Sunday, May 5, 2013

Android Central 132: TGIF with the Galaxy S4

Podcast MP3 URL: 
http://traffic.libsyn.com/androidcentral/acpc132.mp3

Thing 1: The Galaxy S4

Thing 2: LG Optimus G Pro

Thing 3: Other odds and ends

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/-8nf1-Up2fg/story01.htm

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Alt-week 5.4.13: Atacama's mystery skeleton, move to Mars, and lights out for Herschel

Alt-week takes a look at the best science and alternative tech stories from the last seven days.

Altweek 5413 Atacama's mystery skeleton, move to Mars, and lights out for Herschel

Well, here we are. It's happening. We're officially talking about setting up a human colony on Mars. Not only is this very real, it's something you can be part of. You don't have to leave the planet to get your extra-terrestrial fix though, as our two other stories demonstrate. This is alt-week.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/05/04/alt-week-5-4-13-atacamas-mystery-skeleton-move-to-mars/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Saturday, May 4, 2013

Chef Edward Lee Adds Korean Spice To Southern Comfort Food ...

Chef Edward Lee moved to Louisville, Ky., 10 years ago to take over a restaurant called 610 Magnolia. There, he mixes the sweet of Southern food with the salt and umami of Asian cuisine. Photo: Dan Dry/Artisan Books.

Chef Edward Lee moved to Louisville, Ky., 10 years ago to take over a restaurant called 610 Magnolia. There, he mixes the sweet of Southern food with the salt and umami of Asian cuisine. Photo: Dan Dry/Artisan Books.

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Post by Lydia Zuraw, The Salt at NPR Food (05/03/13)

Korean and Southern food may not seem like a natural pair. But now it?s one more example of traditions emulsifying in the great American melting pot. Korean-American chef Edward Lee makes that case with his new cookbook Smoke and Pickles: Recipes and Stories From a New Southern Kitchen.

Fusion cooking comes naturally to Lee: He grew up in an immigrant neighborhood of Brooklyn surrounded by Jamaicans, Indians, Iranians and Jews.

?When they immigrated to America, my parents deliberately decided they weren?t going to live in the big Korean enclaves,? Lee tells Morning Edition host David Greene. ?They wanted to spread out and be amongst other people. That education in cuisine, ranging from so many different immigrant groups probably left more of a lasting impression on me in cuisine than anything else.

?Their whole thing was ?You?re an American. Be an American,? ? Lee says.

But Korean food was a way Lee connected with his grandmother. She rarely spoke of Korea because she didn?t have very happy memories, he says, but ?food was the one thing that was kind of sacred and pure and hadn?t been torn apart.?

As a kid, Lee says he would hang out with her in the kitchen, and at first, she ignored him. ?I would, little by little, start helping her with things,? he says. ?She got very annoyed by that at first. She?s like, ?You?re a man. You?re not supposed to be here learning how to make kimchi ? that?s women?s work.? ?

Over the years, he says, they developed a strong bond that relied on few words.

Korean food was also how Lee established himself as a chef. In 1998 he opened a restaurant in Manhattan called Clay, which attracted a clientele that included plenty of celebrities. But the excitement wore off quickly.

?Everything seemed right on paper: Korean kid opens Korean restaurant,? he says. ?But it just didn?t feel right to me, and I wasn?t incredibly proud of the food. I felt like it was just an extension of what I thought people wanted me to cook.?

He started to re-evaluate things and decided to travel around the country. The farthest his family had traveled in his childhood was New Jersey. ?That was huge for us,? he says. ?Although I grew up in America and I was influenced by all of the things that other Americans are, I had no idea what America was. It was this vast unknown beyond New Jersey.?

So in 2001 Lee went to places like Wisconsin and Washington, D.C., for the first time. And it was in Louisville at the Kentucky Derby that he fell in love with the South.

Within a year he had moved there to take over a restaurant called 610 Magnolia and the fusion instinct kicked in. He started mixing Korean spice with Southern comfort food.

?Southern food tends to be a little bit on the sweeter side. Asian food tends to be a little bit on the saltier, kind of umami side,? Lee says. ?When they work and you put them together, they are actually are a wonderful marriage.?

Grits, for example, reminded Lee of congee, a rice porridge Koreans usually eat with soy sauce and seafood. So Lee came up with a recipe for lamb braised in soy sauce and served over grits, transforming the sweet taste of the corn into something new.

Or take fried chicken. Koreans actually have a long tradition of frying chicken, Lee says. They just have a slightly different method of preparing the chicken for frying. ?The results are almost similar, but it?s just different pathways to the same place,? he says. ?And I find that a lot in Asian cuisine and Southern cuisine.?

Copyright 2013 NPR.

Related posts

Tags: Asian cooking, Edward Lee, fusion, korean, Southern food

Category: asian food and drink, chefs, food history and celebrities, food trends and technology, NPR food, radio, travel

Source: http://blogs.kqed.org/bayareabites/2013/05/03/chef-edward-lee-adds-korean-spice-to-southern-comfort-food/

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Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Chesapeake, Bank of New York wrap up trial over bond redemption

By Bernard Vaughan

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Chesapeake Energy Corp and Bank of New York Mellon concluded an expedited trial on Tuesday over the energy company's effort to redeem $1.3 billion notes at par.

District Judge Paul Engelmayer in Manhattan, who is hearing the case without a jury, did not issue an immediate ruling.

Chesapeake, which faces a projected $3 billion cash shortfall this year, sued Bank of New York, the trustee for the bonds, on March 8. The dispute is centered around a few short paragraphs in the offering contract for the bonds.

The natural gas producer has argued that it had until March 15 to notify investors that it intended to redeem the bonds, which have an interest rate of 6.775 percent and mature in 2019, at par under an early redemption provision in the bond contract.

Bank of New York Mellon, however, said Chesapeake had to have completed the redemption by March 15, and that any redemption thereafter would require a $400 million payment to investors.

Witnesses for Chesapeake, including its Chief Financial Officer Domenic Dell'Osso, testified during a trial that started April 23 that the drafters of the contract had understood that March 15 was a notice deadline.

The company also sought to play down Bank of New York's role as one of an administrator that wasn't involved in negotiating terms or drafting the contract.

In his closing argument on Tuesday, Chesapeake lawyer Richard Ziegler called Bank of New York Mellon's position "absurd" and "patently unreasonable."

"It simply doesn't compute," Ziegler said.

But how Chesapeake and the underwriter for the offering viewed the March 15 deadline was less important than how Bank of New York understood it as the trustee of the bonds, Steven Bierman, a lawyer for the bank, told Engelmayer.

He also argued that the testimony of the four witnesses was unreliable and should not factor in the judge's decision.

" should have gotten it right, they should have been clear," Bierman said. "It's on them if it's unclear, ultimately."

The lawsuit is separate from other legal matters Chesapeake is facing, including a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission probe into a perk granting former CEO Aubrey McClendon a stake in company wells and a U.S. Department of Justice investigation into possible antitrust violations in Michigan land deals.

The case is Chesapeake Energy Corp v. Bank of New York Mellon Trust Co, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 13-01582.

(Reporting By Bernard Vaughan; Editing by Martha Graybow)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chesapeake-bank-york-wrap-trial-over-bond-redemption-183701674.html

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