25 Feb 2021

Baked Masala Dory [お弁当]


This mealbox of Baked Masala Dory came with jasmine rice and stewed curry vegetables.

Masala is a kind of spice mix originating from the Indian subcontinent.  

I'm not sure of the spices mixed for this masala, however it had an interesting fragrance coating the dory fish pieces without any accompanying heat.  And dory is a reliable fish that seldom goes wrong regardless of the marinate.

To my gleeful surprise, there wasn't the usual layer of grease at the bottom of the box when I finished my meal, and I didn't feel particularly thirsty either, unlike how I felt after eating the other mealboxes from the same company.

Still, I thought there were 2 areas where I could have enjoyed this mealbox more:

1. the curry vegetables could have been stewed far longer, especially the cabbages.  If I wanted crunchy vegetables, I would have opted for a salad instead.

2. the rice wasn't quite well done, and it seems like it wasn't jasmine rice but a mixture of jasmine rice with broken rice grains.  It was quite obvious that some of the rice grains were complete and longish while others were very short and slightly gooey.

22 Feb 2021

Day 33


Cathedral of Saint Vincent de Paul [Tunisien]

Tunisia is now a predominantly Muslim country, though it was once part of the Roman Empire, the Ottoman Empire and a French colony.

In downtown Tunis is the beautiful Cathedral of Saint Vincent de Paul, which unfortunately I didn't have the chance to enter as a tram broke down at the most inconvenient location and caused a bottleneck and when we arrived, there wasn't much time to visit it, which also translates into the possibility of visiting Tunisia again to catch up on sights I couldn't enter during my first trip!


What was also interesting to me as I milled outside the Cathedral of Saint Vincent de Paul was a pair of policemen having a very calm conversation with two men holding a flag which the guide confirmed was the Flag of Palestine along Avenue Habib Bourguiba.  While there were quite many people walking, chatting and waiting for their friends along Avenue Habib Bourguiba, there was no agitation and everyone was very calm.  I was quite surprised as I always thought Palestine is a very emotive issue for many Arabs, but there was just calmness all round, and helped me to see the support for a Palestine state from a different perspective.

17 Feb 2021

Malgudi Days | R.K. Narayan | Penguin Books


The version of Malgudi Days I have in my possession now is the 1984 version from Penguin Books.  The cover certainly looks quite different from the current Penguin Classics version yet somehow, I prefer the cover of the version I have. 

Malgudi Days, written by the Indian writer R. K. Narayan, was first published by Indian Thought Publications in 1942.  Set in a fictional South Indian town Malgudi, Malgudi Days allowed a glimpse into the daily lives, hopes and aspirations of its inhabitants.  Written in a simply understood and humorous way, Malgudi Days can be an easy fiction for reading.  Yet as always, once it becomes a text for reading class, the teacher is always able to sieve out the underlying read-between-the-lines issues of each short story in the collection.  And as an introduction to South Indian culture, Malgudi Days is quite helpful at that, although the teacher's elaboration of why certain characters behaved in a certain way aided in understanding the stories.

Life in Malgudi, while tough for some of the characters, was certainly exciting for readers.  I read the book in one sitting and never thought it out-of-touch without the electronic devices that are omnipresent nowadays.

15 Feb 2021

Dark Waters

Binged on National Geographic's Atlas of Cursed Places when the episode on West Virginia took a decidedly investigative journalistic tone and the Mothman was soon set aside as the car tyres of the production team were slashed.

By coincidence, Dark Waters was available on the movie channel around the same time too.  I'm not sure if Sam Sheridan in the National Geographic series and the Dark Waters were about the same case though both happened in West Virginia.

The 2019 Dark Waters headlined by Mark Ruffalo and Anne Hathaway is a dramatization of Robert Bilott who filed lawsuits against DuPont on behalf of plaintiffs from West Virginia who fell ill from DuPont's dumping of chemicals.  The plaintiffs were initially disbelieving of Bilott, as DuPont was the largest employer in West Virginia.  The case dragged for years and DuPont settled for more than $700 million.

Dark Waters wasn't a fast-moving movie.  Rather it was at most times, dark and slow-moving.  Yet it was gripping and evocative.

Perfluorooctanoic acid, the chemical that DuPont dumped, was found to have causative relationship with cancers.  It is found in many items that people can come into contact daily, one of which is the teflon coating on non-stick pans.  Today's non-stick-pans claim to not cause health concerns if used below 300 degrees Celsius, but as humans find out time and again, what was claimed to not be hazardous could likely be so in the future as testing techniques improve and causative relationships established.

From the summer of 1999 when Bilott first filed a suit against DuPont till 2017 when DuPont agreed to settle, it was 18 long years and Bilott certainly was a very very persistent person, going against a very large corporation.  Granted Dark Waters hinted at how tough it was.  But Dark Waters happened in America.  What if it happened in other parts of the world, like Latin America or Asia, would such cases even come to light?

It was interesting to see Mark Ruffalo in characters other than Bruce Banner/Hulk. And it demonstrates that a good piece of work does not always require over-the-top explosives or CGI or overly dramatic in-your-face emoting.  

Anne Hathaway, who played Bilott's wife Sarah, is much younger than Mark Ruffalo yet she didn't seem out of place acting the role of Sarah opposite Ruffalo.  She has really come a long way since The Princess Diaries.

Dark Waters was interesting to watch, and it didn't try to be preachy about environmentalism or about how capitalism was devious.  Maybe law schools and departments of chemistry and chemical engineering could consider making students and faculty watch this.

12 Feb 2021

四国地方・鳴門の渦潮・完成!

自分で、寂しいな!

カニちゃんと一緒に!

ネズミちゃんと一緒に!

チョウチョちゃんと一緒に!

9 Feb 2021

Steamed Fish with Fried Rice and Vegetables [Too salty #2] [お弁当]

 


Finally a mealbox from the same "company that offered mealboxes with a layer of grease at the bottom of the boxes" that didn't have a layer of grease when I finished my meal!

There in the mealbox, were three pieces of steamed white fish (not dory for sure) with some brown sauce, brown "fried rice" and steamed vegetables.

I think it was to mimic Cantonese food.  I always think Cantonese food has to be eaten when it is just cooked at eating places for it to taste as the cooks intended.  Anyone ordered take-away dim sum and actually enjoyed rubbery-skin hargow?

The mealbox was still slightly warm, so it wasn't too bad.  What I thought was a bummer was the "fried rice".  It was neither fried nor had any hint of wok hei that self-respecting fried rice should have.  There was no egg in the "fried rice" and neither were long grained rice used.  I really wished eateries would stop naming their inventions "fried rice" when they were so obviously not.  Fried rice is really difficult to get right, and many tze char stalls can't either.

I was silently cheering for the lack of grease in this mealbox when five hours after the meal, I was still feeling thirsty, having drank a lot of water after the meal.  This was not good. 

5 Feb 2021

沖縄地方・サガリバナ

自分で、寂しいな!#1
    
自分で、寂しいな!#3


チョウチョちゃんと一緒に!#1

                                                    チョウチョちゃんと一緒に!#2
 

                                                    チョウチョちゃんと一緒に!#3

                                                チョウチョちゃんと一緒に!#4

3 Feb 2021

Meeting Paul Klee in Sidi Bou Said [Tunisien]

Naturalich kann ich nicht Paul Klee treffen, aber ich war sehr sehr uberschauen, dass Paul Klee in Sidi Bou Said war.

Ich weiss, dass Paul Klee, mit August Macke und Louis Moilliet waren in Tunisia in 1914, aber in Sidi Bou Said!

Unsere Reisefuehrer fragte ob wir Santorini gegangan, und sagte es gibt auch Santorini in Tunisia.

Der Reisefuehrer hatte recht, Sidi Bou Said ist sehr sehr schoen und gemuetlich.  Ich koennen in Sidi Bou Said leben!

Als ich die Strasse ins Sidi Bou Said gehen, sehte ich ein Poster mit sehr vertrauter Malstil.  Es war nicht ein Paul Klee, aber ich leste Paul Klee in der Poster.


Was fuer eine Ueberraschung!

2 Feb 2021

Day 11


 

黑眼豆豆 [スイーツ]




我不是个非常需要喝珍奶的人,但当已连续十三个月没法离开这城市后,珍奶竟成了我逃避的港湾。我的舱热症应该是现形了。。。

黑眼豆豆还是2019年初喝的味道,配方应该没变。真没想到珍奶可以成为纾解心灵的comfort food。。。