No one had managed to discover a way of manufacturing a watch component in high-technology ceramic with bulk colouring in two distinct colours. No one before #Rolex...
Rolex presents a world first with the new GMT-Master II equipped with a two-colour Cerachrom bezel insert in red and blue, which was long considered impossible to create in ceramic.
The innovation consists first in creating a single-piece red ceramic and then modifying the composition of each grain, right to the core of the ceramic, to change the red into blue over half the insert with a perfectly clear demarcation between the two colours. #Baselworld
http://on.rolex.com/GMT-Master-II
同時也有22部Youtube影片,追蹤數超過180萬的網紅Venus Angelic Official,也在其Youtube影片中提到,Join my OnlyFans! → https://onlyfans.com/venusangelic ♥(=^・ω・^=) Hello my dolly molly inky pinky cotton candy clouds! This makeup tutorial explains yo...
insert into set 在 Lee Hsien Loong Facebook 八卦
By now, you have probably heard about my father’s red box. Minister Heng Swee Keat posted about it last week. The red box was a fixture of my father’s work routine. It is now on display at the National Museum of Singapore in his memorial exhibition.
Some of my father’s other personal items are there too. His barrister’s wig (of horsehair) from when he was admitted to the Bar. And a Rolex Oyster Perpetual watch given to him by the Singapore Union of Postal and Telecommunications Workers after he represented them in the famous postmen’s strike in 1952.
I enjoyed my visit to the exhibition a few days ago. Was happy to hear that many of you went yesterday. The exhibition will be on until 26 April. – LHL
MR LEE'S RED BOX
Mr Lee Kuan Yew had a red box. When I worked as Mr Lee’s Principal Private Secretary, or PPS, a good part of my daily life revolved around the red box. Before Mr Lee came in to work each day, the locked red box would arrive first, at about 9 am.
As far as the various officers who have worked with Mr Lee can remember, he had it for many, many years. It is a large, boxy briefcase, about fourteen centimetres wide. Red boxes came from the British government, whose Ministers used them for transporting documents between government offices. Our early Ministers had red boxes, but Mr Lee is the only one I know who used his consistently through the years. When I started working for Mr Lee in 1997, it was the first time I saw a red box in use. It is called the red box but is more a deep wine colour, like the seats in the chamber in Parliament House.
This red box held what Mr Lee was working on at any one time. Through the years, it held his papers, speech drafts, letters, readings, and a whole range of questions, reflections, and observations. For example, in the years that Mr Lee was working on his memoirs, the red box carried the multiple early drafts back and forth between his home and the office, scribbled over with his and Mrs Lee’s notes.
For a long time, other regular items in Mr Lee’s red box were the cassette tapes that held his dictated instructions and thoughts for later transcription. Some years back, he changed to using a digital recorder.
The red box carried a wide range of items. It could be communications with foreign leaders, observations about the financial crisis, instructions for the Istana grounds staff, or even questions about some trees he had seen on the expressway. Mr Lee was well-known for keeping extremely alert to everything he saw and heard around him – when he noticed something wrong, like an ailing raintree, a note in the red box would follow.
We could never anticipate what Mr Lee would raise – it could be anything that was happening in Singapore or the world. But we could be sure of this: it would always be about how events could affect Singapore and Singaporeans, and how we had to stay a step ahead. Inside the red box was always something about how we could create a better life for all.
We would get to work right away. Mr Lee’s secretaries would transcribe his dictated notes, while I followed up on instructions that required coordination across multiple government agencies. Our aim was to do as much as we could by the time Mr Lee came into the office later.
While we did this, Mr Lee would be working from home. For example, during the time that I worked with him (1997-2000), the Asian Financial Crisis ravaged many economies in our region and unleashed political changes. It was a tense period as no one could tell how events would unfold. Often, I would get a call from him to check certain facts or arrange meetings with financial experts.
In the years that I worked for him, Mr Lee’s daily breakfast was a bowl of dou hua (soft bean curd), with no syrup. It was picked up and brought home in a tiffin carrier every morning, from a food centre near Mr Lee’s home. He washed it down with room-temperature water. Mr Lee did not take coffee or tea at breakfast.
When Mr Lee came into the office, the work that had come earlier in the red box would be ready for his review, and he would have a further set of instructions for our action.
From that point on, the work day would run its normal course. Mr Lee read the documents and papers, cleared his emails, and received official calls by visitors. I was privileged to sit in for every meeting he conducted. He would later ask me what I thought of the meetings – it made me very attentive to every word that was said, and I learnt much from Mr Lee.
Evening was Mr Lee’s exercise time. Mr Lee has described his extensive and disciplined exercise regime elsewhere. It included the treadmill, rowing, swimming and walking – with his ears peeled to the evening news or his Mandarin practice tapes. He would sometimes take phone calls while exercising.
He was in his 70s then. In more recent years, being less stable on his feet, Mr Lee had a simpler exercise regime. But he continued to exercise. Since retiring from the Minister Mentor position in 2011, Mr Lee was more relaxed during his exercises. Instead of listening intently to the news or taking phone calls, he shared his personal stories and joked with his staff.
While Mr Lee exercised, those of us in the office would use that time to focus once again on the red box, to get ready all the day’s work for Mr Lee to take home with him in the evening. Based on the day’s events and instructions, I tried to get ready the materials that Mr Lee might need. It sometimes took longer than I expected, and occasionally, I had to ask the security officer to come back for the red box later.
While Mrs Lee was still alive, she used to drop by the Istana at the end of the day, in order to catch a few minutes together with Mr Lee, just to sit and look at the Istana trees that they both loved. They chatted about what many other old couples would talk about. They discussed what they should have for dinner, or how their grandchildren were doing.
Then back home went Mr Lee, Mrs Lee and the red box. After dinner, Mr and Mrs Lee liked to take a long stroll. In his days as Prime Minister, while Mrs Lee strolled, Mr Lee liked to ride a bicycle. It was, in the words of those who saw it, “one of those old man bicycles”. None of us who have worked at the Istana can remember him ever changing his bicycle. He did not use it in his later years, as he became frail, but I believe the “old man bicycle” is still around somewhere.
After his dinner and evening stroll, Mr Lee would get back to his work. That was when he opened the red box and worked his way through what we had put into it in the office.
Mr Lee’s study is converted out of his son’s old bedroom. His work table is a simple, old wooden table with a piece of clear glass placed over it. Slipped under the glass are family memorabilia, including a picture of our current PM from his National Service days. When Mrs Lee was around, she stayed up reading while Mr Lee worked. They liked to put on classical music while they stayed up.
In his days as PM, Mr Lee’s average bedtime was three-thirty in the morning. As Senior Minister and Minister Mentor, he went to sleep after two in the morning. If he had to travel for an official visit the next day, he might go to bed at one or two in the morning.
Deep into the night, while the rest of Singapore slept, it was common for Mr Lee to be in full work mode.
Before he went to bed, Mr Lee would put everything he had completed back in the red box, with clear pointers on what he wished for us to do in the office. The last thing he did each day was to place the red box outside his study room. The next morning, the duty security team picked up the red box, brought it to us waiting in the office, and a new day would begin.
Let me share two other stories involving the red box.
In 1996, Mr Lee underwent balloon angioplasty to insert a stent. It was his second heart operation in two months, after an earlier operation to widen a coronary artery did not work. After the operation, he was put in the Intensive Care Unit for observation. When he regained consciousness and could sit up in bed, he asked for his security team. The security officer hurried into the room to find out what was needed. Mr Lee asked, “Can you pass me the red box?”
Even at that point, Mr Lee’s first thought was to continue working. The security officer rushed the red box in, and Mr Lee asked to be left to his work. The nurses told the security team that other patients of his age, in Mr Lee’s condition, would just rest. Mr Lee was 72 at the time.
In 2010, Mr Lee was hospitalised again, this time for a chest infection. While he was in the hospital, Mrs Lee passed away. Mr Lee has spoken about his grief at Mrs Lee’s passing. As soon as he could, he left the hospital to attend the wake at Sri Temasek.
At the end of the night, he was under doctor’s orders to return to the hospital. But he asked his security team if they could take him to the Singapore River instead. It was late in the night, and Mr Lee was in mourning. His security team hastened to give a bereaved husband a quiet moment to himself.
As Mr Lee walked slowly along the bank of the Singapore River, the way he and Mrs Lee sometimes did when she was still alive, he paused. He beckoned a security officer over. Then he pointed out some trash floating on the river, and asked, “Can you take a photo of that? I’ll tell my PPS what to do about it tomorrow.” Photo taken, he returned to the hospital.
I was no longer Mr Lee’s PPS at the time. I had moved on to the Monetary Authority of Singapore, to continue with the work to strengthen our financial regulatory system that Mr Lee had started in the late 1990s. But I can guess that Mr Lee probably had some feedback on keeping the Singapore River clean. I can also guess that the picture and the instructions were ferried in Mr Lee’s red box the next morning to the office. Even as Mr Lee lay in the hospital. Even as Mrs Lee lay in state.
The security officers with Mr Lee were deeply touched. When I heard about these moments, I was also moved.
I have taken some time to describe Mr Lee’s red box. The reason is that, for me, it symbolises Mr Lee’s unwavering dedication to Singapore so well. The diverse contents it held tell us much about the breadth of Mr Lee’s concerns – from the very big to the very small; the daily routine of the red box tells us how Mr Lee’s life revolved around making Singapore better, in ways big and small.
By the time I served Mr Lee, he was the Senior Minister. Yet he continued to devote all his time to thinking about the future of Singapore. I could only imagine what he was like as Prime Minister. In policy and strategy terms, he was always driving himself, me, and all our colleagues to think about what each trend and development meant for Singapore, and how we should respond to it in order to secure Singapore’s wellbeing and success.
As his PPS, I saw the punishing pace of work that Mr Lee set himself. I had a boss whose every thought and every action was for Singapore.
But it takes private moments like these to bring home just how entirely Mr Lee devoted his life to Singapore.
In fact, I think the best description comes from the security officer who was with Mr Lee both of those times. He was on Mr Lee’s team for almost 30 years. He said of Mr Lee: “Mr Lee is always country, country, country. And country.”
This year, Singapore turns 50. Mr Lee would have turned 92 this September. Mr Lee entered the hospital on 5 February 2015. He continued to use his red box every day until 4 February 2015.
(Photo: MCI)
insert into set 在 肥媽 Maria cordero Facebook 八卦
今日教大家
📌 豉油雞
📌白灼牛肩胛
📌 砵仔糕
🍏🍏🍏🍏🍏🍏🍏🍏🍏
蘋果膠中文購買連結 送冰皮月餅粉
海外觀眾優惠完結,只限香港粉絲
https://www.jlc-health.com/tc-maria-mooncake-special
✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨
和牛凍肉資料👉https://bit.ly/3adssZ3
💥💥💥肥媽粉絲優惠💥💥💥💥
優惠價+套餐折扣+禮物1+禮物2+免費送貨
$1000送開合式矽膠隔熱墊
$2000再送可調適量匙
✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨
豉油雞
材料: 光雞一隻,薑.蔥.乾蔥頭.老抽二湯匙,片糖半塊,半碗紹興酒或一至二湯匙玫瑰露,細半碗生抽
香料:桂皮.香葉.一粒八角。
做法:
1 洗淨雞放滾水中淥一淥後即放冷水中過冷河(雞身較爽)
2索乾雞身內外水份用2大湯匙老抽內外塗勻雞身,將二片薑及蔥放雞肚內
3薑.乾蔥頭.桂皮.香葉八角放鑊中爆香加半碗紹興酒及細半碗生抽加半塊片糖煮溶
4將汁料倒入電飯煲雞胸向下放煲中,
每10分鐘轉雞身一次,共30分鐘
English Version
Soya Sauce Chicken in a Rice Cooker
(YouTube video starts at 4:30 )
Ingredients:
Whole chicken - 1
Shallots
Ginger slices
Cinnamon stick
Bay leaf
Star anise - 1
Garlic, optional
Green onion - 2 bunches (1 bunch for the cavity of chicken. 1 bunch to put in the rice cooker inner pot.)
Seasonings:
Dark soya sauce - 2 tbsp
Shaoxing wine - ½ a bowl (or you can use Chinese rose wine but only use 1 – 2 tbsp due to the strong taste)
Light soya sauce - ½ a bowl
Chinese brown sugar - ½ a slab (or you can use Chinese rock sugar but less richer in flavour)
Methods:
1. In a pot of boiling water, grab the whole chicken by the neck and dip it into the boiling water a couple of times and lastly submerge the chicken head into the boiling water. With a pair of chopsticks, secure the chicken neck and transfer to pot of ice-cold water or flush cold water in the sink to stop the cooking process.
This step will result in firm skin texture, to prevent the chicken skin from breaking, and to better absorb the color from the dark soya sauce.
2. Gently pat dry the whole interior and exterior of the chicken with paper towel.
3. Chop both chicken feet to prevent them from sticking out from the rice cooker. Set aside.
4. In a bowl, add in the whole chicken and coat the exterior and interior of the chicken with dark soya sauce. Stuff a bunch of green onion and two big slices of ginger into the cavity of the chicken. Set aside.
5. In a heated wok, add in less than a tbsp of oil, shallots, ginger slices, cinnamon stick, bay leaf, and fry until fragrant and slightly charred then transfer to the rice cooker inner pot.
6. Add the chicken feet and the whole dark soya sauce coated chicken into the rice cooker inner pot with the chicken breast facing down. Add in Shaoxing wine, light soya sauce, 1 bunch of green onion, and Chinese brown sugar. This step is done or you can take an extra step to heat up the sauce in a pan. Pour all the sauce out from the rice cooker inner pot into a pan and bring to boil then return the sauce to the rice cooker inner pot.
7. Put it in the rice cooker and cook for 10 minutes, after 10 minutes flip the whole chicken over on its side and cook for further 5 minutes for each side for a total of 10 minutes. After 10 minutes, TURN OFF the heat and let the chicken sit in the rice cooker for further 10 minutes. Total cooking time 30 minutes.
8. Let the chicken cool for 20 to 30 minutes before cutting into pieces. Pour the liquid from the rice cooker to a cooking pot and bring to a boil and let it reduce to a thick sauce. Drizzle sauce over chicken. Serve.
✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨
📌白灼牛肩胛
材料
📌 牛肩胛一碟(按照自己份量需要)
📌 薑一至兩片
📌 葱兩至三棵
📌 辣椒適量
📌 鼓油半碗
📌 麻油一茶匙
📌 生粉少許
📌 酒一湯匙
📌 清水
做法
1. 薑片切條再切粒。
2. 開火煲滾熱水,把薑粒和酒放入煲內,煮滾。
3. 牛肩胛一片片分開,加入生粉撈均。
4. 葱切絲用水稍浸,之後瀝乾。辣椒切片或粒,之後和葱撈均。
5. 用碗把鼓油,麻油和少許步驟4的葱和辣椒,撈均。
6. 準備一隻碟,放入步驟4剩餘大半的葱和辣椒鋪底,備用。
7. 牛肩胛一片片放入煲中,灼大約10-15秒。
8. 把牛肩胛放在已鋪底的碟上,之後再次鋪上步驟4餘下的葱和辣椒在面。
9. 最後倒入已調味的鼓油(步驟5),即成。
English Version
Poached Beef Chuck Slices
(YouTube video starts at 30:15)
Ingredients:
Beef chunk slices
Ginger - diced
Shaoxing wine - 1 tbsp
Cornstarch
Spring onion - wash, soak in water and rinse well
Fresh red chilli
Dipping sauce ingredients:
Light soya sauce
Fresh red chilli
Sesame oil
Green onion
Methods:
1. On a plate, separate the beef chuck slices and mix thoroughly with corn starch. This is to make the meat more tender.
2. In a dipping bow, add in light soya sauce, sesame oil, fresh red chilli, green onion, and mix well. Set aside.
3. In a cooking pot, add in water, diced ginger, Shaoxing wine, and bring to a boil. Add in the beef chuck slices and poach them briefly and transfer them to a serving plate covered with green onion and red chilli pieces. Garnish with more green onion and serve with dipping sauce or drizzle dipping over the plate. Serve.
✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨
📌砵仔糕
材料:
70 g 粘米粉
一湯匙粟粉
85 ml水
椰糖一塊
片糖1/4塊
150ml 水
紅豆(早一晚浸過夜,然後用水浸過紅豆煲滾至熟,不要開蓋,焗一個鐘, 盛起紅豆備用)
做法:
1) 先把小碗輕輕掃油,蒸熱
2) 粘米粉,粟粉放在碗來,先放入1/3的85ml水入碗內,用手把水搓入粉內,再加入1/3的水、將水搓入粉內至成團,再加入餘下的水,搓均,放一旁備用
3) 切碎棷糖及片糖,放入煲內,加入150ml 水,煲至糖完全溶解
4) 糖水大滾後,先再拌勻粉漿,然後分三次把已煑滾糖水撞入粉漿,邊撞,邊攪拌至糖水完全加入
4) 把紅豆分入已蒸熱的小碗內,然後倒入粉漿
5) 用保鮮紙包蓋著小碗
6)大火蒸15至20分鐘至熟
Red Bean Pudding (“Put Chai Ko”)
(YouTube video starts at 14:08)
Ingredients:
Rice flour - 70g
Corn starch/flour - 1 tbsp
Water - 85ml
Red bean - 50g – 60g (soak overnight, cook till tender and leave the lid on to cook further without the heat. This will preserve their shapes and still tender inside.)
Sugar mixture ingredients:
Palm sugar &/or Chinese brown sugar - 60g a small piece (crush into tiny pieces)
Water - 150ml
Water - 1 tsp, optional (larger pieces of sugar will take longer to melt so add an additional 1 tsp of water to the melted mixture to make up for the evaporated water.)
Methods:
1. In a heat-proof mixing bowl, add in rice flour, and corn starch. Slowly add in a bit of water and knead well to let the rice flour absorb the water and MUST form a dough like texture then add a bit more water and continue to knead until the rice flour has absorbed the water and becomes dough like texture again. Continue with this process until the water is finished. Set aside.
This kneading process will give a firm, bouncy texture to the pudding whereas simple mixing all the ingredients together without this kneading process will be soft and sticky.
2. Prepare 6 small bowls. Brush each with a bit of oil and steam them. Steamed bowls will cook batter evenly.
3. In a cooking pot, add in palm sugar, Chinese brown sugar, water, and cook until sugar has melted. Optional to add 1 tsp of water if sugar takes longer to melt and more water has evaporated. Bring to a boil.
4. Add boiling melted sugar mixture into Step 1 rice flour mixture and mix well. Set aside.
5. To assemble, add the red bean first to the 6 small steamed bowls. With a ladle, add and divide mixture from Step 4 evenly among the 6 small bowls. Make sure to keep stirring the mixture each time you add to the small bowl to avoid the sugar and rice flour mixture from separating.
6. Cover the bowls with plastic wrap and steam 20 minutes.
7. Let puddings cool before removing the bowls. Insert skewers into the sides of the puddings. Serve.
insert into set 在 Venus Angelic Official Youtube 的評價
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Hello my dolly molly inky pinky cotton candy clouds!
This makeup tutorial explains you how to imitate the look of a bjd short for ball jointed doll, dollfie doll, or asian doll as they are sometimes called.
An Inspiration to create this makeup was a doll itself, that some nice people at Hyper Japan gave me to pose for a photo. Tadaaaaa!
Now, Let's Start!
Use moisturiser to create a base that makes your skin look smooth like porcelain.
Press the moisturiser with lifting strokes into your skin. Be gentle with your skin, the facial skin is the most sensitive, so make sure your hands and face are clean so you don't transfer bacteria into your pores and avoid breakouts.
When the cream is absorbed, apply a second layer. Wait until the second one is absorbed by your skin too, and apply the third and last layer. Applying more than one layer of moisturiser is more effective.
This part is optional, but listen:
Before we start applying any makeup, insert circle lenses. It's wrong inserting them after the makeup is done, as you risk that powder could come in touch with your lens, and you'd end up with a bad eye infection. Or, of course, your eye makeup and mascara would risk getting messed up.
Use a pink or peach toned concealer, 1 shade lighter than your natural skin tone to create an even, and flawless base shade. Apply around the dark area under your eye, eyelids and the infamous T-Zone. Apply the second coat of concealer and blend, blend, blend, and blend. No magic, but only blending is the one key to create an even base.
Get powder in your natural skin tone. Lightly dab the sponge with the powder. Then, dab the sponge to your facial areas. We only dab, as pressing to much powder onto your skin would mess up the doll look. We want the difference between powder colour and concealer colour to be seen, as it creates a natural but doll like skin.
Dolls got mysterious, beautifully deep set eyes, so keep watching too see how you can do that, too!
Choose light pink eyeshadow, and apply colour from eyelid to brow bone. Choose a reddish brown and apply it to your outer eye corner, then blend the two colours.
As mentioned, make up is art, and there's a wide variety of tools for us to use.
Take a lip liner, but use it as an eyeliner.
Line about the half of your lower lash line and blend moving your finger upwards.
Apply mascara, a lot of mascara, to make both your real lashes and lower lashes thick and long.Now get fake lashes. For a dolly look, look for lashes that aren't too long, have a thin lash band,many but thin lashes, and have their ultimate longest lash pair set in the middle.
Use light pink blush. Smile and apply on your cheeks.
Apply blush on your temples, brushing downwards to your kidney.
This time, bronzer is not used to tan us, but to create shadows. Dab a small amount of bronzer on a powder brush and apply to your sides, over the light pink blush to create a warm and soft colour tone.
Dab some bronzer on your finger and apply to the sides of your nose. This will give an illusion of a narrow nose like most dolls usually have.
To create soft looking lips, line your lips with a brown lip liner. Blend the lip liner on your lips.
Stroke cherry red lip liner on your lips, then blend the 2 colours together. Dab red or pink lip gloss on your lips, then press them together. Now you have simply dreamy lips in soft colours!
Look! We're done!
I hope that you too will enjoy trying out this doll makeup!
See you in my next video!
Credits:
Music by Kevin MacLeod: Cattails
A thank you to Sebestian1 and ~飛飛~ on flickr for letting me use those beautiful dollfie picture! ♥
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(灬╹ω╹灬) SUBSCRIBBLE FOR MORE VIDEOS! ♥
☆ New videos every Wednesday & Friday at Japan time 9pm!
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insert into set 在 MosoGourmet 妄想グルメ Youtube 的評價
話題の業務スーパーの“タピオカドリンク”。品切れ・入荷未定で、ずっと買えなかったけど、とうとう入手しました!
外でいろんなタピオカドリンクを娘とよく飲むけど、それに比べてもこの商品はフツーにおいしい!しかも牛乳と氷を入れるだけ、極太ストローまでついてる手軽さがまた すごい!
今回、この“タピオカドリンク”をやわやわの飲めるゼリーにアレンジ。氷に見立てたナタデココを浮かべて、びっくりデザートにしてみました。時代は令和となりましたが、タピオカとナタデココ、奇しくも平成を代表するスイーツの共演となりました。
*レシピ*(満水状態 220ml カップ 4個分)
1.粉ゼラチン 10gを50gの水に振り入れておく。
2.業務スーパーの冷凍“タピオカドリンク”3袋を解凍する。湯煎で約4分。
3.タピオカとミルクティーの素を分け、タピオカをカップに入れておく。
4.牛乳 500mlを人肌(40度)に温める。
5.1を600wの電子レンジで様子を見ながら加熱し、粉ゼラチンを溶かす。(沸騰させない)
6.4に5を入れ混ぜる。
7.3のミルクティーの素も入れ混ぜる。
8.氷水にあて、混ぜながら冷やす。
9.3のカップに8を流し入れる。
10.冷蔵庫で20分ほど冷やし、表面がやっと固まってきたら氷に見立てたナタデココ 110gを入れる。付属のストローも入れ、しっかりと冷やす。
11.できあがり。うっまい。
For a while we were unable to purchase the popular "Tapioca Drink" carried by Gyomu Super due to it being out of stock, but we finally got our hands on it!
We've tried tapioca drinks from various shops with our daughter and this product is just as delicious! On top of that, it's as simple as adding in milk and ice, plus it comes with its own wide straw!
This time we thought we would turn this "Tapioca Drink" into a soft drinkable jelly. We wanted to try making a surprise dessert with ice cube-shaped Nata de Coco (coconut jelly product) floating in it. While the period is now Reiwa, tapioca and Nata de Coco are two sweets that have, oddly enough, become representative of the Heisei period.
*Recipe* (for four full 220 ml cups)
1. Sift 10 g of powdered gelatin into 50 g of water and set aside.
2. Defrost three bags of Gyomu Super's frozen "Tapioca Drink." This will take about 4 minutes over a double boiler.
3. Separate the tapioca from the milk tea, put the tapioca in a cup and set aside.
4. Heat 500 ml of milk until warm (40°C).
5. Heat the water and gelatin mixture in a microwave at 600 W to dissolve the powdered gelatin (keep an eye on it and do not let it boil).
6. Combine the warm milk with the water and gelatin mixture.
7. Stir in the milk tea from Step 3 of the recipe.
8. Continue stirring the mixture over an ice bath to cool.
9. Pour the mixture into three cups.
10. Cool in the refrigerator for about 20 minutes. Once the surface has finally solidified, add 110 g of ice cube-shaped nata de coco. Insert the straws included and chill well.
11. All done. Delish!
#タピオカ #ミルクティー #ナタデココ #レシピ #bubbletea #boba
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This video will show you how to make Fudgy Cake Pops using a Nordic Ware's Baking Pan which I bought in New York (at Sur La Table).
The new innovative two-piece pan design allows you to bake a dozen perfectly round cakes or brownies, easy and fun to decorate! Unlike crumbled up cake pops, the cake is very soft and fluffy. The texture you get is absolutely distinctive! So I recommend this pan if you want to make perfect and delicious cake pops :D
Summer 2012 in New York
http://createeathappy.blogspot.jp/2012/07/summer-2012-in-new-york.html
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Fudgy Cake Pops *I modified the recipe on the Nordic Ware package.
Difficulty: Easy
Time: 20min + baking & cooling & decorating time
Number of servings: 24 cake pops
Note:
1cup = 250ml or 250cc
Ingredients:
((Fudgy Cake Pops))
3/4 cup semi-sweet chocolate chips (or 2 bars Meiji Milk Chocolate)
1/2 cup (100g=3.5oz.) butter
1/2 cup sugar
3 tbsp. cocoa powder
2 eggs
3/4 cup flour (or 3/4 cup cake flour + 1 tsp. baking powder)
1/4 tsp. salt
((Decoration))
12 oz. chocolate bark coating (or 2 Meiji Milk Chocolate Bars)
Meiji Twinkle Chocolate
Meiji Sweet Pen Chocolate
Meiji Sweet Pen White Cream
sprinkles of your choice
24 lollipop sticks
Directions:
((Fudgy Cake Pops))
1. Preheat the oven to 170C (338F). Grease and flour pan.
2. In medium saucepan, over low heat, melt chocolate chips (or 2 Bars Meiji Milk Chocolate) and butter together. Stir until smooth. Remove from heat and pour into medium bowl.
3. Add sugar and mix until blended. Add eggs, one at a time, mixing well after each addition.
4. Sift in flour, cocoa powder, and salt. Stir until blended.
5. Spoon the batter into bottom half of pan (without holes) filling each well so it mounds over the top of the pan. (Norpro 1 tbsp. scoop works perfect.)
6. Place top half of pan on top and secure with keys. Bake for 15-18 minutes, until toothpick inserted comes out almost clean.
7. Cool 5 minutes in pan, then remove cake pops from pan to cool completely. Trim the edges of cake pops, if needed.
((Decoration))
1. Melt chocolate bark according to package directions.
2. Dip lollipop stick into melted chocolate and insert into cake. Repeat with all cakes. Allow chocolate to cool to secure stick in place.
3. Dip cake pop in melted chocolate, spinning to let excess chocolate drip off. Decorate with sprinkles as desired. If you have a Styrofoam box, you can make them stand to set. Makes about 24 cake pops.
* I didn't have a Styrofoam box, so I coated and decorated the cake pops first (placed them on a parchment paper and set) before I insert the sticks into cakes.
レシピ(日本語)
http://www.cooklabo.blogspot.jp/2012/07/blog-post_25.html
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Nordic Ware Cake Pop Pan (ノルディックウエア ケーキポップスパン)
Bake perfectly round, bite-sized balls of cake or brownie, and serve on a stick!
http://www.nordicware.com/store/products/detail/nordic-ware-cake-pop-kit/700EFD84-2673-11E1-B8E4-005056A42C5A
Meiji Milk Chocolate Bar (明治 ミルクチョコレート)
http://catalog-p.meiji.co.jp/products/sweets/chocolate/010101/08048.html
Meiji White Chocolate Bar (明治 ホワイトチョコレート)
http://catalog-p.meiji.co.jp/products/sweets/chocolate/010101/07036.html?rnd=883c53c8ffc8fd3c1beb3ba8e001b889
Meiji Twinkle Chocolate (明治 ツインクル)
http://catalog-p.meiji.co.jp/products/sweets/chocolate/010124/13554-1.html
Meiji Sweet Pen Chocolate (明治 スイートペンチョコ)
http://catalog-p.meiji.co.jp/products/sweets/chocolate/010125/01826-1.html
Meiji Sweet Pen White Cream (明治 スイートペンホワイトクリーム)
http://catalog-p.meiji.co.jp/products/sweets/chocolate/010125/01800-1.html
What is Cake Flour?
http://createeathappy.blogspot.jp/2012/05/what-is-cake-flour.html
Music by
Josh Woodward
I'll Be Right Behind You, Josephine (INSTRUMENTAL)
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