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  • firstvirtual 6:50 pm on November 5, 2008 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: argentine food, empanadas   

    RECIPE: Argentine Empanadas 

    Dough:

    - 1 Kg. or 2 pounds of white flour

    -1 egg, salt, water

    250 g. or ½ pound of “grasa de pella”

    Preparation:

    Combine flour and salt in a bowl. Pour in the tepid liquid “grasa de pella”, the entire egg and water until reasonable well-combined. Turn out on a floured surface and knead until smooth. Leave 15 minutes to rest covered with a moisted cloth. Roll on the dough with a knead-stick stretching until 3 milimeters thick.

    Cut circles aproximately 5 inches in diameter. Filling: 2 pounds of veal beef, tenderloin in preference, in slices 5 milimeters thick. With a sharp knife cut it in small cubes 5 milimeters wide. 2 large onions minced well chopped. 2 tablespoons of paprika 1 tablespoon of dried crushed red pepper (flakes) 2 cups filled of “grasa de pella”, salt Heat the two large cups of “grasa de pella” in a saucepan until liquid. Saute in it the chopped onion until soft but not brown. Retire from heat and add the chopped meat, paprika, crushed red pepper and salt to taste.

    Let the filling become cold and then refrigerate until it solidifies. Final setup: Place a portion of filling in the center of each circle of dough and add a green olive without core. Lightly brush the edges with water and fold the dough over the filling. Crimp the edges securely by pressing them with a fork or make overlaped small folds along the line of union of the edges as a sort of seam called “repulgue”. Make sure it remains securely closed. Preheat the oven to 375°F (180°C). Arrange the empanadas on a buttered cookie sheet. Brush the tops lightly with egg yolk or butter and bake until light brown.(aprox. 15 minutes)

    Enjoy this delicious typical Argentine meal!

     
  • firstvirtual 2:41 pm on November 5, 2008 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: barack, election, , , wins   

    Barack for beginners 

    Barack Hussein Obama was elected the 44th president of the United States on Tuesday, sweeping away the last racial barrier in American politics with ease as the country chose him as its first black chief executive.

    Readers’ Comments

    “Now comes the tough part, of course. But the symbolism of this magnificent choice by the American people cannot but illuminate the world.”

    Steve S, New York

    The election of Mr. Obama amounted to a national catharsis — a repudiation of a historically unpopular Republican president and his economic and foreign policies, and an embrace of Mr. Obama’s call for a change in the direction and the tone of the country.

    But it was just as much a strikingly symbolic moment in the evolution of the nation’s fraught racial history, a breakthrough that would have seemed unthinkable just two years ago.

    Mr. Obama, 47, a first-term senator from Illinois, defeated Senator John McCain of Arizona, 72, a former prisoner of war who was making his second bid for the presidency.

    To the very end, Mr. McCain’s campaign was eclipsed by an opponent who was nothing short of a phenomenon, drawing huge crowds epitomized by the tens of thousands of people who turned out to hear Mr. Obama’s victory speech in Grant Park in Chicago.

    Mr. McCain also fought the headwinds of a relentlessly hostile political environment, weighted down with the baggage left to him by President Bush and an economic collapse that took place in the middle of the general election campaign.

    “If there is anyone out there who still doubts that America is a place where all things are possible, who still wonders if the dream of our founders is alive in our time, who still questions the power of our democracy, tonight is your answer,” said Mr. Obama, standing before a huge wooden lectern with a row of American flags at his back, casting his eyes to a crowd that stretched far into the Chicago night.

    “It’s been a long time coming,” the president-elect added, “but tonight, because of what we did on this date in this election at this defining moment, change has come to America.”

     
  • firstvirtual 12:28 pm on November 5, 2008 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: autores ingleses, enciclopedia britanica,   

    La Biblioteca Británica recupera las voces de los mejores autores anglosajones del siglo XX 

    La célebre institución acaba de editar un archivo sonoro con entrevistas a grandes novelistas y poetas anglosajones del siglo XX, en el que se pueden escuchar las dos únicas grabaciones que se conservan en el mundo con las voces de Virginia Woolf y Arthur Conan Doyle.

    Esos archivos recuperan las voces originales de Arthur Miller, Tennessee Williams, John Steinbeck, Scott Fiztgerald, Graham Greene, Tolkien, Joe Orton, Kipling, Nabokov, Aldous Huxley, Doris Lessing y John Steinbeck entre otros escritores, tal como reseñó el diario El País, de España.

    The spoken word: British and American writers conserva una entrevista concedida por Woolf (1882-1941) a la radio pública BBC en 1937 durante ocho minutos, en la que reflexiona sobre la vida de las palabras y se pregunta “si los británicos leen y escriben mejor que hace 400 años”.

    En la grabación, la autora de La señora Dalloway (1925) afirma que las palabras “viven en la mente y no en los diccionarios” y reflexiona que “quizá la razón por la que no tenemos un gran poeta o novelista en nuestros días es porque no las dejamos ser libres, las reducimos a su significado útil (…), podemos atraparlas, clasificarlas y colocarlas en orden alfabético”.

    Los archivos conservan una entrevista con Doyle, el creador de Sherlock Holmes, rememorando la lectura de sus primeras novelas de detectives y contando cómo abandonó su educación cristiana y se dispuso a conquistar “una esfera superior de espiritualismo”.

    También se puede escuchar al irlandés Graham Greene en 1969, que fue espía antes de escribir sus célebres novelas de espionaje, recordando cómo de niño jugaba a la “ruleta rusa” con un viejo revólver para “combatir el tedio” y totalmente “conciente de lo que eso suponía”.

    La Biblioteca Británica conserva también una charla concedida por el joven dramaturgo inglés Joe Orton, una semana antes de ser asesinado a balazos por su ex pareja Kenneth Halliwell, con quien escribió sus primeras comedias negras.

    En esos archivos Arthur Miller recuerda en 1980, con casi 30 años de perspectiva, su primer encuentro con Marilyn Monroe: “Estaba simplemente arrebatadora”, confiesa; y Tenesse Williams asegura: “aborrezco lo obsceno”, cuatro años después haber estrenado “La gata sobre el tejado de zinc caliente” (1955).

    Las grabaciones recuperan, entre otros, a Chesterton divagando sobre su poesía; a Steinbeck recordando “cierta ira inculcada”; a Raymond Chandler con unas gotas de alcohol de más en plena charla con Ian Fleming.

    Ñ

     
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