Monday, December 31, 2012

Your Daily Posterous Spaces Update

Your daily Update December 31st, 2012

Caffeinated syrup makes mornings that much brighter

Posted 1 day ago by Po-wed_006__2__thumb Kate Rinsema to Holy Kaw!

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If coffee isn’t your cup of tea and tea is a beverage you want nowhere near your cup, then it’s time to start getting all your morning energy in one fell swoop with ThinkGeek’s All-Caffeinated Maple Syrup.

Packaged in such a way as to bring to mind those miracle tonics from back in the day that were guaranteed to cure everything from a stubborn cough to premature balding, the eighty-four mg of caffeine per tablespoon of gooey goodness is bound to put hair on your chest if you’re the type who sees pancakes as merely a vehicle for the really good stuff.

Full story at ThinkGeek via Foodbeast.

Super food!

10 strange science stories from 2012 [video]

Posted 1 day ago by Po-wed_006__2__thumb Kate Rinsema to Holy Kaw!

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While we’ll all fondly remember the moment the Mars Rover successfully touched down on the red planet or Felix Baumgartner’s wild ride from the edge of the stratosphere, there were other incredibly weird science stories that may have flown under your radar in the wake of so many other awe-inspiring moments.

Luckily, Alan Boyle, Science Editor at msnbc.com has been keeping his eyes peeled and brings us the ten strangest science stories of the year, wrapped up in a neat little article, but without the bow.

Sorry about that.

10. Holding it hurts your brain

No. 10 is the discovery that having a painful need to urinate can impair your judgment. "When people reach a point when they are in so much pain they just can't stand it anymore, it was like being drunk," says Brown University neurologist Peter Snyder. "The ability to hold information was really impaired." To say nothing of the ability to hold water.

Embedded media -- click here to see it.

9. Flies hooked on meth ... and sugar

When researchers noticed that meth addicts often take in large amounts of sugary drinks, they decided to do a little experiment: First, they got fruit flies hooked on methamphetamine. Then the scientists fed some of the flies a diet heavy on trehalose, an insect blood sugar. They found that the sugar-gobbling flies outlived the flies who didn't get the sweet stuff. Maybe sugar metabolism plays a role in meth's toxic effects. "Hopefully, some of these insights might lead to opportunities to deal with the problems associated with the drug," says University of Illinois toxicologist Barry Pittendrigh. But more research is required to trace the effects on mammals. In the meantime, watch out for those meth-head fruit flies.

Full story at MSNBC via Miss Cellania.

Weird science.

Photo credit: Fotolia

雨に煙る

Posted 1 day ago by Ls_3058_hoo_thumb Koichi Mitsui to s a s u r a u

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年の瀬。

もっと

Posted about 18 hours ago by Ls_3058_hoo_thumb Koichi Mitsui to s a s u r a u

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来年はいろいろな所に行こう。

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Sunday, December 30, 2012

Your Daily Posterous Spaces Update

Your daily Update December 30th, 2012

撮影散策

Posted 1 day ago by Ls_3058_hoo_thumb Koichi Mitsui to s a s u r a u

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明日の準備中。

Final Place by Mohd Zaki Shamsudin

Posted 1 day ago by Aptwitter_thumb Amazing Pics to Amazing Pics

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Peacock Spider

Posted 1 day ago by Aptwitter_thumb Amazing Pics to Amazing Pics

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View many more stunning photos of the hard to believe Peacock Spider on Jurgen Otto's Flickr Page.

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Saturday, December 29, 2012

Your Daily Posterous Spaces Update

Your daily Update December 29th, 2012

Posted 1 day ago by Ls_3058_hoo_thumb Koichi Mitsui to s a s u r a u

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山を想う。

Stay safe winter cycling with super easy DIY signal gloves

Posted 1 day ago by Po-wed_006__2__thumb Kate Rinsema to Holy Kaw!

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Though we all know full well that biking is friendlier to the health of both Mother Nature and ourselves, opting for this form of transportation when the weather gets frightful can be daunting.

If you are one of these brave souls, though, visibility is key and these incredibly easy DIY signal gloves from Instructables user Harmless Matt won’t put a huge dent in your wallet and will hopefully keep them out of you and the bike, too.

All you need is reflective tape and a set of mittens (a sense of style is optional), and you’re ready to hit the streets.

Full story at Instructables via Lifehacker.

Safe cycling.

An army of sand Santas march on India

Posted about 23 hours ago by Po-wed_006__2__thumb Kate Rinsema to Holy Kaw!

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Just because there isn’t snow is no reason not to get into the holiday spirit, enough of it, in fact, to scare you right out of believing in Santa Claus but hopefully into believing in climate change.

This amazing installation in Puri, India was built by Sudarsan Pattnaik and his students at the Sudarsan Sand Art Institute, the school he founded to pass on his knowledge of working with the medium, and the particular piece’s message is a timely one seeing that snow enough to make a decent Santa the old fashioned way is getting scarce; the Jesus figure at the focal point of the piece bears the tiding, “Go green, save Earth.”

Full story at My Modern Met.

Sand art.

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Friday, December 28, 2012

Your Daily Posterous Spaces Update

Your daily Update December 28th, 2012

あと

Posted 1 day ago by Ls_3058_hoo_thumb Koichi Mitsui to s a s u r a u

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四日。

Eggs, Chicken Livers, and a Secret Ingredient

Posted 1 day ago by Mark_bittman_097_thumb markbittman to bittman

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When I asked Frank DeCarlo — the chef at Peasant, on Elizabeth Street, and a friend — to show me a big-flavored, funky, simple dish that he loved, he suggested a chicken liver frittata.

My mouth watered. Liver and eggs isn’t a common combination, but it’s one I’ve known and have been fond of; I especially remember a breakfast in Turkey of nothing but those two ingredients a few years ago.

Frank’s version is more complicated than that — though it takes only 10 or so minutes — and even contains what he calls a “secret ingredient.”

Read the rest of this article and watch the video here.

Stop Subsidizing Obesity

Posted 1 day ago by Mark_bittman_097_thumb markbittman to bittman

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Not long ago few doctors – not even pediatricians – concerned themselves much with nutrition. This has changed, and dramatically: As childhood obesity gains recognition as a true health crisis, more and more doctors are publicly expressing alarm at the impact the standard American diet is having on health.

“I never saw Type 2 diabetes during my training, 20 years ago,” David Ludwig, a pediatrician, told me the other day, referring to what was once called “adult-onset” diabetes, the form that is often caused by obesity. “Never. Now about a quarter of the new diabetes cases we’re seeing are Type 2.”

Ludwig, who is director of the New Balance Foundation Obesity Prevention Center in Boston, is one of three authors, all medical doctors of an essay (“Viewpoint”) in the current issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association titled “Opportunities to Reduce Childhood Hunger and Obesity.”

That title that would once have been impossible, but now it’s merely paradoxical. Because the situation is this: 17 percent of children in the United States are obese, 16 percent are food-insecure (this means they have inconsistent access to food), and some number, which is impossible to nail down, are both. Seven times as many poor children are obese as those who are underweight, an indication that government aid in the form of food stamps, now officially called SNAP, does a good job of addressing hunger but encourages the consumption of unhealthy calories.

Read the rest of this column here.

Giving Lamb Legs

Posted 1 day ago by Mark_bittman_097_thumb markbittman to bittman

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The gleaming, massive lamb shank on these pages, impressive though it may be, is not the most effective way to serve what amounts to the shin and ankle of a lamb.

It’s glorious, for sure, but it has a number of disadvantages, the first of which is that a small-to-moderate lamb shank weighs in at more than a pound, a nice serving size in the ’70s (or the Middle Ages) but a bit macho for most of us these days. The second is that it’s difficult to cook — size alone makes it awkward, and penetration of flavors is an issue. It’s difficult to eat. And finally, that same graphic quality that makes for such a gorgeous photo reminds some people more of its source than they’d like.

Besides, I’ve slowly begun to realize that my most successful lamb dishes were made from what was left over from a meal of lamb shanks. A couple of months ago, when braising season began, I cooked two sizable lamb shanks and, of course, enjoyed them. But I really got into it over the following couple of nights when I wound up using them to create a marvelous ragù and then transformed the ragù into a lamb-tomato-bean stew that could not have been much better.

Read the rest of the column and get the recipes here.

A list-lover's paradise in the 100 best lists of all time

Posted about 17 hours ago by Po-wed_006__2__thumb Kate Rinsema to Holy Kaw!

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Though some get annoyed at the constant barrage of lists being circulated on the Internet, particularly as the year draws to a close, lovers of bullet points and numbered anything will have plenty to keep them happy until New Year’s Day with The New Yorker’s “The Hundred Best Lists of All Time.”

100. Generations of Adam (Genesis)*

99. Satchel Paige’s “How to Keep Young”

98. The Crain’s New York Business “40 Under 40”

97. Gentlemen Golfers of Leith’s “Articles & Laws in Playing at Golf”

96. The World Rock Paper Scissors player’s responsibility code

95. Maxim’s “Hot 100”

94. Benjamin Franklin’s “Thirteen Virtues”

93. Benjamin Tusser’s “Five Hundred Points of Good Husbandrie”

92. The Rules

91. U.S. News and World Report’s best-college rankings

90. McDonald’s Big Mac-ingredients commercial

Full story at The New Yorker via Kottke.

The best list of lists.

Photo credit: Fotolia

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