Jumat, 19 Februari 2010

Tor 0.2.1.23 Multilingual




Anonimity online without installation.

Download Portable Tor on RapidShare (8.3 MB)

(md5: 074d83dd0e9b00fb83a6c3e106ba6a2e)


Content: Vidalia 0.2.7, Tor 0.2.1.23, Polipo 1.0.4.1 & Torbutton 1.2.4.

Extract and run TorPortable.

Installer check Pidgin, Firefox, Thunderbird, Opera, Flock, Netscape, SeaMonkey Portable if found in expected folders to extract Tor launchers and settings.

When Tor enabled, run *TorPortable launchers (for Mozilla click on TorButton to enable or disable) and don't forget to exit Vidalia when closed.

Settings of installed Tor should be preserved.

Rabu, 17 Februari 2010

Warm Salad Month: Forest Walk Cabbage



I don’t know whether it’s the warm salads or the fact that it’s light outside until 5 p.m. now (holy cow!!!), but I feel that February is going by very quickly. Thank goodness for that, I want spring!

The next delicious dish on the menu is a warm cabbage salad, adapted from 101 Cookbooks, and packed with all kinds of flavour layers. Sweet, sour, woody, salty, rich and clean – we’ve got them all on one spectacular plate of whole food goodness. In fact, something about all of these rich colours and contrasting textures reminds me of a walk through the forest...with just a dash of snow.

The star of the show here is red cabbage, a veritable powerhouse vegetable, often underappreciated and misunderstood. I think this boils down to the fact that cabbage is often either over-cooked and mushy, or when eaten raw, sliced into too-big chunks and not fun to munch – we’re not rabbits after all (although I would bet that I was one in a past life).
In this recipe, the cabbage is sliced into thin ribbons and heated just through, so that it retains some of its distinctive crispness. When tossed with a dark balsamic vinegar, it becomes sealed with a juicy sweet-tartness that deepens as the flavours sink into the slivers of its purple splendor. Too much?


Use your Head: Eat More Cabbage
Like I mentioned earlier, cabbage is a vegetable with crazy health-promoting powers. In fact, it was written up in the New York Times health column: “The 11 Best Foods You Aren’t Eating”.
Cabbage stimulates the immune system and kills bacteria and viruses. It can inhibit the growth of cancerous cells; protect against tumors; controls hormone levels; affects sex drive, fertility, and menopause symptoms. Cabbage can speed up the metabolism of estrogen, which reduces the risk of breast cancer and inhibits the growth of polyps, an early sign of colon cancer.(1)
Cabbage is an excellent source of fiber, another protective measure against colon cancer. The high levels of vitamin A aid in tissue repair, and the sulfur content helps fight infection and protects skin from eczema and other rashes.(1)
Convinced yet? I hope so.

Forest Walk Cabbage Salad

Ingredients:
2 Tbsp. extra-virgin olive oil
1 red onion, diced
3 medium cloves garlic, minced
1 pound head of red cabbage quartered and cut into thin ribbons
1-2 crisp green apples, chopped into chunks
2 teaspoons fresh rosemary, minced
a couple handfuls golden raisins (or other plump, chopped dried fruit)
2 tablespoons balsamic vinegar
1/2 cup walnuts (or toasted hazelnuts, or pumpkin seeds, or sunflower seeds...)
fine grain sea salt
2 ounces goat cheese, crumbled (totally optional)

Directions:
1. Heat the olive oil in a large skillet and sauté the onion for a minute or two with a couple pinches of salt. Stir in the garlic, and the cabbage, and a few more pinches of salt. Stir and cook for just a minute or so, or until the cabbage softens up just a touch.
2. Then stir in the rosemary, most of the raisins, and the vinegar. (The cabbage will continue to get more and more tender even after you remove it from the heat, so keep that in mind, and do your best to avoid overcooking it - where it collapses entirely). Fold in half of the goat cheese, the apples, raisins and walnuts, then taste. Season with more salt if needed.
3. Serve garnished with the remaining raisins, goat cheese, and walnuts, and perhaps a sprinkling of rosemary sprigs.

To make a complete meal, serve this salad on a bed of wild rice, adding to the overall "woodsy-ness" of it all. For vegans, omit the goat cheese and throw in more nuts.

info source: Balch, Phyllis A. Prescription for Dietary Wellness.
New York, NY: Penguin, 2003

Roasted Vegetable Chowder

Gluten free roasted vegetable chowder recipe
Craving a bowl of comfort? Have I got a soup recipe for you.


Frost was not on the pumpkin this morning. Not my pumpkin, anyway. Mine's long gone. Turned into a pie. Well, that and it was 80 degrees yesterday. Skateboarders careening by my apartment (at impressive speeds for a Fat Tuesday) wore nothing but Aloha shorts. Welcome to Santa Monica in February.

But what was on my pumpkin- if I still had one?

Pollen, dude. The trees are blooming, doing their sexy spring thang. Bursting. Co-mingling. Giving the bees something to buzz about. And I'm all about having a good time. I believe in love. And bees. But tree pollen, I have to ask you. Why so hostile?

Can't we all just get along?

I am thick and stupid from your assault. Not to mention, dripping from frontal orifices (not the most attractive trait sported by a woman of a certain age, I assure you- though how would you even know? You're a microgametophyte, for goddess sake).

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Selasa, 16 Februari 2010

Ad-Aware 8.2.0 Multilingual




Anti-spyware without installation.

Download Portable Ad-Aware on RapidShare (8.3 MB)

(md5: 898a05c6a4f0b4f33a19db07338e7f7a)


Ad-Watch non available.

Extract and run Ad-AwarePortable.

No definition file: core.aawdef downloaded on first run.

Don't forget to close in systray

Language set by launcher according UserDefaultLang (if you don't want: write UserDefaultLang=false in AdAwarePortable.ini).

Selasa, 09 Februari 2010

Warm Salad Month: Roasted Fennel with Orange and Mint



My, my, my. It really seems like winter just won’t give up. I haven’t even caught a faint suggestion warmth or fresh breeze yet – you know, the kind that of day that just hints that spring is on its way? My latest fantasies for brilliant sunlight and getting dressed without long underwear, have also included munching fresh, crisp greens, and crunchy vegetables, seldom of which have crossed my lips over the past few months. I really do believe that eating seasonally is one of the most important steps to take towards personal health (read more here), which means choosing more locally-grown fruits and vegetables and preparing them in a way to support the body’s needs. This practice is something we’ve long forgotten about since asparagus entered the grocery store in January. However it is possible to eat well according to the season, and still have lots of flavour and variety.
So I declare the month of February…Warm Salad Month! I know it’s hard to forgo the beauty of raw salads this time of year, but it puts stress on the system when we are cold and when we consume cold foods. Makes sense, right? I think so.

The first salad I am featuring is a classic combo of fennel and orange, with a twist. Instead of eating the fennel raw, I chose to roast it, caramelizing the natural sugars, and bringing out an entirely new flavour. It is SO delicious!!



About Fennel

Fennel is like the perfect combination of crisp, crunchy celery and sweet licorice. It is not the most common vegetable in North American cuisine, but surprisingly available at most grocery stores and markets. You can certainly eat the bulb raw (when the weather warms up, of course) as well as the feathery fronds that resemble dill weed – they make a nice garnish and add great flavour.
Fennel is high in vitamin C and A. It is a great source of dietary fiber, and as such may help to reduce elevated cholesterol levels. And since fiber also removes potentially carcinogenic toxins from the colon, fennel bulb may also be useful in preventing colon cancer (1). Fennel is also high in potassium, manganese, and folate.

Roasted Fennel with Orange and Mint Salad

Ingredients:
1 fennel blub per person
a couple oranges (or grapefruit)
2-3 Tbsp. white balsamic vinegar (regular is okay, but it may change the colour of the fennel)
2-3 Tbsp. extra virgin olive oil
pinch of sea salt
1 small red onion
1 bunch fresh mint

Directions:
1. Preheat over to 375F.
2. Wash the fennel bulbs well and remove the green tops. Slice into sections about ½ inch thick. Place fennel in a roasting pan, sprinkle with olive oil, balsamic vinegar, and salt.
3. While fennel is roasting, prepare the other ingredients: Remove rind from orange and slice horizontally to make orange ‘coins’ (save rind). Cut red onion horizontally into paper-thin slices. Roll up several leaves of mint and slice thinly into ribbons.
4. Fennel is cooked when tender (about 15-20 minutes). Discard any burnt pieces.
5. Arrange everything on a plate. Squeeze juice from the leftover fruit inside the orange rind if any remains (no waste!) over the dish, and serve immediately.



As a side note, I came across this great website recently which shows you which foods are in season at what time of year. It’s a very easy to use reference that can keep you informed every month!
Here is the link for fennel, but browse around to find exactly what you’re looking for.
Eat the Seasons

sources: (1) http://www.whfoods.com/genpage.php?tname=foodspice&dbid=23

Senin, 01 Februari 2010

Warm Winter Salad with Roasted Banana Squash and New Potatoes

Winter Salad
Roasted fingerling and tiny new potatoes 
and winter squash on baby salad greens.

After a long and restless night I am pondering potato salad and glitter. Sleep deprivation may be unpleasant but it often breaks loose the inertia of stalled imagination (who among us has the power of will to maintain the status quo of the literal, linear world after a scant teaspoon of sleep?). In my experience it is not prudent to ignore gifts of imagination and whimsy. If one begins associating fingerling potatoes and burlesque I say, go for it. You never know when such a spinning sparkling muse will visit again. 

Which is why I am sipping coffee and entertaining lurid flashbacks of the Vegas show that was the 2010 Grammy Awards.

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