November 25, 2009

Low fat mayonnaise with full fat taste

Filed under: Food & Drink,Health,Science by Orangemaster @ 12:10 pm
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Thanks to a new production process, Koen van Dijke of the University of Wageningen has come up with a way of making mayonnaise using less oil, but with the same taste as full on fat mayonnaise. When you make mayonnaise, you need egg yolks or lemon as an emulsifier to stabilise the mixture. To do this right, you need to use a lot of oil, which makes mayonnaise fattening.

Van Dijke developed a microscale system that adds very little oil to a lot of water, producing a stable emulsion. Then this mix is added to more water, producing a new emulsion that is mostly water, but that retains the same taste.

(Links: rtl.nl, evmi.nl)

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November 24, 2009

A canal of whores at the London Gallery

Filed under: Art by Orangemaster @ 6:16 pm

The Hoerengracht (literally ‘whore canal’) is the clever name of an exhibition by Americans Ed and Nancy Kienholz currently at the National Gallery in London featuring ‘an artistic re-creation of Amsterdam’s red light district’.

Althought the play on words is excellent, this sentence, however, is rubbish: “The Herengracht, or Gentlemen’s Canal, is home to Amsterdam’s prostitutes, who famously sit in windows to ply their trade.”

The Herengracht has beautiful houses, lawyers, offices, a few nice restaurants, but no whores. The nearest girls are on the Spui, roughly two streets down. So much for fact checking.

Someone on television said this exhibition would come to Amsterdam, and I wonder why anyone would bother looking at some artsy-farty rendering of the real thing when we can go, see and even experience the real thing. I could be missing the point, who knows.

(Link: independent.co.uk, Photo is Red Light District of The Hague)

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Students sell Ritalin to make some cash

Filed under: Health by Orangemaster @ 12:12 pm
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Oh dear, students are selling their Ritalin online! Six boxes of pills for 150 euro, saving you a trip to the doctor’s with someone’s annoyingly hyperactive child. No wait, they actually prescribe Ritalin to students so they can concentrate better on their exams. And then there’s this famous American telly programme where a mom with four children took her eldest son’s Ritalin to be able to get the household chores done and be the perfect wife and mother. Scary.

Apparently, the party people get off on the similar effect it has to speed or cocaine. I talked to someone younger recently who tried it and said it did help him concentrate better than too much coffee or drinking litres of water, which would explain why students are into Ritalin. Other friends from way back used to just do cocaine with their teachers at university. It was ‘the only way’ to get so many projects done without sleeping.

Healthcare inspectors aim their crackdown efforts on professional sellers of the drug, not students trying to make some extra cash, which they say is a huge problem. I’m saving my last codeine-laced ibuprofen pill for a worthy headache.

The link (pic) shown here has been removed, but the Internet has a good memory.

(Link: ad.nl)

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November 23, 2009

Drinking wine by numbers

Filed under: Food & Drink by Branko Collin @ 8:42 am

Picking a wine if you have no idea what you are doing can be a painful process, especially if you have only the bottle’s label to go by. To reduce ‘choice stress’, 94wines.com has taken every last bit of confusing information from the bottle and put a number in its place. If you liked the 51 last time, you know you should buy it again. If you didn’t, you know to leave that number alone the next time.

I am sure true wine connoisseurs will be outraged by the idea of objectifying wine, but hey, it’s the naughties, baby, at least for one more month.

A short online wine test should help to get you underway for the first purchase by determining the basic flavours you want. Young marketing buffs Lucas Tieleman and Sander de Jonge came up with the whole concept.

(Source photo: 94wines.com. Link: De Pers.)

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November 22, 2009

Roundabouts of the world

Filed under: Photography by Branko Collin @ 1:50 pm

A rotonde is a roundabout in Dutch, so when Tijs van den Boomen and Peter Jonker set out to create a website about roundabouts and the often ugly art that is in their centres, they of course called it rotondologie.nl. (The Flemish say rondpunt.)

Rotondologie.nl has pictures, videos and stories about roundabouts from all over the world, but you can hardly blame them for paying extra attention to the Netherlands. The website is clunky at times—rather than showing you a whole story at once you get little Javascript arrows with which to scroll, even if there is nothing to scroll towards—but if you click the big Collectie button, you get a nice big site map listed by country, province and so on.

Trendbeheer unearthed a quote from the site about a Doesburg roundabout that exemplifies the wrongness of moral rights (a part of copyright):

“I thank God that [the centre piece] is not art,” alderman Fred Jansen told De Gelderlander. “If it had been, we would not have been allowed to touch it for sixty years. Everybody thought it was garbage, citizens, entrepreneurs and visitors.”

(Photo of a roundabout in Venray by Google Streetview, immortalised because this is presumably the location where the Streetview car made an infraction that caused a police car to stop it two blocks further)

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November 21, 2009

‘Twitteren’ Dutch word of the year 2009

Filed under: Literature by Branko Collin @ 8:05 pm

I just got back from the Onze Taal (‘Our Language’) congress in Utrecht, where the word ‘twitteren’ was elected Word of the Year 2009.

The word, which simply means ‘to twitter,’ was chosen over Koninginnedagdrama, the deeply racist kopvoddentax, Mexicaanse griep and vuvuzela by 600 of the attendants. Another candidate was mama appelsap, for a misheard lyric. Mama appelsap literally means “mother apple juice,” but is Michael Jackson’s misheard lyric “Mama-se, mama-sa, ma-ma-coo-sa.”

The 27th congress featured talks about language by Princess Laurentien, writer Kristien Hemmerechts, and performances by comedians Paulien Cornelisse and Kees Torn.

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Domino record broken again

Filed under: Shows by Branko Collin @ 8:59 am

Last week a team of 89 ‘builders’ broke the world record for toppling dominoes in one long chain reaction.

In total, 4.491.863 stones of the 4.8 million that were originally set up, fell over at the WTC Expo in Leeuwarden for this year’s Domino Day. Almost three million Dutch viewers watched the show live on television, which was a record for the annual programme.

Source video: Associated Press. Link: Geo TV, Nieuws.nl.

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November 20, 2009

Skip the food, pass the cutlery

Filed under: Health,Science,Weird by Orangemaster @ 11:22 am
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If you can stomach it, have a look at x-rays showing a whole bunch of cutlery eaten by 52-year-old Margaret Daalman, a Dutch woman with an eating disorder called pica (I think it’s pica; oddly no one mentions it), which is an urge to eat non-food items. She ate 78 different items of cutlery and went to the hospital in Rotterdam with stomach pain. Although this happened some 30 years ago, the x-rays were apparently published for the first time this week in a Dutch medical magazine.

One of the most famous entertainers with pica (or just plain bonkers) was Michael Lotito aka Monsieur Mangetout (‘Mr Eat-it All’), a Frenchman who holds the Guinness Book of World Records for eating undigestables.

He apparently had the ability to consume 900 g of metal a day. Since 1966, he had consumed 18 bicycles, 15 shopping carts, seven television sets, six chandeliers, two beds, a pair of skis, a computer, and a Cessna light aircraft. He died of natural causes in 2007.

(Links: presurfer, knurps.nl)

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November 19, 2009

Whining about wine – you’re doing it wrong

Filed under: Food & Drink by Orangemaster @ 11:43 am
De Linie wine

I once wrote about going to a wine tasting event where famous Dutch winemaker Ilya Gort of the La Tulipe vineyard (Obviously not the bottle shown here) gave drinking tips. One of the things that really bothers him — and helps him sell books and his inexpensive wine — is that the Dutch don’t take the time to appreciate what they are drinking. He had said “someone worked very hard to get it [the wine] that way” and he’s right, although I can imagine the average Dutch consumer thinking that they can do whatever the hell they want with the wine they bought at the store and rightly so.

Gort claims in Dutch newspaper ad.nl that three quarters of the Dutch don’t taste wine properly as they just drink it instead of slurping it. No idea where that percentage comes from, but hey. Slurping is frowned upon in many Western cultures, but with wine, you can slurp to taste the wine, then you can drink it and know what you’re drinking. Gort is plugging a book about slurping, so let’s be honest, the ‘story’ sounds more like an advertorial.

I am in no way a huge wine connoisseur, but my non-book-pushing gripes involve the following:

– The very bad quality of wine glasses here. It’s a freaking juice glass! The nicer the glass, the more pleasant the drinking or we’d put cocktails in a big coffee mug and call it a day.

– When I ask for wine in a bar, choices are often limited to red or white, and dry or fruity.

– When I want to know what the house wine is, I get a shoulder shrug and get told it’s the house wine.

I also have to tell you about the time a Dutch girlfriend invited me over for dinner and said ‘bring a red Merlot’ (Merlot is always red), either as an excellent joke or worried I’d go Dutch on her. I laughed and got worried about her taste in wine.

All these comments make anyone sound like a snob — and I have had great wine in the Netherlands — but accepting this state of affairs makes one sound like a provincial hicks. No wait, they drink beer. Damn.

(Link: ad.nl, Photo: De Linie)

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November 18, 2009

Pupils bake 13 metre long speculaas doll

Filed under: Weird by Orangemaster @ 11:04 am

The speculaas doll is a typical Sinterklaas treat, but the cookie the pupils of the Albeda College in Rotterdam baked is perhaps a little too much for any one person to eat. The 13.84 metre long giant weighs 867 kg. Dig in!

Baking the doll raised 51,250 euro, and the proceeds will go to the Friends of the Sophia Children’s Hospital foundation (Stichting Vrienden van het Sophia).

The speculaas doll may warrant a mention in the Guinness Book of Records, as the previous tallest doll was only 9 metres. A school on the other side of the country, ROC Almelo, will try to break the new record on 30 November 2009.

Speculaas is a type of dough containing pepper, cinnamon, ginger, cloves, cardamom and nutmeg.

(Link: Telegraaf. Photo by Flickr user zoyachubby, some rights reserved)

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