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March 05, 2016
Costs of US-Anglo & Allied Political Persecution of Western Journalist - Assange
Greek Donuts
COMMENT
Greek 'donuts' turned out really yummy -- recipe here.
Weird thing is, I strained the falafel oil and used the same oil to fry these up. Although there was a smell of spices, the donuts didn't taste like falafel. Maybe it was the cinnamon sauce that saved the day?
Next lot I do will be the Somalian ones. Cardamom sauce and a yoghurt based dough sounds good. Some of the other recipes on this site look good: the spice mix and the chutney look appealing, although the chutney looks like a bit more work than I'd like to do.
Still have half the Greek donut dough in the refrigerator to fry up tomorrow. After that, I might have to lay off the donuts for a while. I've scoffed almost this entire bowl on my own. Mouth's sort of numb from all the sugar I've consumed.
Main meal was French style chicken in white wine stew with vegetables. No photo because it wasn't visually appealing. Sort of looked like spew. lol
Bit rattled at the moment. Heap of screaming and carrying on down the street freaked me. Sounded like someone was being attacked. Didn't know what they were going to do. Half expected someone to come charging in here, or to have my car damaged again. It's died down now, but I'm on still on edge. Neighbourhood's gone down the tubes. A**holes.
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March 04, 2016
Caesar - Greatness Is Fleeting & Death is Eternal
Caesar
Greatness Is Fleeting
& Death is Eternal
Gaius Julius Caesar
b. July 100 BC d. March 15, 44 BC Roman dictator role in demise of Roman Republic
& rise of Roman Empire
[wikipedia]
Info from documentary: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dxff0fCe9TM Otherwise, supplemented with info from look-ups in Wikipedia or sources, as marked. COMMENT
The psychiatrist in this documentary makes it sound like it's 'not' psychopathy if it's goal directed psychopathy, where the ends justify the means and the individual is in a position of power. Or that's how it comes across to me.
Will need to come back to this to follow up on the linked materials that I've only skimmed over so far.
The brain-eating tape worm sounds absolutely revolting. Another good reason for quarantine, but negligent governments don't care about that -- they're from a class that's buffered from the consequences of their decisions.
Making war meant profit in Roman times, just as it is today. Only it was more straightforward and less costly to domestic populations in Roman times, where sale of the defeated into slavery and mass killing of the conquered appears standard.
I like the busts of Caesar, but I'm not sure I like Caesar. Ruthless, power hungry, sexually exploitative / hedonistic sounding, manipulative propagandist, mass murder. On the other hand, his military record seems impressive (so far, I think) and he seems fearless (so he probably was a psychopath). But brain worms and screwing anything that moves aren't so appealing, despite the military prowess. So maybe he's not all that impressive.
Didn't like the facial reconstruction they did on the documentary. Made him look horrible, where the features were otherwise appealing in statue form.
It looks like Caesar will have been dead 2,060 years this 15th March ... I think. The backwards dates are confusing.
The Christian / Gregorian / Roman dates are insane. Even the dates are a lie. The world needs to quit lying and adopt the Hebrew calendar (or whatever's older than that). It's at least 5776, from when the Hebrews started counting.
Not sure I'll remember the mountain of Caesar stuff to follow up on, but it's fun looking.
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March 02, 2016
Falafel
COMMENT
Resetting the body-clock was a disaster so far ... woke at 3am, was up until 11pm. Crashed.
But then I slept for 13 hours straight. WTF? Who sleeps that long??? And who gets up after 13 hours of sleep, feeling sleepy and tired??
Think I liked it better when I as semi 'manic' or something, poring over the news obsessively. lol
Falafel cooking went somewhat better than the planned body-clock reset. But it began as a disaster.
Rolled home-made falafel mix into small dessert-spoon sized balls, flattened them a little, & arranged them on a tray for a quick chill before frying. Easier for the inexperienced falafel cook without the requisite falafel scooping gadget.
All good ... until I threw some falafel into the oil. Not hot enough, even after something like 8 minutes heating. Had to fish it out.
Might need some wooden skewers for oil testing. Apparently, if the oil bubbles around skewer, it's good to go. Got that off watching what I call 'food porn,' recently.
Falafel frying attempt in hot oil: bubbling. Bubbling big time. Seemed OK. Bubbling's good, right?
Well, it looked like it was all good ... until I tried to fish out a falafel balls to see how the frying process was going.
The f*%$ing falafel balls DISINTEGRATED!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Fished out a couple of remaining 'stumps' of falafel and got to quickly remixing and reforming the balls, with a small amount of plain flour.
The balls that incorporated some flour didn't fall apart and fried up OK. But I'm not entirely happy with the texture.
The mix I made is just a little too mushy for my taste and needs to be a little more coarse next time. As I don't really know what I'm doing, how coarse/textured will depend on experimenting to see what I can get away with in terms of falafel balls that don't fall apart.
I'm working with tinned chickpeas, so maybe that's where the problem lies. As in, the chickpeas would probably be waterlogged compared to those traditionally used, starting from scratch with dried chickpeas and soaking them overnight or whatever they do.
The lot I mixed up didn't need additional water for the same reason, so that was pointless and counter-productive for me.
After frying off a trial batch of falafel balls remixed with flour, I've had to then drain the oil through a fine sieve to fish out the residue. Annoying. Should have only tested with one, instead of tossing in several.
General falafel mix:
The spices were on a 'whatever' basis ... whatever I think will taste good. Can taste the mix to make sure there's enough salt & spices. Other spices can go in there, as well. But the above is enough for me.
Think I might need to prepare this on a few consecutive days to get the feel for what will work best.
Final result wasn't too bad, but I need to maybe take it easy with the degree of food-processing next time.
Update Made up a batch of dry chickpeas, soaked overnight. The texture is very nice. Much better than the canned chickpeas version.
Falafel - Version #2
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March 01, 2016
Ides of March - 15th March (Roman Calendar)
COMMENT
Stand by for the 'Ides of March' .... ;)
That passage's about all the Shakespeare I can handle. lol
History's really cool, tho.
Might have to check out Julius Caesar once I get some practical things out of the way here.
Edit: this Caesar doco looks interesting: |
Roman Goddess Juno: Matronalia Festival - 1 March Juno Feast
COMMENT
Thought it really cool that today is Juno's feast day.
I inadvertently sacrificed some oil, having made some donuts for breakfast ... and burnt the oil I'd intended to set aside.
Managed to sleep during part of the night (yay!), but I woke up at 3am ... thinking of donuts. So I got up at 3am, surfed 'food porn,' made donuts and eventually had breakfast at something like 5:30am.
These turned out quite nice (if you don't mind a dense donut). If there's a 'next time' I'll be adding heaps more sugar to the mix.
It's just a thick, sticky yeast dough (with x3 eggs) that's spooned into hot oil, after resting for 30 minutes.
As nice as the latest food experiments have been, I need to stop looking at fattening 'food porn,' as it leads to food cravings, cooking experiments and stacking on weight.
Not sure how I'll mange this: either I cook and I cook the artery-clogging foods I tend to crave, or I don't cook at all. There's no middle ground, and certainly no enthusiasm for low-fat meals.
Really enjoyed checking out the Roman info. Don't like Theodosius. Cannot understand why he would want to endorse (and enforce) some phony foreign religious doctrine that he's effectively placed above the state. It's anger provoking to see churches built over Roman temples. It looks as though Christianity incorporates pagan-style trinities: 1. the Jesus figure, the Virgin Mary figure & the god figure;
Guessing it's probably to make the break-away foreign religion eventually adopted by Rome (and imposed on Europe) maybe appeal to the pagan European populations of the time.
Not sure why they'd bother with this in Europe, when Europe was largely 'converted' by force. Maybe it's an attempt to legitimise the religion by fitting it in with existing traditions and cycles, to prevent lapse to older traditions (were the new religion to innovate new traditions)?
It appears that incorporating a bunch of extraneous traditions may help gain and/or retain followers:
Syncretism "Catholicism in Central and South America has been integrated with a number of elements derived from indigenous and slave cultures ... while many African Initiated Churches demonstrate an integration of Protestant and traditional African beliefs." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syncretism
However interesting religion is from a historic and cultural perspective, it's easy to forget that religion is mass delusion and/or fraud.
Incredulously, in this day and age, religion is still kowtowed to by the state.
Despite: 1. the notion that the state that is officially separated from religion;
Giving religion any state/official credence is participating in a fraud and participating in keeping the masses ignorant, while enabling charlatans to wield political and social power.
The state ought to deny superstition instead of being complicit in bolstering it by engaging in public relations lip service displays, by granting political concessions, by granting practical concessions (tax benefits, program funding etc), or by granting special protections (eg. those that result in various lawsuits and payouts on account of what amounts to pursuit of superstition), or facilitating state-imposed erection of unwanted (and incompatible with state culture) religious structures.
Instead of embracing reason, modernity and freedom from superstition, the state reinforces & validates superstition by entering into dialogue with adherents of superstition, paying lip service to superstition or otherwise playing a part in legitimising superstition. In the process, the 'non-religious' state's taking the lot of us down the path of oppression-by-religion, thanks to the new global state religion: universal 'human rights' ideology. An ideology that is modern religion, oppression and facilitation of oppression by religion, all wrapped in one.
The new religion is much like the former religion: it's just a political tool to manipulate the gullible masses that are dominated, deceived and eventually brainwashed to serve the interests of those at the top. I was going to delete this because it sounds so negative, but I'll let it stand because it's what I think. Now I'm off to check out some falafel recipes. I'm hanging to make some decent falafel for a change. So far, all my attempts have been lame: the mix usually falls apart on me. If I try to bind it, it tastes like crap. This lady looks like she knows what she's doing -- here. Wish I had one of those falafel gadgets. Makes it look so easy. One more shot at it can't hurt. Hey, this craving is sort of healthy: falafels, hummus and salad in flat bread. Maybe I should live on nothing but falafel. I think that any time I hit on something I think I'd like to have every day. But I don't live alone, so the same meal every day until I get sick of it is out of the question ... lol :) |
February 26, 2016
Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf
Impressions sound & vision
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