Wednesday, September 30, 2009

To Read is to Empower

I just came across this little quote this morning which is such a gem that it seems criminal not to share. :)

To read is to empower
To empower is to write
To write is to influence
To influence is to change
To change is to live
Jane Evershed

My dear Jane, truer words have never been said!

And goodness gracious! Look what I stumbled upon on photobucket. Check out this building! I'd LOVE to enter that one! It'll be Book Heaven for bookworms like moi! Sigh... It doesn't say the location though but if you know, do share. :D



Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Australian Dust Storm

     I was browsing a local paper earlier and came across some pics which blew me away! The whole vista was orange! It was so surreal and very eerie!

     Apparently a dust storm swept across eastern Australia and blanketed several cities on 23 September 2009, disrupting transport, placing health authorities on alert for widespread respiratory illness and stripping thousands of tonnes of topsoil off Australia's main farmlands.

     According to The Australian, “Dragging up soil from three states, the plume grew to more than 1500km long and 400km wide; at its peak sweeping up 140,000 tonnes of soil an hour. Overnight the thick, red dust blanketed Sydney, with the city awakening to a deep-red dawn that transformed into an eerie orange glow.”

     Check out some of these pics, courtesy of some news sites. Gotta say that some of them gave me goosebumps!



 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

My New Toy... Eh I Mean Phone

     My old-ish Nokia Music Express 5610 has been dying a slow death for a while so I looked around for a replacement.  After checking out several brand names and models, I finally decided on the new Nokia touch phone, a slimmer and cost-effective version of its first touch phone, the 5800.



     The 5530 is slightly slimmer and lighter. Instead of an 8GB memory card, it comes with a 4GB one though both has the capacity of taking a 16GB memory card. Function-wise it is about the same though I understand that the 5530 does not lag as much as the 5800. I feel my inner geek emerging again... ;)

     I was vastly impressed by one reviewer in particular, a British chap residing in the UAE. He's so smitten by it that he's decided to sell off or give away the iPhone that he has. Of course there are those who are not satisfied by it but I reckon 4 dissatisfaction out of 50 or so is not too bad, eh?  It takes a little getting used to but so far I'm satisfied. 

     Best of all, it only costs SGD 399 without a contract. Its usual retail price is SGD 598. Cool, no?  Oh, I also had a SGD 50 voucher so I only paid SGD 349 for it. All in all, quite a worthy price for a touch phone that has only been on the local market for about a week when I bought it.

     The Dutchess wanted to see my actual phone's photos so how can I not oblige her. :)


General Menu


 On its side

 
Back view - like an iPhone eh?



Oh look, my favourite couple is here too

     And in case it's not obvious how delighted I am with it, here's one of the satisfied user. ;)



     Since I started this, I've managed to move my Notes application somewhere so I need to figure out where it is now! Talk about dumb moment!

The Talented Little Dancer

     On his twitter, Peter Facinelli aka Papa Carlisle Cullen himself, suggested viewing this video.  This little sweetheart sure has some moves!


Our Glorious Earth

     A friend of mine sent these pics via email a while ago. Aren't they just gorgeous?! Viewing such pics often  leaves me very humbled and in awe of God's Magnificence.  Kudos to the very talented photographers who managed to capture such enrapturing beauty. You guys rock!


 


 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 

Monday, September 28, 2009

Double Take

     I had to pass by this movie poster daily for a few weeks recently and could not help but pause and do a double take each time. 


     Even though I knew it's not Bella, I kept thinking it might be since it's like the pic below.

 

     Of course I think Bella is more gorgeous! So I'm biased, what can I say!

The Malay Rice Cakes of Eid

     My dearest Dutchess had asked the other day what the white wrapped things in my Eid morning photos were.  How remiss of me not to have taken the time to give a brief explanation. So I shall rectify that and do so now. :)

     Rice is the main food staple for Malays but on Eid, especially the first few days of it, rice takes a break while their relatives the rice cakes take their place.  These are eaten with the various dishes that are cooked on the morning which could be beef or chicken rendang (very thick stew); serondeng (fried coconut in brown sugar and spices) and a variety of other food too delicious to mention as I sit here with a growling stomach! And I wasn't even that hungry to begin with!

     Again, I do not own the following pics but am grateful for them being around. Don't you just love the internet?! :D

     First we have the ketupat.  These are made from coconut leaves that are woven into  cubic casings.  They are then filled 1/4 full of raw washed rice and boiled for a few hours, when it will expand to follow the shape of the casing.


 

      Uncooked ketupat casings look like this:

 

      Weaving a ketupat casing. Bless the person who took the time to document it thus!



     After boiling in water for a few hours..






     they will look like this:



     Due to the process, one usually weave the ketupat casings two days in advance and they are boiled on the eve of Eid and allowed to cool and ready to be eaten on Eid morning.  I've done these from scratch before myself.  The novelty of weaving the casings tend to disappear after the twentieth casing or so. I remember having to weave about 50-60 of these. The more visitors you expect, the more you have to do.  I recall my late paternal grandmother having loads since she had a lot of people coming over.

    The sibling of the ketupat is the lontong. This was favoured by my maternal grandmother and are made with banana leaves - I say was since she's gone the instant route now. I have no clue how these are made, having never done it myself nor been witness when it was made at Grandma's place. I've seen cylinders sold though I reckon the older generation have their magical ways too.





     There is also the lepat, this is made with glutinous rice, coconut milk and soya beans.  My late paternal grandmother made the best. I've not had any to rival hers.




     We had some lepat for Eid too but it was store bought, someone had made and sold them ready-made to the store, that is.  My brothers liked them, me not so much.




     Last in the group but certainly not least is the lemang. It's also made of glutinous rice and coconut milk, with salt added for taste. It is cooked over open fire in hollowed bamboo sticks that have been lined with banana leaves to prevent the rice from sticking to the bamboo. For that reason, it is more popular in Malaysia since they have the open space to cook them.  It is also the stickiest of the four.


 


     With people getting so busy these days, marketers have naturally capitalized on this and managed to create instant versions of lontong and ketupat which are in plastic casings instead of the leaves.  My mum has been using for a few years. - that's what the white things are.  I've even seen instant lepat and lemang in a supermarket in Johor Bahru. The cooking duration is the same, more or less though.


  
 

Shining Stars

A Taste of Vintage