Showing posts with label Advanced Vocabulary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Advanced Vocabulary. Show all posts

Saturday, March 12, 2011

Do Not Cry, Have A Doughnut Today!





I read   that  some people love donuts,specially @banbi12   and  @emihiro7



At the end of the article, you can find  a vocabulary quiz.  



The Story of Doughnuts

The truth, the hole truth…

Krispy Kreme
In the mid-1990s, I visited Las Vegas for the first time. I was there for an Internet conference, and a friend of mine who had been there many times took it upon himself to show me all the standard tourist sites and make sure I got the complete Las Vegas experience. We walked down the Strip, taking in the obligatory pirate show, erupting volcano, and other spectacles. But there was one sight I had never heard of that was later to become a regular pilgrimage for me: the Krispy Kreme Doughnuts shop in the Excalibur hotel.
    At that time, Krispy Kreme hadn’t expanded to become the phenomenon it is today. The only commercial doughnut shop chain I had ever known was Dunkin’ Donuts. But Krispy Kreme was definitely something special. For one thing, visitors could watch the doughnuts being made; a window ran along the side of the shop where the line formed. I was fascinated by the mechanism that flipped the doughnuts over in the oil when they were half-cooked, and watched in awe as they passed through a curtain of glaze. Although doughnuts are such a simple food, I felt I was watching something magical. Then I tasted one, and was even more impressed. I had never known what a fresh, hot doughnut was like—the difference from what I had experienced before is like that of fresh bread hot from the oven compared to week-old supermarket bread. It was light, soft, perfectly sweet—delicious. I couldn’t understand why Krispy Kreme hadn’t taken over the world yet; of course, it was only to be a matter of time.

When a local newspaper ran an article about the history of doughnuts, it got me wondering how many other things about doughnuts I had been taking for granted all along. I decided to do a bit of research.

From Oily Cakes to Doughnuts
Doughnuts as we know them today originated in the mid-1800s. Their predecessor was the olykoek, a treat Dutch immigrants to the U.S. made by frying the leftover bits of bread dough in hot oil. Exactly how the name “doughnut” came to be used is the subject of some disagreement. According to some sources, the Dutch twisted their dough into knots, hence “dough knots”. Others point out that the olykoeken tended not to cook through in the very middle, so some makers would put nuts in the center (“dough-nuts”) to make them more palatable.
The uncooked centers seem to have been, directly or indirectly, the reason behind the hole. According to several widely diverging accounts, the doughnut hole was the invention of a New England sea captain named Mason Crockett Gregory (or Hansen Gregory or Hanson Gregory, depending on who you ask) around 1847. Gregory’s mother Elizabeth made olykoeken and sent them with her son on his journeys to sea. The least likely but most colorful version of the story, and therefore the one I like best, is that Gregory needed a place to put his olykoek while he steered the boat, so he impaled it on one of the spokes of the steering wheel. Other sources say that Gregory came up with the idea in a dream or claimed to have received it from angels; some say he simply didn’t like the uncooked centers (or the nuts his mother filled them with) and poked them out; still others say he may have encountered a cake with a hole in the middle during his journeys and decided to adapt the idea to the olykoeken. Whatever Gregory’s real reason for adding the hole, it had the beneficial effect of making the doughnuts cook more evenly, and the idea quickly caught on.

Success Rolls On
Nearly thirty years later, in 1872, John Blondell received the first patent for a doughnut cutter. Doughnut technology advanced significantly over the next few decades. By the 1930s, automated doughnut-making machines were producing the treats in huge quantities. And in the 1940s and 1950s, chains like Krispy Kreme and Dunkin’ Donuts sprang up, taking mass-produced doughnuts to the masses. In Canada, meanwhile, the name most often associated with doughnuts is Tim Horton, a former hockey player who lent his name to a nationwide chain of doughnut shops.
Fond though I am of Krispy Kreme doughnuts, I have become increasingly aware that the doughnut illuminati don’t take them very seriously. I asked my friend Russ, a doughnut connoisseur, where to find the best doughnuts in San Francisco. Without any hesitation, he said, “Oh, Wirth Brothers Pastry Shop on Geary. They’re the best by far; I’ve been going there for years.” If there was something better than Krispy Kreme, I had to experience it for myself. In the interest of science, I set out on a field trip.

Hole Is Where the Heart Is
Wirth Brothers is a small, inconspicuous bakery; their doughnuts are barely even noticeable in the display case among the cakes and pastries. But I went in and ordered a few, assuring the owner that they came with the highest recommendation. She smiled knowingly; apparently she gets that a lot. The current proprietor is neither a Wirth nor a brother, but she’s been making doughnuts by hand for 28 years, following the recipe of the store’s original owner, who opened the business in the 1930s. She said the recipe is no secret, but that the key is the half-hour of hand mixing they do every morning, which gives the doughnuts their unique texture. “Come back at 8:00 in the morning,” she advised me, “to get them when they’re hot.”

I then headed to the local Krispy Kreme, where even in the evening, the “Hot Doughnuts Now” sign was illuminated, signifying the availability of doughnuts fresh off the conveyor belt (as well as free samples for each customer). I carefully compared the Wirth Brothers doughnuts with the Krispy Kreme, trying to maintain a properly objective attitude. The doughnuts from the bakery were significantly larger, and much chewier. When I bit into one, my teeth met some resistance halfway through; I found this “al dente” quality quite pleasing. The Krispy Kremes, however, were uniformly light; it was like biting into sweet, slightly oily air. I repeated the experiment on another pair of doughnuts, just to be scientifically responsible. There was no doubt: Krispy Kreme was merely fantastic, compared to the heavenly perfection of the Wirth Brothers doughnut. To be absolutely sure, though, I will have to repeat this experiment at various times of day and at numerous outlets around the country. I love science. —Joe Kissell





Choose the correct meaning of the word:

phenomenon
a. unusual occurrence 
b. usual occurrence 


2. fascinated
a. bored, uninterested 
b. captivated, enchanted , absorbed


3. predecessor
a. a thing replaced by another thing, as in use
b. a person or thing that succeeds, or follows


4.originated
a. started 
b. finished 


5. hence
a. that's why, for this reason 
b.  for no reason 



6.palatable
a. disagreeable in flavor to be eaten.
b.agreeable in flavor to be eaten



7. impaled
a. pierced with a sharp point 
b. pulled 


8.connoisseur
a.ignorant 
b. an expert 


9.inconspicuous
a. clear
b. Not readily noticeable.



10.objective
a. fair 
b. unfair


Do you love doughnuts?
Hmmmm.. Because of this article, I'm now craving for doughnuts with coffee.


 Do not cry.Eat a donut now. 


With Aja Aja English, you can eat a doughnut while studying English! 

Add me up to your contacts.

Skype ID - imteacherjet 

Google Talk -  ajaajaenglish@gmail.com


Windows Live Messenger -  ajaajaenglish@hotmail.com

Email - ajaajaenglish@gmail.com 

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Do You Ever Wonder How Does One Cook Up A Storm?

To cook up a storm is an  Australian slang which means to cook an amazing meal. 

Watch this video and learn  how does Kylie Kwong cook up a storm.



 

Read this CNN news and study some vocabulary words. 
(CNN) -- Family, food and faith have guided Kylie Kwong to where she is today. 

The 41-year-old chef has been cooking up a storm with her TV shows and restaurant for over a decade, adding a dash of color and flavor to Australia's cultural life. 

A third generation Chinese who grew up in the suburbs of Sydney in the 1970s, Kwong left High School to work for an advertising agency. She soon realized, however, that making people feel bad in order to make them buy things they didn't want wasn't for her. Making people happy through good food was much more appealing

After leaving the advertising industry she worked part-time for a caterer where she saw a way to combine the love of cooking she inherited from her mother with a growing interest in creating her own business. 

She opened her first restaurant "Billy Kwong" 10 years ago and it has since become a fixture on the Sydney restaurant scene. 

"When I opened the goal was very simple. I wanted to fill it every night and serve really fantastic, amazing, fresh Chinese food out of this funny little arty place," she told CNN.
"And I love running a business. It's so challenging. And I love what it brings out of you. You find these hidden strengths you find that you didn't know you had."
Since then Kwong has developed a larger profile through her cooking shows and recipe books.
She also let cameras follow her to southern China and the village where her great grandfather once lived; the first time a member of Kwong's immediate family had been there in 90 years.
It was a world apart from the suburban Australia that Kwong knew. Coming from the only Chinese family in her suburb, Kwong says she always felt different from other children. 

"I certainly felt different when I'd go to school and open the lunch box and there I'd have last night's rice and soy sauce chicken wings and my friend had the Vegemite sandwiches," she told CNN. 

"And that point it was very good to be different because our food was so much more interesting. Yes, I felt different, yes, my brothers felt different. But it really didn't affect us negatively at all." 

In touch with her roots and a vast extended family (family reunions number in the hundreds) Kwong is also a practicing Buddhist who cooked for the Dalai Lama when he visited Australia in 2009. 

"It was one of the great weeks of my life. I still can't believe that it actually happened. We spent all week with him backstage in Sydney," she said. 

"His practice just really encouraged me to keep practicing and doing what we're doing, and to always try harder and harder in everything we do. And to know every single thing that we feel, or think, or do, makes a really big difference."


New Words To Study :
1. over a decade - A decade means a period of ten years. Over a decade means  more than  ten years.
2 appealing - attractive
3.inherit - to get or acquire/receive the same quality. This means that Kylie Kwong loves  cooking like her mother does.
4. fixture - a person or thing long established in the same place or position. Kylie Kwong restaurant has been in Australia for a long time now.
 5.  arty - popular
6.  brings out of you develop (a quality, for example) to best advantage
7.  immediate family -
spouse, parents and grand parents, children  and grand children, brothers and sisters, mother in  law and father in law, brothers in law and sisters in law, daughters in law and sons in law
8. suburb - a residential area  around a major city
9.   Vegemite - a kind of  food in  Australia made from yeast and usually spread on bread 
10.  In touch with one's roots  - Roots mean ancestors or  one's great grandparents. Kylie Kwong is now  connected  with her  ancestors/origin.


-0- 

Dear ESL students, 

Keep practicing  English! You'll be better at it. 

Aja, aja English! 
Teacher  Jet 
Skype ID - imteacherjet 


Friday, August 13, 2010

The Missing Piece by Shel Silverstein




Answer the following questions :

1. Who is the main character in the story?
2. What is it looking for ?
3. Can it sing?
4. Why did it decide to let go of the missing piece after it has finally found it ?
5. What is the meaning of the story ?