Archive for April, 2008

Learn to cook ‘chicken with tangerines’ with Navtej Kohli

Wednesday, April 30th, 2008

Enjoy to cook and relish to eat this lip smacking recipe by Navtej Kohli.

Dish: Chicken with Tangerines

Ingredients you need:

10 g raisins
1 tablespoon Madeira
1 chicken [1300g] (ready for cooking)
1 teaspoon red sweet pepper
2 tablespoons oil
1 clove of garlic
1 can tangerines (190g)
125 ml bouillon
1 tablespoon Soya sauce
1 tablespoon starch flour
0.5 teaspoon ginger (powdered)
50 ml cream
10 g sliced almonds


How to cook:

Soak raisins with Madeira. Cut the chicken in 4 portions and season with salt, red pepper and pepper. Heat the oil in a pan and roast the chicken for 10 minutes. Fill bouillon with tangerine juice up to 250 ml. Chop the peeled garlic very fine and add to the bouillon. Pot-roast the chicken with bouillon for 30 minutes. Add raisins five minutes before pot-roasting ends. Arrange the chicken pieces on a plate. Make a sauce with bouillon and starch flour, season with Soya sauce, ginger, salt and stir the cream under the sauce. Spoon the sauce over the chicken. Decorate with sliced, roasted almonds.

The story of sand and stone by Navtej Kohli

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

Navtej Kohli takes his entire life as an inspiration. Read one more beautiful and inspirational story and let your grudges fade out!

It is a story of two friends who were walking through the desert. During some point of the journey they had an argument, and one friend slapped the other one in the face. The one who got slapped was hurt, but without saying anything, wrote in the sand: “TODAY MY BEST FRIEND SLAPPED ME IN THE FACE.”

They kept on walking until they found an oasis, where they decided to take a bath. The one, who had been slapped, got stuck in the mire and started drowning, but the friend saved him. After the friend recovered from the near drowning, he wrote on a stone: “TODAY MY BEST FRIEND SAVED MY LIFE.”

The friend who had slapped and saved his best friend asked him, “After I hurt you, you wrote in the sand and now, you write on a stone, why?”

The other friend replied: “When someone hurts us, we should write it down in sand where winds of forgiveness can erase it away. But, when someone does something good for us, we must engrave it in stone where no wind can ever erase it.”

Moral of the story:
LEARN TO WRITE YOUR HURTS IN THE SAND, AND TO CARVE YOUR BENEFITS IN STONE

Navtej Kohli- Opting Commercial Photography as a Career

Sunday, April 27th, 2008

Navtej Kohli’s passion for photography is immense. On this Navtej Kohli Interest blog, he shares some current trends in the commercial photography arena.

Photography is a unique art that requires keen sense for aesthetics and technical expertise. This medium of self-expression can be as good a profession as it is a hobby. With the ever-expanding communication network, the growth of advertising and media and the fashion boom, digital photography has become a good money-making profession.

Photography, however, has become an inseparable part of Print and electronic media and thus has a greater scope for those who are planning to opt it as a fulltime profession.

It is one creative medium that is more of inherent than learned. Though, there are many training institutes that help you hone your skills, but creativity is something that lies within the photographer. There are several specializations in photography like portraiture, fashion and advertising photography, journalistic photography, wildlife and outdoors photography etc.

For taking a commercial quality photograph, the photographer must know the angle specifications, lighting conditions and most importantly the latest equipments and technology in this field.

To be a successful photographer, there is no specific eligibility criterion, as such. You can enroll into a diploma or certificate course soon after you have completed your high-school. Besides, having a background in computers and electronics is also beneficial to shine in this field.

But as I’ve mentioned before, a successful photographer is one who is instinctively creative and can actually communicate through his/her photographs. To be a good commercial photographer you should have the ability to understand client’s need. It’s only your understanding and perceptive that ultimately appears in your photographs. And mind it, once you are in the field work pressure, difficult conditions and irregular hours are a common sight.

Apple Muffins For You

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

INGREDIENTS

    * 2 cups whole wheat flour
    * 1 tablespoon baking powder
    * 1/2 teaspoon salt
    * 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
    * 3/4 cup nonfat milk
    * 2 egg whites
    * 1/4 cup vegetable oil
    * 1/4 cup honey
    * 1 cup chopped apples

DIRECTIONS

   1. Preheat oven to 375 degrees F (190 degrees C). Lightly grease the muffin tin.
   2. Lightly beat egg whites.
   3. In a separate bowl mix dry ingredients properly.
   4. In a separate bowl, mix remaining ingredients. Gently fold in egg white. Add to the dry ingredients. Stir until barely moistened. Batter will be lumpy.
   5. Fill greased muffin tins two-thirds full. Bake about 20 minutes until lightly browned.

When done enjoy then with a nice cup of coffee!

Compact, Lightweight, Water and Dust-Resistant Digicam - G600

Tuesday, April 22nd, 2008

ricoh g600Today Ricoh launched the G600 digicam, a new water and dust-resistant camera. The G600 is very small and light-weight yet it still managed to pass the Ricoh‘s shock resistance test for a 1.5 m fall, a test that conforms to US Department of Defense standards. In addition to the 5x optical wide-angle zoom lens (equivalent to 28-140 mm for a 35 mm camera), the G600 continues to provide the same strong set of features as previous models, such as a 1 cm macro function and a flash range of 10 m. It is perfect for customers who want to take pictures in a variety of outdoor activities, such as marine sports, mountain climbing, and fishing.

Main features of the new Ricoh G600 :

1. Superior water and dust resistance plus even greater shock resistance make the G600 ideal for hard outdoor use. The well thought out design and positioning of the large buttons make operation easy even with gloves on, such as while skiing.

2. Powerful flash with effective range of up to 10m and ISO3200 sensitivity for low-light photography.

3. Large 2.7-inch picture display.

4. Compact and lightweight body that can be carried in a breast pocket.

5. A 28-140 mm wide-zoom lens on a water and dust-resistant digital camera.

6. The large-capacity lithium ion battery provided with the camera gives long battery life for approximately 360 shots (CIPA standard). If the battery runs out, readily available AAA size batteries can be used instead. A

7. An edit check function detects for image data tampering. This increases the reliability of the data when digital photographic images are submitted as corroborative evidence.

So, if you are in the market to buy a new camera then this might be a potential candidate.

History of Indian Spices

Sunday, April 20th, 2008

Indian spices are the soul of India Cuisine. Their history dates back to 7000 years old centuries when before Greece and Rome had been discovered when sailing ships were carrying Indian spices, perfumes and textiles to MesopotamSpicesia, Arabia and Egypt. It was the lure of these that brought many seafarers to the shores of India.

Long before Christian era, the Greek merchants thronged the markets of South India, buying many expensive items amongst which spices were one. Epicurean Rome was spending a fortune on Indian spices, silks, brocades, Dhaka Muslin and cloth of gold, etc.It is believed that  the Parthian wars were being fought by Rome largely to keep open the trade route to India. It is also said that Indian spices were the main lure for  crusades and  expeditions to the East .
                         
Today when spices cost so little, it is unbelievable that they were once a luxury and that men were willing to risk their lives in quest of them. It was in the year 1492 A.D., that Christopher Columbus discovered the America. Five years later, four tiny ships sailed southward from the port of Lisbon, Portugal, under the Captain Vasco Da Gama. Like Columbus, Vasco Da Gama was also on a hunt for a new route to the spice lands of Asia. While Columbus failed to achieve the goal, Da Gama succeeded. In a two year, 24,000 miles round trip, he took his ships around the continent of Africa to India and back to Lisbon. Only two of the four ships survived to reach their homeport. These two ships brought back a cargo of spices and other products worth 60 times the cost of the said voyage.

The spices of the East were valuable in those times, During these Middle Ages, a pound of ginger was worth a sheep, a pound of mace worth three sheeps or half a cow. Pepper, the most valuable spice of all, was counted out in individual peppercorns, and a sack of pepper was said to be worth a man`s life. Da Gama`s successful voyage intensified an international power struggle for control over the spice trade. For three centuries afterwards the nations of Western Europe - Portugal, Spain, France, Holland, and Great Britain - fought bloody sea-wars over the spice-producing colonies.

By the year 1000 Arabians had conquered  the Indus valley , what is now India. They brought the cumin and coriander that mixed with Indian pepper, ginger and turmeric make up the base of so many South Asian dishes. It was this combination of spices that centuries later British sailors spread throughout the world as curry powder. In India, Arabian traders got the rare and exotic spices of the Far East from local spice merchants. India had spent the previous two millennia spreading its culture to the Spice Islands of the east. Arabian traders were able to make good money supplying these spices, even with the high prices paid to the Indian middle men, not only to their countrymen back home, but to Europe as well. These traders of spices paid for the Art and Education for which Arabia became famous in the present day.. In many ways the culture of Arabia loved studying and learning different things. Many great Greek and Roman plays were translated in Arabic, so too were the geographic writings of Pliny and Ptolemy telling of the general location of the tabled spice islands.

As Arabian astronomers charted the stars in order to study them and understand mans relation with them, they realized these same charts could be used for navigation. Soon they were sailing to what is now Indonesia and Malaysia to purchase spices directly, bypassing the Indian middlemen. By the middle of the 13th century Arabian merchants were regularly visiting Sumatra for cassia from the slopes of Mount Korintje. .While travelling they would stop at little villages and towns that had fresh water resource to refill their water supplies. At these stops the merchants would barter their cumin, coriander and saffron and speak and preach of their religion as well .The tropical climate did not suit the saffron but coriander now plays an integral part in so many dishes across Indonesia. The religion, which they preached while bartering spices did even better than the coriander, with Indonesia today being the world`s most populous Islamic country. Compared to the Hindu belief in a caste system spread earlier by traders from India, it seems  the Islamic belief that all were equal in serving God really hit a chord with the people of Indonesia.

In nutshell, the fascinating history of spices is a story of adventure, exploration, conquest and fierce naval rivalry.

The people of those times used spices, as we do today, to enhance or vary the flavors of their foods. Spices were also flavor disguisers, masking the taste of the otherwise tasteless food that was nutritious, but if unspiced, had to be thrown away.  Some spices were also used for preserving food like meat for a year or more without refrigeration. In the sixteenth century, cloves were used to preserve food without refrigeration. Cloves contain a chemical called eugenol that inhibits the growth of bacteria. It is still used to preserve some modern foods like Virginia ham. Later, mustard and ground mustard were also found to have preservative qualities. When spices were not available people went hungry because they could not preserve their foods to carry them over to the winter. Such was the importance of spices those days.