Posts Tagged ‘Weblogs’

Headstones | band The

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

Headstones are grave markers.

Headstones may also refer to:

  • The Headstones, a Canadian band
  • Headstones (band), an Australian band
  • The Headstones (band), a German band
  • Headstones (album) is an album from the Swedish metal band Lake of Tears


See also

  • Headstone (disambiguation)

Links

List of asteroids/108001–109000 | Christmas. edit

Friday, April 25th, 2008

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”001″| 108001–108100 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”101″| 108101–108200 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”201″| 108201–108300 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”301″| 108301–108400 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”401″| 108401–108500 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”501″| 108501–108600 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”601″| 108601–108700 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”701″| 108701–108800 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”801″| 108801–108900 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”901″| 108901–109000 [ edit]

Links

Wayan, Idaho | Caribou. It also

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

Wayan is a small unincorporated town located 35 miles north of Soda Springs in Caribou County, Idaho, United States. Located on State Highway 34, it is part of a valley known as Grays Lake, and its zip code is 83285. Wayan is located at 42.978 N and 111.376 W. The community was named after its first post master and his wife.


External links

  • City info

Links

Kings Park | MVMCP Park

Tuesday, April 1st, 2008

Kings Park is the name of several parks and locations:

  • Kings Park, Western Australia, a park near central Perth
  • Kings Park, New South Wales
  • Kings Park, South Australia
  • Kings Park, Victoria
  • Kings Park, New York
  • King’s Park, Glasgow
  • King’s Park, London, a ward in the London Borough of Hackney
  • King’s Park, Hong Kong, in the Kowloon area of Hong Kong.
  • Kings Park, Rhode Island, a park in Newport, Rhode Island.
  • Kings Park Stadium and Kings Park Soccer Stadium are two sporting venues in Durban, South Africa
  • King’s Park F.C., a defunct football club in Stirling

Links

Revolutionary Communist Party of Turkey-Socialist Unity | Turkey at Christmas it

Sunday, March 23rd, 2008

Revolutionary Communist Party of Turkey-Socialist Unity (in Turkish: Türkiye Devrimci Komünist Partisi-Sosyalist Birlik) was a clandestine Marxist-Leninist political party in Turkey. It was founded in 1987, following a split from the Revolutionary Communist Party of Turkey (TDKP).

The Fox (album) | the albums Elton

Sunday, February 24th, 2008

The Fox is the fifteenth studio album by British singer/songwriter Elton John, released in 1981. The track “Elton’s Song” was banned from some countries radio play due to homosexual content.


Track listing

All songs by John/Taupin, except where noted.

  1. “Breaking Down Barriers” (Elton John, Gary Osborne) – 4:40
  2. “Heart in the Right Place” (John, Osborne) – 5:13
  3. “Just Like Belgium” – 4:08
  4. “Nobody Wins” (Jean-Paul Dreau, Gary Osborne) – 3:42
  5. “Fascist Faces” – 5:10
  6. “Carla/Etude” – 4:45 (Elton John)
  7. “Fanfare” – 1:26 (Elton John, James Newton-Howard)
  8. “Chloe” – 4:39 (John, Osbourne)
  9. “Heels of the Wind” – 3:37
  10. “Elton’s Song” (Elton John, Tom Robinson) – 3:03
  11. “The Fox” – 5:10

On some versions of the CD, “Carla/Etude” and “Fanfare” are combined into one track. Other editions combine “Carla/Etude”, “Fanfare”, and “Chloe” into one track, making it a 9-track album.


B-sides

Song Format
“Fools in Fashion” Nobody Wins 7″ (US/UK)
“Tortured” Chloe 7″ (US)
“Can’t Get Over Getting Over Losing You” Just Like Belgium 7″ (UK)
“Nobody Wins (Extended Version)” Nobody Wins 12″ (US)
“Je Veux De La Tendresse (French Version of “Nobody Wins”)” Nobody Wins 12″ (US)


Personnel

  • Colette Bertrand: French Girl
  • Rev. James Cleveland: Spoken Words
  • Victor Feldman: Percussion
  • Jim Horn: Alto Saxophone
  • Roger Linn: Drum Synthesizer programing
  • Reggie McBride: Bass
  • Dee Murray: Bass
  • James Newton-Howard: Vocoder, Synthesizers, Organ
  • Nigel Olsson: Drums
  • Mickey Raphael: Harmonica
  • Stephanie Spruill: Tambourine
  • Alvin Taylor: Drums
  • Ritchie Zito: Guitar

Links

John Dominis | John

Friday, February 22nd, 2008

John

Dominis can refer to either:

  • John Dominis (merchant) (?-1846), American merchant who built Washington Place in Honolulu
  • John Owen Dominis (1832–1891), son of John Sr., a US/Hawaiian statesman
  • John Dominis (photographer) (b. 1921), a photojournalist who worked for LIFE magazine

Links

  • Addicted To New Posted on Monday, September 3rd, 2007 by John Nunemaker. GA is quite easy to integrate with anything I have a bundle in TextMate called John

Chocolate chip cookie | Cookies and

Thursday, February 21st, 2008

A chocolate chip cookie is a drop cookie, originating in the United States. The distinguishing characteristic is the chocolate chips, with traditional recipes combining a sweet butter brown sugar/white sugar dough with semi-sweet chocolate chips. Variations abound, ranging from white chocolate to milk chocolate chips to bittersweet chunks, with the inclusion of nuts bringing the cookie to a different level.

Contents


Description

The chocolate chip cookie is a drop cookie, i.e., about a tablespoon of dough is scooped up by a spoon or other implement & “dropped” onto a cookie sheet for baking. It can also be made as a bar cookie, similar to a brownie. The cookie is traditionally a vanilla flavored sugar cookie with unmelted, semi-sweet baking chocolate chips (distinct pieces) incorporated into the dough before baking. See below for a more detailed description.


History


Conflicting stories

There are conflicting stories about the origin of the chocolate chip cookie and the acquisition of the recipe by Nestlé. The commonality between the two stories is that the chocolate chip cookie was accidentally developed by Ruth Wakefield in 1933. Mrs. Wakefield owned the Toll House Inn, in Whitman, Massachusetts, a very popular restaurant in the 1930s. The restaurant’s popularity was not just due to its home-cooked style meals; Mrs. Wakefield’s policy was to give diners a whole extra helping of their entrées to take home with them and a serving of her homemade cookies for dessert. Mrs. Wakefield’s cookbook, Toll House Tried and True Recipes, was published in 1936 by M. Barrows & Company, New York. Included is the recipe for the Toll House Cookie, originally called the Toll House Chocolate Crunch Cookie. The book is out of print but some booksellers still have copies for sale. Older editions have a photo of the Toll House Inn on the cover of the dust jacket.


Nestlé version

Mrs. Wakefield was making chocolate cookies but ran out of regular baker’s chocolate, so she substituted it with broken pieces of semi-sweet chocolate, thinking that it would melt and mix into the batter. It clearly did not, and the chocolate chip cookie was born. Wakefield sold the recipe to Nestlé in exchange for a lifetime supply of chocolate chips. Every bag of Nestlé chocolate chips in North America has a variation of her original recipe printed on the back (butter and margarine are now both included as variants).

During WWII, GI’s from Massachusetts who were stationed overseas shared the Toll House Cookies they received in care packages from back home, with soldiers from other parts of the U.S. Soon, hundreds of GI’s were writing home asking their families to send them some Toll House Cookies, and Mrs. Wakefield was soon inundated with letters from around the country asking for her recipe. Thus, began the nation-wide craze for the chocolate chip cookie.


Toll House Inn version

Mrs. Carol Cavanagh, of Brockton, Massachusetts and a former employee of the Inn, and her father, George Boucher of South Dennis, MA and the former head chef at the Toll House Inn during the years of its operation, offer a different history of the cookie. Contradicting Nestlé’s claim that Mrs. Wakefield put chunks of chocolate into cookie dough hoping they would melt, Mrs. Cavanagh states that Mrs. Wakefield was already an accomplished chef and author of a cookbook, and knew enough about the properties of chocolate that it would not melt and mix into the batter while baking. Mr. Boucher states that Mrs. Wakefield was known for her sugar cookies, which came free with every meal, and were for sale in the inn’s lobby. One day, while mixing a batch of the sugar cookie dough, the vibrations from a large Hobart electric mixer caused bars of Nestlé’s chocolate stored on the shelf above the mixer to fall into the mixing bowl, where it was broken up and incorporated into the dough. Mrs. Wakefield believed the dough was ruined and was about to discard it, when Mr. Boucher stopped her and talked her into saving the batch. His reasoning was out of frugality rather than a prediction of the cookie’s future popularity.

Mrs. Cavanagh states that Mrs. Wakefield did not sell the ownership of the recipe to Nestlé, but she only gave them rights to print her recipe on the packages of their chocolate morsels. Later, Nestlé’s lawyers found loopholes in the initial agreement that ceded the rights to the recipe from Mrs. Wakefield, and began mass-producing the cookies.


Present day

Currently, the chocolate chip cookie is one of the most popular cookies in United States with half the cookies baked in American homes being chocolate chip.. While the Nestlé’s Toll House recipe is the most widely known, every brand of chocolate chips (Semi-sweet chocolate morsels in Nestlé parlance) sold in the US and Canada contains a variant of the chocolate chip cookie on its packaging, and almost all baking oriented cookbooks will contain at least one type of recipe.

Practically all commercial bakeries offer their own version of the cookie in both packaged cooked or ready to bake forms. There are at least three national (US/North America) chains that sell fresh baked chocolate chip cookies in malls and stand alone retail locations. Several businesses, including Doubletree hotels, Citibank, Aloha and Midwest Airlines, offer fresh baked cookies to their patrons to differentiate themselves from their competition. Additionally, there is an urban legend about Neiman Marcus’ chocolate chip cookie recipeNeiman Marcus cookie legend that has gathered a great deal of popularity over the years.

To honor the cookies creation in the state, on 9 July 1997 Massachusetts designated the chocolate chip cookie as the Official State Cookie, after it was proposed by a third grade class from Somerset, Massachusetts.


Composition and variants

Chocolate chip cookies are commonly made with white sugar; brown sugar; flour; a small portion of salt; eggs; a Leavening agent, such as baking powder; a fat, typically butter or shortening; vanilla extract, additional flavorings can be used; and semi-sweet chocolate pieces. Some recipes also include milk or nuts (such as chopped walnuts) in the dough.

Depending on the ratio of ingredients, mixing and cooking times, some recipes are optimized to produce a softer, chewy style cookie while others will produce a crunchy/crispy styleJonathan Levitt, “They’re Not As Easy To Make As To Eat,” Boston Globe, 7 June 2006, C2. Available through ProQuest eLibrary.. Regardless of ingredients, the procedure for making the cookie is fairly consistent in all recipes: First, the sugars and fat are creamed, usually with a wooden spoon or a electric mixer. The eggs and vanilla extract are added next followed by the flour and the leavener. Depending on the additional flavoring, its addition to the mix will be determined by the type used: peanut butter will be added with the wet ingredients while cocoa powder would be added with the dry ingredients. The titular ingredient, chocolate chips, as well as nuts are typically mixed in towards the end of the process to minimize breakage, just before the cookies are scooped and positioned on a cookie sheet. Most cookie dough is baked, although some eat the dough as is, or use it as an addition to vanilla ice cream to make “cookie dough ice cream”.

Common variants include:

  • The M&M Cookie is a variation that replaces the chips with Mars, Incorporated M&M’s candies; this recipe uses shortening as the fatThe M&M Party Cookie recipie on m-m.com.
  • The chocolate chocolate chip cookie, where the cookie surrounding the chips is also chocolate flavored, through the addition of cocoa or melted chocolateChocolate Chocolate Chip cookie recipe on FoodTV.com. Variations on this cookie include replacing chocolate chips with white chocolateWhite Chip Chocolate Cookie recipe on AllFood.com or peanut butterChocolate Peanut Butter Chip Cookie recipe on AllFood.com chips.
  • The macadamia chip cookie has macadamia nuts and white chocolate chipsMacadamia Nut Chocolate Chip Cookies recipe on AllFoods.com. It is a signature cookie of Mrs. Fields bakeries.
  • The chocolate chip peanut butter cookie replaces the vanilla flavored dough with a peanut butter flavored one.
  • Milk, dark or unsweetened chocolate can all be substituted to change the flavor of the cookie, the darker the chocolate the less sweet the cookie will be.
  • There are several styles of chocolate chip- the most common are pre-packaged chocolate chips or morsels (usually the size of a pea), mini- (smaller) or maxi- (larger) chips. Chocolate chunks (e.g. chopped pieces of a Hershey bar) are also used.


Popular brands

  • Blue Chip Cookies
  • Chips Ahoy! (Nabisco)
  • Chips Deluxe (Keebler)
  • David’s Cookies
  • Famous Amos
  • Mrs. Fields
  • Marylands
  • Otis Spunkmeyer
  • Pepperidge Farm
  • Toll House (Nestlé)


References


External links

  • Nestle Toll House Cookie recipe
  • History of the Chocolate Chip Cookie
  • Neiman Marcus Cookie Recipe
  • Chocolate Chip Recipe, fine tuned
  • Ama-za-zing Chocolate Chip Cookies

from first principals provided in Cookwise cooking book

Links

A Christmas Gift of Love | Christmas

Tuesday, February 19th, 2008

A Christmas Gift of Love was an album released in 2002 by singer and songwriter Barry Manilow. As Manilow’s second compilation of Christmas songs, the album did quite well, and went Gold. Oddly enough, the album was done with Columbia Records instead of his usual label of Concord Records. However, as part of the agreement with Concord, the logo of both labels appear on this release.


Track listing

  1. “Winter Wonderland” - 1:44
  2. “Happy Holiday/White Christmas” - 2:45
  3. “Santa Claus Is Coming to Town” - 1:53
  4. “Home for the Holidays” - 2:27
  5. “I’ll Be Home for Christmas” - 3:20
  6. “My Favorite Things” - 2:26
  7. “The Christmas Waltz” - 2:56
  8. “I’ve Got My Love to Keep Me Warm” - 2:59
  9. “River” - 3:44
  10. “What Are You Doing New Year’s Eve?” - 3:47
  11. “A Gift of Love” - 2:25

Links

Forward Kyrgyzstan Party | Party Rare

Monday, February 18th, 2008

The Alga Kyrgyzstan (Forward Kyrgyzstan) Party is a political party in Kyrgyzstan. The party was founded on September 7, 2003. The current Chairman of the party is Bolot Begaliev but one of its notable founders was Bermet Akayeva, eldest daughter of former President Askar Akaev. However, Bermet did not run as a candidate of the party. In the February 2005 parliamentary elections, the party won 19 seats.

The party was formed from the merger of five separate parties. They were as follows the The Manas El, the New Time, the New Movement and the Party of Cooperators. On December 8, 2003 the Birimdik Party agreed to merge with the party.

Following the 2005 Tulip Revolution the future of the party remains unclear.


See also

  • Politics of Kyrgyzstan
  • List of political parties in Kyrgyzstan

Links

Float (parade) | Parade

Monday, February 18th, 2008

A float is a decorated platform, either built on a vehicle or towed behind one, which is a component of many festive parades, such as the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, the Key West Fantasy Fest parade, and the Tournament of Roses Parade. For the latter event, floats are decorated entirely in flowers.

Parade floats were first introduced in the middle ages when churches used pageant wagons as movable scenery for passion plays. Artisan Guilds were responsible for building the pageant wagons for their specified craft. The wagons were pulled through out the town, most notably during Corpus Christi in which up to 48 wagons were used, one for each play in the Corpus Christi cycle.

The name is derived from the first floats, which were decorated barges that were towed along canals with ropes held by parade marchers on the shore.


Floats in popular culture

The climax of the movie Animal House features the protagonists from the title fraternity surreptitiously launching their own float into a parade featuring legitimate entries from many of their rivals. The illicit float, in the form of a giant decorated cake adorned with the words “Eat Me” later splits open to reveal the parade-destroying “Deathmobile” inside. Ferris Bueller’s Day Off also has an important scene on a float, where the truant title character, rather than keeping a low profile while skipping school, lip-syncs “Danke Schoen” and “Twist and Shout” atop a float in the Von Steuben Day Parade through Chicago.

Links

Christmas is all in the Heart | Christmas

Saturday, February 9th, 2008

Christmas is all in the Heart is a 2003 album by Steven Curtis Chapman.


Tracks

  1. Silver Bells
  2. Winter Wonderland
  3. I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day
  4. Go Tell it on the Mountain
  5. It Came Upon a Midnight Clear
  6. O Little Town of Bethlehem
  7. O Come All Ye Faithful
  8. This Baby
  9. O Come O Come Emmanuel
  10. Home for Christmas
  11. Silent Night Medley

Links

Christmas Island (album) | Christmas

Thursday, February 7th, 2008

Christmas Island is Jimmy Buffett’s 1996 collection of Christmas-themed music. It features covers of popular Christmas songs in Buffett’s musical stylings as well as two tracks which Buffett wrote for the album.


Track listing

  1. Christmas Island
  2. Jingle Bells
  3. A Sailor’s Christmas - written by Buffett
  4. Happy Xmas (War Is Over)
  5. Up On The House Top
  6. Mele Kalikimaka
  7. Run Run Rudolph
  8. Ho Ho Ho & A Bottle Of Rum
  9. I’ll Be Home For Christmas
  10. Merry Christmas, Alabama (Never Far From Home) - written by Matt Betton.

Links

Sell-side analyst | the B-Side

Saturday, February 2nd, 2008

A sell-side analyst works for a brokerage firm and evaluates companies for future earnings growth and other investment criteria. They sometimes place recommendations on stocks or other securities, typically phrased as “buy”, “sell”, or “hold.” They are incentivised by offering their recommendations to institutional investors clients, as well as by seeking investment banking deals with the firms they cover, although the latter is subject to significant regulatory restrictions, particularly in the United States. A proper title for some sell-side analysts is Equity Research Analyst.


See also

  • Buy-side analyst
  • Securities research

Links

Gecarcoidea | at Christmas it was

Friday, February 1st, 2008

Gecarcoidea is genus of terrestrial crabs. It includes the two species G. lalandii and G. natalis, the Christmas Island red crab.

Links

Cheetah-licious Christmas (song) | into Christmas

Friday, February 1st, 2008

Cheetah-licious Christmas” is the first single off of The Cheetah Girls’s Christmas album Cheetah-Licious Christmas. It officially premiered on Radio Disney on October 28, 2005. The single was released officially for digital download on November 1, 2006.


Music video

This is the second official music video by The Cheetah Girls. The video shows all three girls dancing around in the snow and having a snowball fight. At the end of the music video we find out that all of this took place in a magical snowglobe. It premiered on November 5, 2005 on Disney Channel.


Tracklist

  1. “Cheetah-Licious Christmas”
  2. “Cheetah-Licous Christmas - Growl Power Remix”
  3. “Exclusive Radio Disney interview with The Cheetah Girls”


Trivia

  • The Cheetah Girls performed this song in the 2005 ABC Christmas Parade.
  • During the video, Sabrina’s scarf went from brown and blue patterned, then changes to cheetah spots towards the end.

Links

September 2005 | Events In

Sunday, January 27th, 2008



News collections and sources

  • .
  • - This has much of the same material organized in a hierarchical manner to help encourage NPOV in our news reporting.

Links

Adelaide Festival of Ideas | theme

Saturday, January 26th, 2008

The Adelaide Festival of Ideas has been held every two years since 1999. It runs for four days in July, being held in the alternate year to the long-established Adelaide Festival of Arts. It features a range of talks and panel discussions with national and international speakers, loosely organised around a common theme.

The 2005 Festival took the theme “What is to be done”. Speakers included Peter Doherty, Germaine Greer and Stephen Schneider.

Links

Submitted | edit See also

Wednesday, January 23rd, 2008
Wikipedia does not currently have an encyclopedia article for ‘.

You may like to search Wiktionary for “[[Wiktionary:Special:Search/|]]” instead.

To begin an article here, feel free to [ edit this page], but please do not create a mere dictionary definition.

Links

Peace Park | park

Saturday, January 19th, 2008

Peace Park may mean:

  • Peace Park (Seattle), a park in Seattle, Washington, United States
  • Peace park, another name for a Transboundary Protected Area
  • Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park, a park in Hiroshima, Japan dedicated to the legacy of Hiroshima as the first city in the world to be nuclear bombed.
  • Peace Park, Janesville, Wisconsin, which also is the sight of the world’s tallest peace pole.
  • Peace Park (), a park in Žirmūnai elderate of Vilnius, Lithuania, surrounding the Tuskulėnai Manor.
  • The Peace Park in Turkey, part of the Anıtkabir complex.

Links