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Posts Tagged ‘fresh’

Big Gigantic and Two Fresh Tour

BIG GIGANTIC AND TWO FRESH ANNOUNCE TOUR

After a great conclusion of 2009, Big Gigantic and Two Fresh are about to hit the road together for a string of dates. Quickly rising to the top and gaining much positive recognition, both bands immediately became fans of each other and felt it made perfect sense to join forces together on the road. Each night will consist of intertwining sets by the two acts with the music never stopping.

Big Gigantic and Two Fresh Tour Dates

02/11/10 Thu The Box Baton Rouge, LA

02/13/10 Sat George’s Majestic Fayetteville, AR

02/15/10 Mon Middle Tennessee State University Murfreesboro, TN

02/16/10 Tue Rhythm and Brews Chattanooga, TN

02/17/10 Wed King Plow Arts Center Atlanta, GA

02/18/10 Thu Zydeco Birmingham, AL

02/19/10 Fri New Earth Music Hall Athens, GA

02/20/10 Sat Eye Level Art Charleston, SC

02/23/10 Tue 90 Proof Night Club Knoxville, TN

02/24/10 Wed Cosmic Charlie’s Lexington, KY

02/26/10 Fri The Miramar Theatre Milwaukee, WI

02/27/10 Sat Kinetic Playground Chicago, IL

biggigantic.net

myspace.com/twofreshbeats


Malaysia defends stance on ‘Allah’ row amid ninth fresh attack

Malaysia on Monday defended its refusal to allow non-Muslims to use the word “Allah”, as a dispute over the issue saw a ninth church attacked in a spate of fire-bombings and vandalism. The Sidang Injil Borneo Church in the central state of Negri Sembilan was the latest to be targeted amid

Fresh Crew to Arrive at ISS

The International Space Station’s shorthanded crew busy themselves with science and maintenance projects while awaiting the arrival of three new astronauts.
– Three new astronauts are expected to arrive at the International Space
Station Dec. 22 after launching from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan
Dec. 20. Docking is scheduled for 5:54 p.m.
EST.

NASA astronaut T.J. Creamer, Russian cosmonaut Oleg Kotov and Japan Aerospace
Exploration Agency a…


Fresh opposition protests, clashes in Iran

Reports from Iran say protesters have clashed with supporters of the regime on university campuses for a second straight day. RFE/RL’s Radio Farda reports that the protests started at a Tehran engineering school, where members of the hard-line Basij militia attacked students with tear gas.

Clerity, Compuware Maintain Fresh Focus on the Mainframe

As mainframe use remains a fact of life in enterprise IT today, software makers such as Clerity Solutions and Compuware continue turning out new software and services to support developers building applications for the mainframe platform.
– As mainframe use remains a fact of life in enterprise IT today, software makers such as Clerity Solutions and Compuware continue turning out new software and services to support developers building applications for the mainframe platform.
Clerity Solutions, a provider of mainframe migration, modern…


DJ wants side to remain on song

Fresh from leading his New Zealand side to victory at the Dubai Rugby Sevens on Saturday, DJ Forbes set his sights on regaining the World Series crown relinquished to South Africa last year.  The eight-time champions of the season-long competition saw off Samoa to take the final 24-12 and beginFresh from leading his New Zealand side to victory at the Dubai Rugby Sevens on Saturday, DJ Forbes set his sights on regaining the World Series crown relinquished to South Africa last year. The eight-time champions of the season-long competition saw off Samoa to take the final 24-12 and begin

Jennifer Lopez “Fresh Out The Oven” VIDEO

J. Lo’s “Fresh Out The Oven” and piping-hot as her alter ego “Lola” in this sizzling new video, directed by lensman Jonas Akerlund and featuring Miami-based rap star Pitbull.
“Fresh Out The Oven” will appear on Jennifer’s upcoming LP, Love?, available Jan. 26.

Two Fresh: Tour/Free Album

CRAZY BEATS ABOUND ON FIRST NATIONAL TOUR

Two Fresh

Hot off a series of well received opening slots for The Disco Biscuits in September, Two Fresh continue their first full tour since their inception in August of 2008. This tour will bring them to stops all over the southeast and midwest as well as playing the official Halloween run late nights for 1320 label mates STS9.

Two Fresh consists of an inseparable pair of twin producers, Sherwyn and Kendrick Nichols, who have been making beats and playing music together since they were 15-years-old. Now only 20, the twins are ready to release their first album entitled The Baker’s Dozen. This release contains a unique style of music combining elements of hip-hop, jazz, soul, standout synth lines, creative sample chops and heavy bass sections. The 13-track album is available for free download at www.1320records.com.

Download The Baker’s Dozen here.

Two Fresh Tour Dates

Sep 29 2009 8:00P Attitudes Blacksburg, Virginia
Sep 30 2009 8:00P Love is Earth Gallery Boone, North Carolina
Oct 1 2009 8:00P O’Malley’s Charleston, South Carolina
Oct 2 2009 8:00P New Earth Music Hall Athens, Georgia
Oct 3 2009 8:00P The Emerald Lounge Asheville, North Carolina
Oct 9 2009 8:00P Sandbar Wilmington, North Caroline
Oct 15 2009 8:00P The Box Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Oct 16 2009 8:00P The Dragons Den New Orleans, Louisiana
Oct 17 2009 8:00P Newby’s Memphis, Tennessee
Oct 22 2009 8:00P Official STS9 After party at Rise Boston, Massachusetts
Oct 23 2009 8:00P AM Only CMJ Party New York, New York
Oct 24 2009 8:00P Bourbon St Ballroom w/ Orchard Lounge Baltimore, Maryland
Oct 25 2009 8:00P Silk City Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Oct 28 2009 8:00P Official STS9 After party at The World Grotto Knoxville, Tennessee
Oct 29 2009 8:00P Official STS9 After party at Nashwa Asheville, North Carolina
Oct 30 2009 8:00P Official STS9 After party at Zydeco Birmingham, Alabama
Oct 31 2009 8:00P Official STS9 After party at 12th & Porter Nashville, Tennessee
Nov 6 2009 8:00 Senor Fish Los Angeles, California
Nov 13 2009 8:00P Cervantes Denver, Colorado
Nov 14 2009 8:00P Bourbon Theatre Lincoln, Nebraska
Nov 17 2009 8:00P Bottleneck Lawrence, Kansas
Nov 18 2009 8:00P Majestic Theater Madison, Wisconsin
Nov 20 2009 8:00P Beat Kitchen Chicago, Illinois
Nov 21 2009 8:00P Club 2720 St. Louis, Missouri
Dec 12 2009 8:00P Cosmic Charlie’s Lexington, Kentucky


MySociety seeks fresh ideas

Downing St door, BBC

A DIY guide to becoming an MP and a database of the connections between the powerful could soon be created online.

The two ideas are among those being considered by MySociety – a charitable group that helps construct civic tools.

It is looking for ideas for new ideas to enhance its existing sites, entirely new projects or ways to spread the word about the digital democracy group.

Previous competitions have produced a site that automated and logged Freedom of Information (FOI) requests.

Statistics from the Ministry of Justice suggest that the FOI site, WhatDoTheyKnow, is behind 8.5% of the requests received by central government departments.

MySociety also set up the WriteToThem website that helps people get in touch with their MP.

Similar requests for proposals were run in 2003 and 2006 and this time, said MySociety founder Tom Steinberg, it was looking for one big idea to develop.

"The next step will be on a different scale from what we have built before," said Mr Steinberg, "something that might have an order of magnitude more impact or more users."

Those submitting ideas do need to provide detailed technical specifications, said Mr Steinberg, but the proposal must be possible to build.

All the ideas submitted will be subject to public scrutiny said Mr Steinberg. The comments will help decide which one to build. The judging panel will be comprised of the 30 or so people who keep MySociety and its associated websites running.

Those with good ideas have until 15 September to submit them to MySociety. Early suggestions include Me MP, which would make it easier to stand as an independent in a election, and LittleSis which would plot the social relationships between those in power.

Mr Steinberg said he expected recent events, both political and technological, to influence the ideas sent in.

"We are seeing a world that’s being more informed by the existence of social networks," he said.

"We’re also in a post MPs’ expenses era when transparency has gone, temporarily, from being only of theoretical interest to literally the most contentious issue of the moment."


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Pak provides fresh proof of Lashkar involvement in 26/11

Pakistan investigation agencies have, for the very first time, revealed that they have adequate proof that the banned Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT ) is directly involved in the 26/11 terror attack.
A Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) report handed over to India says the material recovered from LeT camps in Karachi and Thatta indicates that the [...]

Fresh face for F1

Spanish teenager Jaime Alguersuari will become the youngest driver to race in Formula One this weekend after Toro Rosso named him as replacement for the sacked Sebastien Bourdais. The Barcelona-born driver, born on March 23, 1990, will make his race debut at Budapest’s Hungaroring on Sunday at

Pak death row inmate Sarabjit Singh files fresh application in Supreme Court

A fresh application has been filed before the Pakistan Supreme Court seeking review of its decision to dismiss the Indian death row inmate Sarabjit Singh’s petition challenging his death penalty, The Daily Times reports.
The apex court had dismissed Singh’s petition last month, as his lawyer failed to appear before it.
Singh’s lawyer, Rana Abdul Hameed had [...]

My veggie heaven

From truffle framboise vinaigrette to fennel pollen – meat-free recipes can be a gourmet’s dream, if you know where to look for them, says Laura Barton

In the early years the menus were always a little grim: wan-looking mushroom stroganoff, mushy beanburgers, Quorn fillets and chilli-non-carne. With time came endless rolls of spinach and ricotta cannelloni and the almost tyrannical reign of wild mushroom risotto. When I stopped eating meat, nearly 15 years ago, vegetarian cuisine was frequently like this — stodgy, generally overly-smitten with dairy and pasta, and always apologetic, somehow, for the glaring absence of beef. 

Times have changed, of course, and today vegetarian food is generally more adventurous and widely available. But still it strikes me that if we want to encourage more people to eat vegetarian — and the news this month that vegetarians are less likely to develop cancer than meat-eaters would surely suggest it – we have to change the way we see vegetarian food; rather than being a miserable, bland and meatless world, it can be delicious, complex, and exciting. 

Four years ago, my own approach to vegetarian cooking was transformed after a visit to Fresh, a small chain of restaurants in Toronto that specialises in predominantly vegan food (stop wrinkling your noses there at the back). It was organic, sustainable, and perhaps most importantly, a-wriggle with flavour and texture. There were salads made with shredded carrot, white radishes called daikon, yellow beets and napa cabbage in a lime-peanut dressing. There was coconut tempeh (a solid, protein-rich ingredient made with whole, fermented soya beans, which tastes three million times better than it sounds) and black bean tostadas. And more than anything, there were the restaurant’s signature rice-bowls: brown basmati rice with a choice of toppings — the ninja, for instance, which offered salad greens, wasabi dill dressing, crispy tofu cubes, sun-dried tomatoes, sunflower sprouts and spicy ginger-tamari dressing. Smitten, I bought the restaurant’s cookbook, Fresh at Home. 

Though some of the recipes, such as the coconut curry and the golden dhal, are ludicrously easy and quick to prepare, others involve a little more of your time. One of my favourites, the sunflower rice bowl involves pre-preparing “Simple sauce” (one of the cookbook’s staples which you can make in larger quantities and store in the fridge), creamy sunflower dressing and marinating tofu steaks. The extra effort is rewarded with a dish that is richly-flavoured, variously-textured and truly joyous.

Some months later, having familiarised myself with the Fresh book, I was eager to try some other adventurous recipes, and after a little investigation chanced upon a website named VeganYumYum. It’s written by Lolo Ulm, a young Boston woman who falls asleep dreaming of recipes (miniature aubergine napoleons, which involve artfully stacked roast veg bound together with delicious aubergine “creme”, were a particular drowsy triumph). She has appeared on the Martha Stewart Show and won Food Blog of the Year in the 2007 Bloggers Choice Awards.

Like Fresh, VeganYumYum displays a passion for flavour, and many of the featured recipes are a result of trial, error and experimentation: marinating tofu in home-made marmalade for instance, making cookies with avocado and lime, or wondering what to do with fiddlehead ferns (the unfurling spring fronds of the ostrich fern) for the few weeks they are in season. 

One of the first recipes I tried from the site was the spaghetti squash, shitake, rocket and pistachio spring rolls. “I had a crazy idea for spring rolls, and here they are,” was how Ulm announced the recipe. “They were very light, and went really well with a lime & chili oil dipping sauce that I made up. “

Another of VeganYumYum’s triumphs is that it dispels the notion that vegetarian and vegan cuisine is austere or restrictive; this food is gutsy and gorgeous and occasionally gluttonous — the site boasts a particularly excellent selection of recipes for sweet treats such as blood orange and coconut mini bundt cakes, ground cherry pies and mojito cupcakes.

I was, by this stage, a little obsessed with finding new and interesting ways to cook without meat, and as last year’s festival season approached I began to feel a tad worried that I might face a summer of little more than veggie burgers and half-arsed Thai curry. Happily on the first day of Glastonbury I found a branch of a London cafe named Dragonfly Wholefoods, which I credit with keeping me alive and healthy for the duration of the festival. The menu specialised in raw vegan food — vegetable noodles made from marinated slivers of carrot and cucumber, raw onion seed bread and raw pizza, flax fire crackers and walnut and thyme cutlets. While I had no desire to make my diet completely raw, it did excite me that here was a whole thrilling new world of flavour and recipes to explore, and, as I lay awake in my tent at night, I began to wonder whether having a dehydrator (which preserves food without cooking it) in my kitchen would be any more bonkers than someone having a microwave.

In New York last year, a friend directed me to a raw vegan restaurant named Pure Food and Wine, set up by two chefs, Matthew Kenney and Sarma Melngailis, who had both previously been dedicated meat-eaters. Here I ate a salad of lamb’s lettuce, summer berries, and fennel with truffle framboise vinaigrette, aged cashew cheese cured with dill and fennel pollens and toasted pine nuts, followed by white corn tamales with raw cacao mole, marinated mushrooms, salsa verde and avocado, and with it, a plum-sake cocktail. It remains one of the best meals I have eaten, and, of course, I brought home their cookbook.

It’s feasible that at this moment you’re thinking I sound a little nuts, that you’re gagging at the notion of kale soup and nut-milk, turnip carpaccio and noodles made from raw coconut, but the last four years have been for me an epicurean delight, a chance to explore flavours and textures and senses, to take a grand adventure in the world beyond mushroom stroganoff •

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Pak govt. may file fresh petition against Saeed to ‘showcase its commitment’

It seems that the threat of adverse international reaction over the failure of the Pakistani government to detain the Jamaat-ud-Daawa (JuD) chief Hafiz Saeed, the prime accused in the November 2008 Mumbai terror strikes may see the federal government file a fresh petition against him, even if the Punjab government decides to withdraw its case.
The [...]

Climate change talks: Wanted: fresh air

Poor countries wrangle with rich ones about who can burn what and when

WHEN argument fails, try metaphor. Shyam Saran, who heads India’s international negotiating team on climate change, says that greenhouse gases are taking up “carbon space” in the atmosphere. Past emissions of carbon dioxide and other gases from rich countries have taken up much of that space. Now the poor countries are standing up for their right to a little bit of that space too.

Put in those terms, it seems a matter of plain justice. Mr Saran is merely defending India’s right to industrialise. But as a negotiating position, it is one of the reasons why the talks on climate change at the G8 meeting in Italy this week have proved so fractious. Mr Saran says that the only limit India will accept on greenhouse-gas emissions is the same per-person amount enjoyed by citizens of developed countries. From the planet’s point of view that would mean a huge, and possibly catastrophic, increase in overall emissions. …