love for guns), and Rock the salary man from Japan who found himself at the mercy of Lagoon Company as one of the packages they traded in. Although saved by Revy, Rock still holds on to a more hopeful view of life. Revy, on the other hand is learning to put up with such optimism, at most. Together they fight for survival and sometimes a better outcome, but nothing much more except for pay.
The art of Black lagoon is a little unengaging for the first chapter or so, probably feeding the mild disinterest I felt with the first attempt. But soon enough the style settles into one that is bold and full of character. There's occasionally a very pretty or cute manga aspect to the illustrations but these generally focus on the younger characters. The action is fast paced and smooth, pushing the story forward and providing much that is visually interesting.  Otherwise, the only strange point is that everyone seems to always wear a set costume.

I'd recommend this manga to: those who love action with extreme violence, gun fights, stories involving the criminal and secret intelligence worlds and those who like to see their nuns and maids sporting big guns and bazookas of the explosive nature. Given the even mix of male and female leads this will appeal to men and women who fit the above but I wouldn't suggest this manga to the young and young at heart.

Notes on manga reader sites
The quality of manga readers can vary. The uploads are often done cheaply or as a serious hobby by a collective. Be aware that sometimes licence hasn't been given but the sites noted above, Manga Fox in particular, are extremely careful about adding and pulling mangas according to license agreements. So you shouldn't have to worry too much about the material being pirated. There are also translated works and non-translated. Amongst the translated works you will find that the quality of translation may vary according to the skills of the translators. Usually the works are perfectly readable anyway, with only a few added or dropped words or a word in the incorrect tense or with/out plurals. But sometimes the text becomes gobbledygook. In which case, either seek another version or give up and buy an official copy once a printed translation comes out. The other issue of note is you may need to expand the screen to read the text easily as sometimes the scans are minimised a little.
I find that if a page doesn't download properly or some other issue occurs (too slow or someone ordered the pages incorrectly etc.) with one reader then skipping across to another reader and picking up where I was is quite easy and rarely annoying.
Otherwise, enjoy and watch out you don't get too addicted you forget about the necessary things in life.