What are ur favorite burger recipes?

May 19th, 2010

MINNEAPOLIS — A Minnesota woman who became severely ill with an E. coli infection from a tainted hamburger has reached a settlement with the meatpacking arm of agribusiness giant Cargill Inc., both sides announced Wednesday.

Stephanie Smith, 23, of Cold Spring, and Cargill said the terms of the settlement were confidential, but that it will provide for Smith's care throughout her life. The former children's dance instructor was left paralyzed, with cognitive problems and kidney damage.

Smith became ill in 2007 after eating a patty produced by Cargill Meat Solutions Corp., a Wichita, Kans.-based unit of Minnetonka-based Cargill Inc. Her E. coli infection led to kidney failure. She went into seizures and was kept in a medically induced coma for three months.

Smith's battle to recover was the centerpiece story last year in a New York Times series that won a Pulitzer Prize. The story spurred several members of Congress to demand better enforcement of food safety laws and a pledge from Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack for stepped up efforts to fight E. coli contamination. The story traced how the beef trimmings that went into her hamburger came from four plants in the U.S. and Uruguay, and that while such scraps are particularly vulnerable to contamination, many companies including Cargill did not normally test them prior to grinding.

Her Seattle-based attorney, Bill Marler, said Smith's case continues to generate public and industry discussion about the importance of better food safety.

“Stephanie's tragedy has taken on a life of it's own, and hopefully it will continue to focus people on why food safety is so important,” Marler said.

Cargill acknowledged responsibility when it first learned of her injuries and has been providing financial help to her and her family, the joint statement said. Cargill said it “deeply regrets” her injuries, and that it has invested more than $1 billion in meat science research and new food safety technologies to eliminate E. coli and other sources of food-borne illnesses.

“Cargill continuously invests in food safety technology,” said Mark Martin, a spokesman for Cargill Meat Solutions. “There certainly are things that have preceded the situation with Stephanie Smith, things that will continue to evolve into the future. Food safety – as you can imagine being an agriculturally based company for much of our business – is a top priority and always will be.”

Neither Marler nor Martin would comment on the terms of the settlement, which still requires court approval. And Marler declined to allow Smith or her mother to comment. He said they wanted to keep her focused on rehabilitation.

Chicken producers like Tyson and Pilgrim's Pride slashed production in 2008 as feed prices went up and consumer demand for meat fell — but now as the economy recovers the demand is going up — along with prices.

“We think we'll do even better the second half of the fiscal year as our operational performance continues to improve. We are very pleased with how our third quarter is going, and the summer grilling season is just getting started,” Tyson Chief Executive Donnie Smith said in a statement.

Marketwatch says prices for Tyson “pork jumped 15%, chicken rose 10.2%, and beef gained 8.4% over the year ago period.” Have you been seeing prices jump in the grocery stores? Or have the price hikes not been passed along to you?

Tyson Foods swings to profit as meat prices strengthen





Gym Equipment Specialist in South Africa - Miles Harrop



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Vegan Kitchen

May 12th, 2010

Birthright trips are a wonderful opportunity for 18- to 26-year-olds to travel to Israel for free. I sometimes receive e-mails from vegetarians and vegans who are going on Birthright trips and came across my old posts on heebnvegan via a Google search. Here is a compilation of the tips I give them.

Food Advice

  • First and foremost, you should communicate with your trip organizers in advance to let them know about your dietary restrictions or food allergies. You should also let your trip's staff know when you meet them on the first day.
  • More often than not, you have any trouble as a vegetarian or vegan. Still, I recommend taking some protein bars (sealed and unwrapped) with you just to be safe; double-check the rules for bringing food into a foreign country before heeding my advice. Meals on my trip varied greatly: Sometimes we had lavish buffets at fancy hotels, and sometimes we had a half-hour to grab falafel (or shwarma, for the meat-eaters) while walking through a village. But in addition to finding the falafel and hummus ever had, find a lot of fresh veggies and creative salads at many of the meals. I also wound up having a lot of figs and other fresh fruit, nuts, potatoes, and couscous. All in all, it was likely a healthier diet than the mock-meat-centered diet I was eating in the U.S. at the time.
  • Almost everyone speaks English, but it's conceivable that there'd be some places you go to where you'd have to special-order and the people would not speak great English. Ask the trip staff for assistance in these situations.
  • Most of the accouterments for falafel in a pita (or a laffa, which is another bread option), including tehini sauce (sesame-based), are vegan. Tzadiki sauce has dairy, and you should ask for your falafel without tzadiki. This is an accommodation.
  • Vegetarian schnitzel (cutlet) is a popular alternative to chicken schnitzel. Think of it as though you were getting a veggie burger in a restaurant in the US. It might have some egg or dairy ingredients you know about, but whether you eat it anyway depends on how strict a vegan you are.
  • Shakshouka is a popular vegetarian dish, but it has a whole egg in it and vegan.
  • The presence of meat might mean that some dishes are vegan! I realize that this is counter-intuitive for those who aren't familiar with kashrut (the noun form of “kosher”). If you go to an all-kosher restaurant or are looking at packaged foods marked kosher, there are three categories: dairy, meat, and pareve. Meat and dairy cannot be mixed together (in individual dishes or even in the same meal) in kosher facilities, so if you know that a restaurant is certified kosher and that meat is present, the mashed potatoes are definitely dairy-free. (“Pareve” means no dairy or meat with regard to kashrut, but pareve foods might include eggs or fish, so “pareve” does not necessarily mean vegan.)

Miscellaneous Advice

  • Some trips include camel rides. If you have an ethical objection to supporting a touristy business that likely overworks camels even in extreme heat, tell your trip staff up-front that you plan to avoid this activity.
  • You're granted to bring two bags (not including a carry-on bag) with you. Find a way to bring only one. You want to be schlepping two around with you the whole time.
  • On my trip, we arrived in Israel in the early morning (Israeli time) and had a full day of activity, and then a lot of us wanted to stay up at night for social reasons. I got one hour of sleep on the plane because I was excited, which meant that I was quite exhausted on Day 1 (and that exhaustion stayed with me for the rest of the trip). One woman sitting near me on the plane took an over-the-counter sleeping pill and slept through the entire flight, and she was raring to go. I normally avoid pills whenever possible, but I think she had the right idea. Use the flight to Israel to sleep, because the rest of the 10-day trip is push push push and regret not sleeping on the plane.

The British Library has announced the shortlist for the Michael Marks Awards for Poetry Pamphlets in partnership with the Poetry Book Society and with the generous support of the Michael Marks Charitable Trust. In their second year, the Awards celebrate the importance of the pamphlet form in introducing new poetry to readers in the internet age. Poetry pamphlet shortlist:

* The Terrors, Tom Chivers (Nine Arches Press). Eighteenth century hangman narratives… conducted by email.
* The Titanic Café closes its doors and hits the rocks, David Hart (Nine Arches Press). An elegy to a café in Birmingham that no longer exists, this single poem is collage, song, and paean in one.
* Advice on Wearing Animal Prints, Selima Hill (Flarestack Poets). A disconcerting tragicomedy told across the letters of the alphabet – this story follows the life of its idiosyncratic heroine Agatha.
* Devorgilla's Bridge, Hugh McMillan (Roncadora Press). This single fold-out poem, beautifully complemented by a linocut by Hugh Bryden, is devoted to what is to be Scotland's oldest bridge: 'an astronaut in stone'.
* The Reluctant Vegetarian, Richard Moorhead (Oystercatcher Press). This pamphlet is a wry and sensual cross between a medieval herbal, a farmer's calendar and an English dictionary.
* ballast: a remix, Nii Ayikwei Parkes (tall-lighthouse). A astonishing account of slavery told through near sci-fi effects: envision the slave trade had operated through hot air balloons rather than ships.





Gym Equipment Specialist in South Africa - Miles Harrop



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What are ur favorite recipes?

April 12th, 2010

For the second time in 12 months, Phoebe Price got into a crash, which left Mama Cutlets laid up in the hospital with injuries. PP was rattled something serious, because she did not even strike one signature pose for the paparazzi! Shit got real.

I mean, there were several firefighters there just waiting to be posed with, and PP ignored them completely. Usually when PP hears the click of a camera, her eyes light up like a drunk on Mardi Gras, her cutlets pop and she gives the paps everything she has! But not yesterday. Hmmm.

You've probably been releasing good thought balloons all day, so send one more to Mama Cutlets! Or at least stick a candle in a frozen cutlet.

Eh, this thing's for lightweights. After all, if any of you have ever reached into a bucket of KFC, how often have you stopped after two pieces? Sure, the bacon and cheese add to the lethality, but come on already. Wendy's Baconator features two quarter-pound beef patties, two slices of “cheese,” and six strips of bacon. Sounds reasonable to a red-blooded arteriosclerotic American, but that sucker will erode your lifespan to the tune of 970 calories and over 2200 mg of sodium. Burger King's Double Stacker hits you with 560 calories… and that is the small one. The Quad Stacker has a full 1000.

Y'all oughta swing by the corner of Lake Ave and Boylston St in Pasadena, CA sometime. You'll find Roscoe's Chicken & Waffles right next door to a KFC, with a Popeye's Chicken, McDonald's, and Burger King all within waddling distance. And right across the street is Orean Health Express, an actual vegetarian fast-food drive-thru. I must add that never, ever seen a single car at their window.





Gym Equipment Specialist in South Africa - Miles Harrop



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Which is ur favorite recipes?

April 6th, 2010

Scoble's Argument: LBS Dead In The Water Without Innovation

For much of Scoble's post, we heartily agree: We are in the very early days of LBS and Facebook could easily squash services like Gowalla and Foursquare if done right. His for these services is to use what he calls “malleable social graphs”, that is, a set of connections that change in response to real-world conditions.

Some of his suggestions and criticisms are right on point, such as the opportunity Gowalla has to point someone checking in at a car wash to anything but a lamp store. Checking into the show “24″ and chatting with other fans sounds like a great idea that Miso is on top of already, just as SuperGlued has taken center stage for aligning like-minded folks around live music events.

…And Then It All Goes Wrong

It's when Scoble gets to suggesting that, because he identified himself as a Democrat on Facebook, he shouldn't be shown any “Republican crap” in his news feed, that our spidey-sense starts to tingle.

Just as we argued when we found that Google was customizing one in five searches, all of this recommending, customizing and filtering, can put us into an idea echo chamber of sorts, where we only come across safe and previously approved, by our actions, opinions. But a part of what we like so much about Facebook is getting into debates with friends we might never get into in “real life”.

Go ahead and post a video of the Tea Baggers on your profile, state how absurd you think it is or how much you support it, and see what unexpected discussion ensues.

It may not end up being pretty, but maybe learn something – if everyone can keep it polite enough to actually exchange ideas and information. Unless we truly believe that one side is always right and another always wrong (a ridiculous proposition) then filtering out any content we may not agree with is sure to create even more people who believe they are right. After all, everything they read on the World wide web tells them so.

…Or Does It?

Then again, when Scoble gets to speaking about tastes and reviews, such as his refined taste for sushi versus those who like “fried crap even pronounce”, it starts to make sense again. Maybe it's because the only thing at stake here is missing out on a good meal.

Here's what happens: Yuzu is a place that is awesome for advanced sushi lovers. I have eaten sushi all over the world in places like Tokyo, Yokohama, New York, London, and other places. I love advanced sushi. I look for restaurants who do sushi well. But most people aren't like me. Most people do not even like sushi. So, if they get dragged to a place like this they try to order “Americanized” sushi like, um, California rolls. Or fried crap I even pronounce. That is NOT sushi. Anyway, these people, er, newbies, get to Yuzu and find that all the other “non-sushi” stuff sucks. So they rate it low. Me? I could care less about all that other non-sushi stuff when I am looking for a sushi restaurant, which is why I rate this place five stars. Now, Yelp does NOT have a malleable social graph. We can't filter out all the “sushi newbies” who like sushi anyway.

Malleable social graphs, recommendation engines, customized searches and the like all have great uses and can be immensely powerful tools. We can find out about all sorts of things we might have missed because they would have otherwise been lost in the overwhelming stream of information. Using these sorts of tools in conjunction with LBS is where the industry needs to go, as Scoble argues, to stay afloat.

But once you return back to the ideological realm again, though, as with his argument about reviews, we feel that the stance gets a bit tenuous. Our fear, as we discussed when looking at engine My6Sense, is that people need to step outside these filters otherwise they will never see the unexpected and have their thoughts challenged.

And of course, this is not a black and white debate. It between either having content recommended or having the entirety of the Internet's data blasted at you, full force. There are gradations and in-betweens, and maybe, sometimes, you just want to know what all of your friends are talking about. But even then, do you only want to know what your friends are talking about that you can be sure you agree with?

Different opinions, ideas, and their vigorous debate is essential to a free and developing society. On this point, we implore Facebook, Google, My6Sense, Twitter and everyone else – no matter how much our staunch Republican friends may annoy us, please silence them. We'll never get anywhere if you do.

One Last Thing

With all of that being said, we have to fess up to one, minor detail. Where did we find Scoble's article? Was it in the unfiltered chaos that contains all of the different opinions of the world? Not at all.

It was, in fact, the third story down in our Twitter Times, a website that creates a custom, newspaper-style page, specifically personalized by looking at all of the links being tweeted and retweeted by all of the people you follow on Twitter.

So much for personalization killing debate, eh?

“Peeps are sometimes jokingly described as “indestructible”. In 1999, scientists at Emory University performed experiments on batches of Peeps to see how easily they could be dissolved, burned or otherwise disintegrated, using such agents as cigarette smoke, boiling water and liquid nitrogen. They claimed that the eyes of the confectionery “wouldn't dissolve in anything”. Furthermore, Peeps are insoluble in acetone, water, sulfuric acid, and sodium hydroxide.”

–Peeps Wikipedia

Which are urs beloved recipes?

April 1st, 2010
  • Genome at 10: Scientists urge patience for medical breakthroughs

    Medicine & Health / Genetics

    1hour ago |
    5 / 5 (1) |
    0

    The genome has yet to deliver on promises it would usher in a golden age of medicine, experts in a debate unleashed by the looming anniversary of the first draft of the human genetic code.

  • Amazon strikes twin electronic book deals: WSJ

    Technology / Business

    1hour ago |
    not rated yet |
    0

    Amazon.com is letting two more major publishers raise prices of electronic books for Kindle readers in deals struck just days before Apple releases rival iPad tablets, the Wall Street Journal reported.

  • Disadvantaged students reap most financial return from college education, study finds

    Other Sciences / Social Sciences

    56 minutes ago |
    not rated yet |
    0

    With the college admission season upon us, teens across the country are glued to college websites in hopes of learning whether they have been admitted to their school of choice.

  • Perception of poor sleep may predict postpartum mood disturbances in healthy new mothers

    Medicine & Health / Health

    1hour ago |
    not rated yet |
    0

    A study of healthy new in the April 1 issue of the journal Sleep found that the perception of poor sleep and the conscious awareness of its impact on daytime functioning might be stronger predictors of immediate postpa …

  • Small soda taxes insufficient to curb consumption among children, study finds

    Medicine & Health / Health

    56 minutes ago |
    not rated yet |
    0

    Small sales taxes on soft drinks in the range currently in force in some are insufficient to reduce consumption of soda or curb obesity among children, according to a new RAND Corporation study.

  • In the face of racism, distress depends on one's coping method

    Medicine & Health / Psychology & Psychiatry

    16 minutes ago |
    not rated yet |
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    The way people choose to cope with personal experiences of racism influences the distress caused by the encounter, according to a new study of Filipino-American men and women. Published this day in the Journal of Counseling Ps …

  • Acupuncture may be an effective treatment for post-viral infection loss of smell

    Medicine & Health / Research

    46 minutes ago |
    not rated yet |
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    Traditional Chinese acupuncture (TCA), where very thin needles are used to stimulate specific points in the body to elicit beneficial therapeutic responses, may be an effective treatment option for patients who suffer from …

  • Direct patient access to imaging test results could result in increased patient anxiety and doctor overload

    Medicine & Health / Other

    36 minutes ago |
    not rated yet |
    0

    Providing patients with direct access to their imaging test results could improve patient satisfaction and clinical outcomes. However, physicians are concerned that it could lead to increased patient anxiety and unrealistic …

  • Facing the future — science in the Muslim world

    Other Sciences / Social Sciences

    36 minutes ago |
    not rated yet |
    0

    Scientists in Islamic countries are often thought by those in the West to be languishing behind the rest of the world. Jim Al-Khalili tells Physics World readers what has been impeding scientific progress in the Islamic world …

  • Short-term program for binge eaters has long-term benefits

    Medicine & Health / Psychology & Psychiatry

    26 minutes ago |
    not rated yet |
    0

    A new study finds that a self-guided, 12-week program helps binge eaters stop binging for up to a year and the program can also save cash for those who participate. Recurrent binge eating is the most common eating disorder …

There are already a whole lot of oil rigs off of the California coast; come take a look some time.
Besides the oil rigs off of the coast, there are 50,000 oil rigs in California, the third largest producer of oil in the country (after Alaska and Texas), but our appetite for oil is still much than what we can possibly take out of the ground.
Even Texas can't get enough oil out of the ground to supply its own needs, and is dependent on imported petroleum for much of what it uses.

That the two largest oil-producing states in the lower 48 produce enough crude to even supply their own needs illustrates how important it is for us to develop energy sources.

  1. Zavatone

    Mar 30th, 2010 at
    3:47 pm

    I can not tell you how many times I have this problem.

    Bacon. YES.

    Machine gun. YES.

    Frying pan? NOOOOOOOOOO!

  2. Max Power

    Mar 30th, 2010 at
    4:35 pm

    Poor Amerikans.

  3. Natey

    Mar 30th, 2010 at
    10:14 pm

    Sadly, this pretty much sums up the United States.

  4. Briannana

    Mar 30th, 2010 at
    11:01 pm

    Let the anti-Americanism begin! I for one, would totally cook bacon this way but can't efficiently put that many rounds through my SKS in short enough of a time. So you nimby-bimby wussy cakes can just shove it.

  5. Cola

    Mar 31st, 2010 at
    1:02 am

    Nothing can just be fun here, can it? Why cannot you be like the commenters at the AV Club!?

  6. Foreigner1

    Mar 31st, 2010 at
    5:03 am

    Max Power, Natey- The MG3 is a definite German weapon.
    And wouldn't you think that those German soldiers back in WW2 on the wintery cold plains of Russia would not have tried that same trick just to get any warm food? Same goes for the Greeks that also use that weapon. Same goes for soldiers in the trenches of WW1.
    Sure this could well be an American that put this trick on the Net, but he will not have been the 1st to think about this even by a long shot.

    So bash Americans all you want, but then please do so equally with all those other users of machine guns…

  7. Max Power

    Mar 31st, 2010 at
    9:46 am

    Foreigner1, I do not think you understand anything. At all. Ever.

  8. Foreigner1

    Mar 31st, 2010 at
    10:00 am

    Max …what do you mean….?

  9. Max Power

    Mar 31st, 2010 at
    10:24 am

    This is only a HINT towards one of the possible directions thought your thoughts might take when you elaborate a subject. I might eat my 80 years old neighbour lady in times of a nuclear catastrophe or alien infiltration of the earth, but that would not effect the quality of a cheering blog post about that practice at a later point.

    And that is a very polite way of expressing this. Basically your attempt at intellectual abstraction mirrors a batch of unfocused relativisations, also known as a rant.

  10. Max Power

    Mar 31st, 2010 at
    10:25 am

    directions that*, of course.

  11. Max Power

    Mar 31st, 2010 at
    10:34 am

    Furthermore I don't even mind that guy posting about his machine gun in his blog. I think it's a funny idea. It's your comment that disturbs me. The worthlessness of opinions is perfectly incarnated in “lol but other people use machine guns too, plz mention them as well”, no matter how well you hide it beneath the coat of a contribution.

    Maybe *that* is what I mean.

    Over.

    ..

  12. Foreigner1

    Mar 31st, 2010 at
    11:14 am

    Sorry Max- You lost me completely with your explanation.
    I guess we are both from a completely differentworld, since I in the faintest see what perhaps eating your neighbour in times of disaster has to do with this guy that puts bacon on a machinegun.

    For the latter I see a parallel with the folks who put food in alufoil on their car-engines while going out on long trips and I only commented that this guy not by a long shot wast the first- I am a European who on a regular bases uses a Minimi and before that a MAG and we have learn't that funny-field-trick from the guys in the platoon that came before us.

    I only went against the US-Bashers around here because I get pretty sick about bashing any group for any kind of in my view misplaced stereotyping.
    Reading back- Perhaps you reacted to the not having of a frying pan? Fine- my wrong. But the rest stands.

    Is that about the direction you hinted at? Fine- Have a nice evening.

  13. Evilbeagle

    Mar 31st, 2010 at
    11:58 am

    If you bash any other group/nationality, then you might as well have just kicked a puppy, but bash Americans and it's ok. This is the type of ignorance and stupidity that has soured me on Neatorama in the past.

  14. Starsky Spasky

    Mar 31st, 2010 at
    12:28 pm

    Evilbeagle, you fail to understand the some fundamental rules of comedy. You can pick on your own side. The other rule is that we laugh about things we have in common. That is why farts are funny. Whatever faction you try to break Americans into , it doesn't matter for humor purposes because we are all Americans.

    The general rule on comedy seems to be if you are offended chances are you are one a lot like the comedian than the people laughing.

  15. lunarlander

    Mar 31st, 2010 at
    3:09 pm

    LOL — Dang getting close to Godwin's Law in record time!

  16. Mr. Bigglesworth

    Mar 31st, 2010 at
    5:04 pm

    What a rocket scientist…

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