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Ramen Forever showcases the world’s most perfect food: ramen. In
Ramen Forever, Tim Anderson shows you the way to enjoy delicious
homemade ramen on a regular basis, and gives you the tools to build
your own ramen, just the way you like it! It is broken into five
sections – Broth, Seasoning, Aromatic Oils and Fats, Noodles and
Toppings – to enable you to mix and match to create your own
ramen to suit your taste. Alternatively, you can choose to follow
one of several complete ramen recipes provided. Recipes include
Double Garlic Tonkotsu Ramen, Tan Tan Men and Tsukemen, as well as
The Ramen Sandwich and Garlic Sesame Miso Ramen Salad. With recipes
for beginners and casual cooks as well as serious noodle nerds, you
can enjoy this superlative Japanese comfort food at home,
regardless of your skill level.
The acquisition of Mandarin Chinese, one of the most important and
widely spoken languages in the world today, is the focus of this
innovative study. It describes the rise of Chinese as a global
language and the many challenges and opportunities associated with
learning it. The collaborative, multiple-case study and cross-case
analysis is presented from three distinct but complementary
theoretical and analytic perspectives: linguistic, sociocultural,
and narrative. The book reveals fascinating dimensions of Chinese
language learning based on vivid first-person accounts (with
autobiographical narratives included in the book) of adults
negotiating not only their own and others' language and literacy
learning, but also their identities, communities, and trajectories
as users of Chinese.
"There's nothing in this book I wouldn't be ecstatic to share... I
return to his books again and again; his recipes have become part
of my life." - Nigella Lawson JapanEasy: Bowls & Bento is your
essential guide to having super-satisfying Japanese meals 24/7. Tim
Anderson shows you how you can build your own delicious bowl from
scratch as well as how you can construct your very own bento
(Japan's beloved and beautiful lunch boxes) from the comfort of
your own home. Fun to make (and eat) JapanEasy: Bowls & Bento
celebrates the versatility, simplicity and joy of Japanese food.
This is everyday self-care and self-love, in bowl and bento form.
Tim will show you just how easy it is to cook your very own
Japanese meals any time of day. You can expect to find everything
from soups and noodle bowls to Japanese donburi and curries:
warming, filling dishes that can function as either fun,
crowd-pleasing dinner party dishes or soothing sofa-based suppers.
You will also discover a wide variety of effortless bento recipes
that can be made by mixing and matching various small, super-fast
dishes prepared in advance (or leftover from dinner) - all of which
can also easily be converted into exquisite Japanese breakfasts!
Almost everything in this book can be prepped ahead and eaten
later, either cold or re-heated, with no loss in quality, allowing
you to have Japanese food for breakfast, lunch, and dinner in a
matter of minutes. Because after all, Japanese food is not just for
dinner - Japanese food is forever.
Believe it or not, Japanese cuisine in general is actually quite
vegan-friendly, and many dishes can be made vegan with just a
simple substitution or two. You can enjoy the same big, bold,
salty-sweet-spicy-rich-umami recipes of modern Japanese soul food
without so much as glancing down the meat and dairy aisles. And
best of all, it's super-easy to make! In Vegan JapanEasy, Tim
Anderson taps into Japan's rich culture of cookery that's already
vegan or very nearly vegan, so there are no sad substitutes and
zero shortcomings on taste. From classics like Vegetable Tempura,
Onigiri, Mushroom Gyoza and Fried Tofu in Dashi, to clever vegan
conversions including Cauliflower Katsu Curry, French Onion Ramen
and Sichuan-Style Hot and Numbing Tofu with Ancient Grains, you
don't need to be vegan to enjoy these tasty recipes. Add to that
some outrageously good drinks and desserts, like the Watermelon
Mojito and Soy Sauce Butterscotch Brownies, and you'll be spoilt
for choice! With ingredients like tangy miso, savoury shiitake
mushrooms and zingy ponzu, to name a few, who needs meat? So if
you're new to veganism, new to Japanese cooking, new to both, or
you just want to expand your meat-free repertoire, this is the book
for you!
In the late 1990s, the MP3 became the de facto standard for
digital audio files and the networked computer began to claim a
significant place in the lives of more and more listeners. The
dovetailing of these two circumstances is the basis of a new mode
of musical production and distribution where new practices emerge.
This book is not a definitive statement about what the new music
industry" is." Rather, it is devoted to what this new industry is
becoming by examining these practices as experiments, dedicated to
negotiating what is replacing an "object based" industry oriented
around the production and exchange of physical recordings. In this
new economy, constant attention is paid to the production and
licensing of intellectual property and the rise of the "social
musician" who has been encouraged to become more entrepreneurial.
Finally, every element of the industry now must consider a new type
of audience, the "end user," and their productive and distributive
capacities around which services and musicians must orient their
practices and investments.
Financial Times Best of Books 2021 In Your Home Izakaya, chef Tim
Anderson explores the 'anything goes' concept of izakaya by
showcasing over 100 flavour-packed recipes. Izakaya began as sake
stores that allowed their customers to drink on the premises, and,
over time, they began to serve food as well. The food is simple to
prepare but big on flavour, making it conducive to sociable
snacking in between gulps of booze. From Radish and Watercress
Salad and Sweetcorn with Soy Sauce Butter, to Spicy Sesame Ramen
Salad and Udon Carbonara with Bacon Tempura, the recipes are
impressive yet simple to achieve and no specialist equipment is
needed. Plus, it includes a guide on how to stock a Japanese bar as
well as how to knock up a few choice cocktails. Full of delicious
dishes, Your Home Izakaya is perfect for anyone wanting to make
show-off food fit for a dinner party with minimum fuss and maximum
fun.
Many people are intimidated at the idea of cooking Japanese food at
home. But in JapanEasy, Tim Anderson reveals that many Japanese
recipes require no specialist ingredients at all, and can in fact
be whipped up with products found at your local supermarket. In
fact, there are only seven essential ingredients required for the
whole book: soy sauce, mirin, rice vinegar, dashi, sake, miso and
rice. You don't need any special equipment, either. No sushi mat?
No problem -- use just cling film and a tea towel! JapanEasy is
designed to be an introduction to the world of Japanese cooking via
some of its most accessible (but authentic) dishes. The recipes
here do not 'cheat' in any way; there are no inadequate
substitutions for obscure ingredients: this is the real deal. Tim
starts with some basic sauces and marinades that any will easily
'Japanify' any meal, then moves onto favourites such as gyoza,
sushi, yakiroti, ramen and tempura, and introduces readers to new
dishes they will love. Try your hand at a range of croquettas,
sukiyaki and a Japanese 'carbonara' that will change your life.
Recipes are clearly explained and rated according to difficulty,
making them easy to follow and even easier to get right. If you are
looking for fun, simple, relatively quick yet delicious Japanese
dishes that you can actually make on a regular basis - the search
stops here.
Everyone wants to escape their boring, stagnant lives full of
inertia and regret. But so few people actually have the bravery to
run, run away from everything and selflessly seek out personal
fulfillment in another part of the world where they don't
understand anything and won't be expected to. The world is full of
cowards. Tune in Tokyo: The Gaijin Diaries, an irresistible new
gay, left-handed, diabetic travel memoir by North Carolina native
Tim Anderson, takes a heady ride through the great Japanese
megalopolis, bobbing, weaving, and karate kicking its way through
the shadowy, dangerous underworld of a Harajuku girl-phobic,
viola-playing, kabuki-tastic English conversation instructor on a
mission to blast himself out of the creative and professional rut
he's in and also do some record shopping. Tune in Tokyo illuminates
the colorful gaijin life of a young-ish American gaywad who, stuck
in Ennuiville with no good employment opportunities in his home
city of Raleigh, NC, decides to jet across the world and magically
make himself more marketable. He leaves behind his boyfriend, his
cat, his CDs, and an increasingly misanthropic existential
lifelessness and heads off to a city where the year is 2119 and the
future is now. Or maybe tomorrow. Tune in Tokyo: The Gaijin Diaries
is a collection of fish-out-of-water stories in which the fish
flopping around gasping for breath (and English-language magazines)
in the open air of planet Tokyo must slowly but surely learn to
breathe, gain his footing, and walk on his own two legs. How else
is he going to take himself to the new Uniqlo, use one of those
beer vending machines, or buy a Hello Kitty dildo?
The activities presented are a broad based approach to advancing
key hydrogen related technologies in areas such as hydrogen
production, distributed sensors for hydrogen-leak detection, laser
instrumentation for hydrogen-leak detection, and cryogenic
transport and storage. Presented are the results form 15 research
projects, education, and outreach activities, system and trade
studies, and project management. The work will aid in advancing the
state-of-the-art for several critical technologies related to the
implementation of a hydrogen infrastructure. Activities conducted
are relevant to a number of propulsion and power systems for
terrestrial, aeronautics, and aerospace applications.
In Papua New Guinea powerful interests have their eyes on land. At
stake are the livelihoods of most of the country's seven million
people, mostly in rural areas. This book argues that notions of
'economy' and 'development' have no meaning without a broad and
inclusive focus on their livelihoods. It takes apart 'modernist'
myths, such as the claim that large scale monocultures are more
productive than small farming, and that customary land must be
registered or 'mobilised' to provide real benefits. Combining
existing evidence with original studies it charts the economic
options for rural families, suggesting their best way forward is by
maintaining customary land as the basis for rich hybrid
livelihoods.
The Bristol Gunners tells the story of the Gloucestershire
Volunteer Artillery (GVA) from its birth in the French invasion
crisis of 1859 through to the modern day. An Italian revolutionary
sparked the crisis which gave life to the GVA, and by a strange
quirk of circumstances the GVA became intimately linked with the
Italian people through two world wars. Bristol gunners have served
in many wars and actions since the formation of the GVA, and they
continue to serve today in the newly created Reserve Forces.
Through many changes of challenge and technology the GVA have
always responded with expertise and enthusiasm for the task. While
this is a story of Bristol men, it reflects the stories of many
other Territorial and Volunteer military units throughout the UK.
This account is based on archives, records, and personal diaries
kept by men of the GVA and held in our archives. Many of these
accounts have not before been published.
The period between the Second World War and the mid-1960s saw the
American music industry engaged in a fundamental transformation in
how music was produced and experienced. Tim Anderson analyzes three
sites of this music revolution: the change from a business centered
around live performances to one based on selling records, the
custom of simultaneously bringing out multiple versions of the same
song, and the arrival of in-home high-fidelity stereo systems.
"Making Easy Listening" presents a social and cultural history of
the contentious, diverse, and experimental culture of musical
production and enjoyment that aims to understand how recording
technologies fit into and influence musicians', as well as
listeners', lives. With attention to the details of what it means
to play a particular record in a distinct cultural context,
Anderson connects neglected genres of the musical canon--classical
and easy listening music, Broadway musicals, and sound effects
records--with the development of sound aesthetics and technical
music practices that leave an indelible imprint on individuals.
Tracing the countless impacts that this period of innovation
exacted on the mass media, Anderson reveals how an examination of
this historical era--and recorded music as an object--furthers a
deeper understanding of the present-day American music industry.
Tim J. Anderson is assistant professor of communication at Denison
University.
The period between the Second World War and the mid-1960s saw the
American music industry engaged in a fundamental transformation in
how music was produced and experienced. Tim Anderson analyzes three
sites of this music revolution: the change from a business centered
around live performances to one based on selling records, the
custom of simultaneously bringing out multiple versions of the same
song, and the arrival of in-home high-fidelity stereo systems.
"Making Easy Listening" presents a social and cultural history of
the contentious, diverse, and experimental culture of musical
production and enjoyment that aims to understand how recording
technologies fit into and influence musicians', as well as
listeners', lives. With attention to the details of what it means
to play a particular record in a distinct cultural context,
Anderson connects neglected genres of the musical canon--classical
and easy listening music, Broadway musicals, and sound effects
records--with the development of sound aesthetics and technical
music practices that leave an indelible imprint on individuals.
Tracing the countless impacts that this period of innovation
exacted on the mass media, Anderson reveals how an examination of
this historical era--and recorded music as an object--furthers a
deeper understanding of the present-day American music industry.
Tim J. Anderson is assistant professor of communication at Denison
University.
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