Saturday, March 21, 2009
Top 10: The Hottest Chef Alive
The chefs we celebrate on these pages are hot from toque to toe. Sure, some of them play the part: they strut around in cool clothes, throw fits, attract groupies, pen books and preach their food gospel on TV. But they didn't make our top-10 list simply for their swagger on the culinary catwalk. With postmodern vision and breathtaking technique, these mavericks are paving the way to the next millennium. They're so much in demand that we were lucky to catch up with them at all, and when we finally managed to get their attention, well, they boasted, they joked, they sulked, they sighed and they flared like steaks on a grill. The next time you travel, check out their food--your meal is guaranteed to be hot.
Here are the top 10 Chef alive:
- Jean-Georges Vongerichten
Restaurant:
JoJo, Vong, Jean Georges, Mercer Kitchen, Spice Market, Perry Street, Matsugen (New York City), Prime Steakhouse (Las Vegas), Vong's Thai Kitchen (Chicago), Chambers Kitchen (Minneapolis), Market (Paris), Cafe Martinique, Dune (Bahamas), V, Rama (London), Jean-Georges (Shanghai), Lagoon (Bora Bora)
- Elena Arzak Espina
Restaurant: Restaurante Arzak, San Sebastian (Head Chef)
- Cheong Liew
Restaurant: The Grange Restaurant
- Marc Veyrat
Restaurant: Auberge de l'Eridan in Veyrier-du-Lac, near Annecy, France
- Pierre Gagnaire
Restaurant: Le restaurant de Pierre Gagnaire
- Susur Lee
Restaurant: Lee, Toronto, Canada, Thompson LEE Hotel, New York City, New York
- Gordon Ramsay
Restaurant:
Restaurant Gordon Ramsay
Boxwood Café
Maze
Pétrus
Banquette
Verre
Gordon Ramsay au Trianon Palace, Versailles
Gordon Ramsay at Conrad Tokyo
Gordon Ramsay at Powerscourt
Cerise by Gordon Ramsay
Gordon Ramsay at The London
La Noisette
The Narrow
The Devonshire
Plane Food at Heathrow Airport T5
- Ferran Adrià
Restaurant: El Bulli (The Best Restaurant in The World)
- Gianfranco Vissani
Restaurant: Vissani Restaurant, Italy
- Marco Pierre White
Restaurant:
Belvedere
Drones
L'Escargot
Parisienne Chophouse
Maison Novelli
Mirabelle
Quo Vadis
Source: http://www.foodandwine.com/articles/the-hottest-chefs-alive
Recipe: Tetsuya's Signature Dish
Confit of Petuna Ocean Trout Served with Konbu and Fennel
This is the Signature Dish of Chef Tetsuya Wakuda, you can find it if you eat in his restaurant for a degustation meals.
350g ocean trout, filleted
100ml grapeseed oil
80ml olive oil
1/2 tablespoon ground coriander
1/2 teaspoon white pepper
10 whole leaves basil
3 stalks thyme
1/2 teaspoon garlic, finely chopped
2 stalks celery, finely chopped
2 small carrots, finely chopped
3 tablespoons chopped chives
4 tablespoons konbu (dried seaweed), chopped
1/2 teaspoon sea salt
2 tablespoons ocean trout caviar
350g ocean trout, filleted
100ml grapeseed oil
80ml olive oil
1/2 tablespoon ground coriander
1/2 teaspoon white pepper
10 whole leaves basil
3 stalks thyme
1/2 teaspoon garlic, finely chopped
2 stalks celery, finely chopped
2 small carrots, finely chopped
3 tablespoons chopped chives
4 tablespoons konbu (dried seaweed), chopped
1/2 teaspoon sea salt
2 tablespoons ocean trout caviar
Fennel salad
1/4 bulb fennel, shaved
1 teaspoon lemon juice
salt and pepper
1/2 teaspoon lemon-scented oil
Parsley oil
Leaves from 1/4 bunch Italian parsley
100ml olive oil or grapeseed oil
1/2 tablespoon salted capers, rinsed and drained
Skin the trout and cut crosswise into 70-80g pieces - they should weigh no more than 100g. Immerse the trout in grapeseed oil and olive oil with the coriander, pepper, basil, thyme and garlic. Cover and allow to marinate for a few hours in the fridge.
To cook the fish, first preheat the oven to the absolutely lowest setting possible. Take the fish out of the oil and allow to come to room temperature.
Chop celery and carrots and place on a baking tray. Put the trout on top and place in the oven. Cook with the door open. Paint the surface every few minutes with the marinade. Cook for seven to eight minutes depending on the size of the fish. Lift out of the tray and allow to come to room temperature.
To make the parsley oil, puree the parsley with the olive oil in a blender. Add the capers and blend. Slice the fennel. Toss with lemon juice, salt and pepper, and lemon-scented oil. Sprinkle the top of the fish with chopped chives, konbu and salt. Place fennel salad on the plate. Put the trout on top and drizzle parsley oil all around. Dot caviar at regular intervals.
Source: http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/food-and-drink/recipes/confit-of-petuna-ocean-trout-with-fennel-salad-529642.html
Biography of Tetsuya Wakuda
Tetsuya Wakuda grew up in the Japanese town of Hamamatsu until at the age of twenty-two, armed with his only piece of information about Australia (that there were lots of koalas and kangaroos around) and having only a limited grasp of English, he decided to travel to Australia. This same thirst for new experiences is reflected still in Tetsuya’s approach to food.
Arriving in Sydney in 1982 with nothing more than a small suitcase and a love of food, Tetsuya landed his first job as a kitchenhand at Fishwives in Surry Hills. A year later he was introduced to Sydney chef Tony Bilson, who was looking for a Japanese cook to make sushi. It was there at Tony’s kitchen at Kinsela’s Tetsuya realised that he wanted to cook, and that he could indeed cook very well. Here also he learnt the classical French technique which forms part of his style today.
"I made a lot of things up along the way, and luckily for me, people like the way it tasted."
Tetsuya left Kinsela’s in 1983 and in partnership with the head waiter opened Ultimo’s, where he quickly learnt the responsibility of running his own business. His own restaurant, Tetsuya’s, opened in 1989 as a tiny shopfront in the Sydney suburb of Rozelle and was booked out with daily waiting lists.
In November 2000, Tetsuya relocated his restaurant from Rozelle to 529 Kent Street, Sydney and since then has evolved his style and reputation to become one of Australia’s, if not the world’s, most renowned chefs.
"Tetsuya is part of an elite group of international chefs that has influenced other chefs through their personal styles and unique approaches to food. His culinary philosophy centres on pure, clean flavours that are decisive, yet completely refined. His amazing technique, Asian heritage, sincere humility, worldwide travels and insatiable curiosity combine to create incredible, soulful dishes that exude passion in every bite." Charlie Trotter.
Source: http://www.tetsuyas.com/page/about_tetsuya.html
Recipe: Tetsuya's Oyster
Who knows Tetsuya Wakuda? He is one the best Chef in the world and he has a restaurant which is based in sydney, Tetsuya's. This is one of the food that he offers but i will give the recipe of one of his signature dish later. Enjoy! :)
Tetsuya’s Oysters with Rice Wine Vinaigrette
The vinaigrette can be adapted for any number of oysters and can be made ahead of time and kept in the refrigerator. Infuse 10cm konbu in a bottle of 750ml rice wine vinegar for added flavour
Ingredients:
- 12 large Pacific Oysters shucked
Vinagirette
- 1 teaspoon finely grated ginger
- 4 tablespoons rice wine vinegar
- 1 teaspoons castor sugar
- 1 teaspoon soy sauce
- 6 tablespoons grapeseed oil
- 2 tablesoons olive oil
- 1/2 tablespoon lemon juice
Garnish
- Chives finely chopped
- 3 tablespoons ocean trout roe (we used salmon roe)
To make the vinaigrette, whisk together all the ingredients in a bowl or jar. Place some sea salt on the base of a serving plate. Put the oysters on top and spoon over the vinaigrette.
Sprinkle the oysters with chives and ocean trout roe
From Tetsuya by Tetsuya Wakuda
Source: http://www.notquitenigella.
Credit goes to: Lorraine Elliott
Wednesday, March 18, 2009
Recipe: Ma hor (galloping horse) - minced duck, peanuts, seared scallops & pineapple
Ma hor (galloping horse) - minced duck, peanuts, seared scallops & pineapple
serves 4 as entree, or 16 canapes
Ingredients
16 local scallops
400g minced duck
40ml peanut oil
3 cloves garlic
4 coriander roots - finely chopped
1 chilli - finely chopped
1/4 tsp white pepper
80g palm sugar - dissolved in 20ml water
40mls fish sauce
80g roasted peanuts - coarsely chopped
1 tbsp fresh coriander - chopped
2 limes - juiced
16 slices pineapple
Method
- Heat oil in a wok over medium heat
- Fry garlic, coriander roots, chilli & pepper until fragrant & garlic golden in colour
- Add duck meat, stir fry for 4 mins stirring occasionally until meat separates and is well sealed
- Add palm sugar & fish sauce - cook until well caramelised
- Add peanuts, coriander then lime juice
- Mix well & keep warm
- Lay pineapple slices on four plates (narrow sushi plates look good or one large platter)
- Place spoon full of duck mixture on each piece of pineapple
- Sear scallops on a hot grill plate or pan. Place on top of duck
- Garnish with coriander leaves & crisp fried shallots. Then serve
Credit goes to: Chef David Coomer
Starbucks Voyage of Success
It starts out like the classic American entrepreneurial success story. Three college friends get together from time to time and talk about what kind of business they could start.
In this case, the three friends were Zev Siegl, Gordon Bowker, and Gerald Baldwin. The business they decided to start was gourmet coffee. It gets interesting. The company they started was Starbucks. And the story goes like this.
Way back in 1971, coffee didn’t look like it was a great business. It didn't show signs of getting better, either. Coffee consumption in the United States had peaked in the 1960s, but by 1971 it was on the decline. Part of the reason was that the coffee we had was awful.
Most Americans drank something called “coffee” that came ground up very finely in vacuum-sealed tins. You scooped the stuff out of the can and put it in a percolator. Some coffee made this way was so weak you could read a newspaper through a carafe of the stuff.
Sigel, Bowker, and Baldwin had traveled together to Europe where they discovered the rich dark coffee that was very different from the percolated brown beverage that most Americans were drinking. But for a while they didn't connect that preference with any kind of business idea.
The story shifts now to Berkeley, California, where a fellow named Alfred Peet had started Peet’s coffee at the corner of Vine and Walnut Streets, just around the corner from the Walk Shop. Peet had come to this country from Holland, where he was a coffee roaster, and he thought that most American coffee was pretty vile. In 1966 he had started Peet’s to offer something better.
Somehow a bag of Peet's dark blend found its way North, into the hands of Jerry Baldwin. It convinced Jerry and his friends that a gourmet coffee shop would be a good business for them to start.
When they were pressed by their attorney for a name, their first idea was to call the place Starbo after an old mining camp. But after a bit of thought they settled on Starbucks to pay homage to Seattle's seafaring heritage.
They opened their first Starbucks in 1971. They weren't the only ones who thought a gourmet coffee business was a good idea, even in Seattle. Elsewhere in town Jim Stewart was starting The Wet Whisker, which later became Seattle's Best Coffee.
Alfred Peet thought they were pretty good guys. He taught them about coffee roasting in his unbendable European way. For the first year of their business he even roasted the beans for them. Starbucks started to grow.
In 1982 a young marketing manager for the Swedish kitchen equipment company, Perstorp, noticed that a small company in Seattle called Starbucks was buying a lot of special drip coffee makers. He stopped by to see what was going on. He stayed on to become a partner.
The fellow's name was Howard Schultz. Shortly after joining Starbucks Schultz took a vacation in Europe. One day, sitting in a coffee shop in Milan, he had a vision of what Starbucks could become. He imagined a place where the staff knew the customers and where the great coffee was only part of a totally wonderful experience.
When he got back to Seattle he worked hard trying to sell Bowker and Baldwin on his idea of the complete experience. They remained unmoved so Schultz decided to do it on his own.
He founded a company call Il Giornale to create the experience that he’d seen in that Milan café. By 1987 he had three locations. Things might have gone on like that with him competing against Starbucks, but that was about the time that Gordon and Bowker decided it was time for them to sell out. Schultz arranged financing and became CEO of the company. Starbucks then had 17 locations in Seattle.
By 1990 the company was profitable. By 1992 it was time for an initial public offering of 2.1 million shares of $17-a-share. There were 125 stores and 2,000 employees.
Starbucks now has 5,689 outlets in 28 countries. They employ some 60,000 people and generate 2.6 billion dollars in annual sales. Sales, in fact, have grown 20%-a-year since the company went public; and, in 2001 the company opened more outlets than McDonald’s.
You don't get growth like that unless you're doing a few things right. Most of them tie back to Schultz’s vision of “the experience.”
Schultz imagined that the customer's experience should be wonderful from the moment he or she walked in the door of a Starbucks. The Barista should recognize the customer and greet him or her by name. The Barista should also know the customer's regular order and start preparing it right away.
To make that kind of experience happen, you need to do a lot of training. Starbucks employees learn about making coffee, but they also learn how to remember customer names.
To make that kind of experience happen you want to have motivated employees. Starbucks gives even part-time employees full benefits and limited stock options.
To make that kind of experience happen you have to control what goes on in the stores. Starbucks holds that control by maintaining ownership of its stores. Starbucks stores are all non-smoking, even in places like Japan and Vienna.
Creating the experience is one thing, creating continuing growth is something else. If you want to grow, you can't rest on your laurels. You need to be looking for things to improve and trying out new ideas. Starbucks has done that, too.
Southern California employees got tired of folks asking them for blended drinks, and so they suggested the Frappuccino product. Schultz didn’t like the idea but went ahead with it anway. It’s been a big winner for Starbucks and Schultz calls it “the biggest mistake I didn’t make.”
There’s a parallel story in Japan. There employees came up with a green tea Frappuccino-like product that's sold only in that country. It’s a big winner, too.
Listening to your employees and customers is a way to generate a flow of ideas. So is having your executives read unedited customer comment cards for an hour or so a week. But no matter where you get your ideas from, you need to test them and refine them.
Starbucks is testing things all the time. Right now there’s Starbucks Express, where you can order to-go items on the phone or over the Net and have them available for pickup at your local Starbucks. There’s wireless broadband connections in Starbucks coffeehouses. And there's automatic espresso machines that will, hopefully, speed up service.
Not every idea works. Starbucks tried adding sandwiches and other fancy food to the menu. It sounded like a good idea. But it didn't work.
One of the ideas that really has worked is the Starbucks card. It was introduced in November 2001 and is a stored value card that a customer can use to pay for purchases. Customers like it because it makes their life easier. The company likes it because it speeds up lines, improves the experience for customers, and encourages loyalty.
Now Starbucks is trying ideas to make the card even better. They've announced a policy of replacing the value on "registered" cards that are lost or stolen. They've developed ways for folks to go online to add value to their card. It's a good idea getting better.
That's what Starbucks wants to continue to do. So far the company has cruised through the business waters like a majestic sailing ship from Seattle's past. But they're coming close to the edge of the map now and beyond that edge lies the legend, "Here be monsters."
First, there’s the generational monster. While lots of folks from Generations “X” and “Y” work at Starbucks, the company is not real popular with those generations. They may work there, but they don't feel at home there.
Focus groups of folks from Generation X and Y have told Starbucks that the only people they see at Starbucks like them are the ones behind the counter. They think Starbucks is for pretentious Yuppies. As one Gen-Xer put it, “I hate the Italian names for the coffee sizes, small, medium, and large are fine for me.” If upcoming generations don't want to become customers, growth will stall.
Generations are just one monster. Another is growth itself. The bigger you are, the harder it is to generate high-percentage growth. That's not all. When a company grows fast it's usually hard to maintain good service. There's a real question about whether Starbucks can continue to find and train and supervise the people who deliver the Starbucks experience to customers.
The last monster that’s out there is the Faustian bargain that public companies seem doomed to make with the stock market. The market loves Starbucks now, but what if growth starts to slow. Then there is bound to be pressure to cut corners, lower standards and change rules and practices.
Starbucks is not a perfect company. But it is a company who has managed to make the voyage to success without compromising key principles of the guiding vision. The voyage ahead is more treacherous. Will Starbucks be able to maintain the integrity of its vision. I hope so.
Copyright 2002 by Wally Bock
Author: Wally Bock
Biography of Gordon Ramsay, The Chef from Hell
Everyone should know this impatient chef who is perfectionist and he won't give you any space at all if you not going by his level. But in other side he just an ordinary people who wants to satisfy himself and of course he wants to satisfy the guest that come to his restaurant. so, enjoy the Biography about Gordon Ramsay, The Chef from Hell.
Scottish by birth, Gordon was brought up in Stratford-upon-Avon, England, from the age of five. With an injury prematurely cutting short a promising career in professional football with the Glasgow Rangers, he went back to college to complete a course in hotel management.
Ramsay’s first years in the kitchen were spent training under culinary luminaries such as Marco Pierre White and Albert Roux in London, after which he moved to France where he worked in the kitchens of Guy Savoy and Joël Robuchon for three years where he was able to enhance his expertise in classic French cooking. In 1993, Gordon became chef of the newly opened Aubergine, within three years the restaurant was awarded two Michelin stars.
Gordon's first book, Passion for Flavour, was published in 1996. A number of hugely successful books have since followed including: Passion for Seafood (1999); A Chef for all Seasons (2000); Just Desserts (2001); Gordon Ramsay Makes it Easy (2005); Gordon Ramsay’s Sunday Lunch (2006); Gordon Ramsay’s Fast Food (2007) and Gordon Ramsay’s Healthy Appetite (2008). His most recent recipe book, Gordon’s Ramsay’s Cooking for Friends is published by HarperCollins this September.
In 1998 at the age of 31, Gordon set up his first wholly owned restaurant, Gordon Ramsay, in Chelsea. On 19th January 2001 it won its third Michelin star. It has since undergone a major refurbishment and this year celebrates its tenth anniversary. In October 2001 Gordon opened Gordon Ramsay at Claridge's which won a Michelin star in 2003. The same year saw the opening of Gordon Ramsay Holdings first international restaurant, Verre by Gordon Ramsay, located in the Dubai Hilton Creek Hotel. A year later he opened Pétrus in St. James's. Within seven months it had won a Michelin star. The restaurant relocated to The Berkeley Hotel in 2003 and won its second Michelin star in January 2007.
In 2001 ‘The Gordon Ramsay Scholar Award’ was set up to recognise talented young cooks working in catering or studying at catering college. The competition has grown year on year and now takes place at The BBC Good Food Show.
At the beginning of October 2002, Gordon Ramsay Holdings took over the food and beverage operation at The Connaught Hotel with Angela Hartnett at the helm. Her restaurant MENU won its first Michelin star in January 2004. In 2003 Gordon Ramsay Holdings re-launched The Savoy Grill with Marcus Wareing. The restaurant achieved its first Michelin star in 2004. This was followed with the opening of Boxwood Café at The Berkeley with chef Stuart Gillies.
May 2004 saw Gordon Ramsay star in the Channel 4 series Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares, later to be awarded a BAFTA and an International Emmy. Shortly after this, Gordon was given two weeks to direct a group of celebrities towards Michelin standard cooking in the ITV series Hell's Kitchen. 2005 confirmed Gordon as one of the UK's major television stars. A second series of Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares was followed by the debut of Channel 4's The F-Word, a high-octane food show with cooking, topical VT's, food campaigns and celebrity guests which remains one of Channel 4’s highest rating shows. The third series of US Hell’s Kitchen was named the top rated show of Summer 2007, a few months later, the American version of Kitchen Nightmares made its successful debut.
2005 also saw the launch of GRH’s eighth UK restaurant, maze, in London's Grosvenor Square with Jason Atherton and the opening of Gordon Ramsay at The Conrad Hotel in Tokyo. The year was rounded off with Gordon's award of an OBE in the New Year's Honours list.
In October 2006 Gordon’s autobiography, Humble Pie was published by Harper Collins. The book, which details an honest account of his life in and out of the kitchen, has topped the best seller charts and has since been published in paperback.
In November 2006 Gordon made his stateside debut with the opening of Gordon Ramsay at The London in The London NYC Hotel, part of the LXR Luxury Resorts collection where Josh Emett, previously head chef at The Savoy Grill is the resident chef de cuisine. In July 2006 GRH opened La Noisette with chef patron Bjorn Van Der Horst, which won a Michelin star in January 2007. Now known as Sloane Street by Gordon Ramsay, the space now offers exclusive private dining for the group.
In January 2007 Gordon Ramsay Holdings opened Cielo at the exclusive Boca Raton resort in Florida. 2007 was also the year that Gordon opened his first pub, The Narrow, in a Grade II listed building on the banks of the River Thames in London’s Limehouse. Gordon has since gone on to open two further pubs: The Devonshire in West London and most recently, The Warrington in Maida Vale.
In October 2007 Quadrille published Gordon Ramsay, 3 Star Chef; a beautiful book containing 50 of Gordon’s signature dishes from Restaurant Gordon Ramsay. October was also the month that saw the publication of Gordon’s follow up to Humble Pie. Titled Playing with Fire published by HarperCollins, the book gives insight into the success of the chef and his company Gordon Ramsay Holdings.
The fifth international Gordon Ramsay restaurant opened towards the end of the year at the Ritz Carlton Hotel Powerscourt, Ireland at the same time that Gordon launched maze restaurant at the Hilton Old Town in Prague. January 2008 saw the re-opening of Chelsea’s classic neighbourhood bistro, Foxtrot Oscar, on Royal Hospital Road, just a few doors away from Gordon’s eponymous restaurant.
In early 2008 Gordon Ramsay Holdings and Lyndy Redding announced their acquisition of the acclaimed Tante Marie Cookery School which relaunched in September 2008.
In March Gordon introduced his first restaurant in France at the legendary Trianon Palace & Spa located just steps away from the famed Château de Versailles. March was also the month that Gordon, together with Stuart Gillies, opened Plane Food, a restaurant at the newly built Heathrow Terminal 5. This was followed in April by the launch of Maze Grill in London’s Grosvenor Square and the publication of maze executive chef Jason Atherton’s first recipe book, maze, The Cookbook. In June Gordon launched Gordon Ramsay at The London in West Hollywood where Chef de Cuisine Andy Cook oversees the Californian-inspired menu at the David Collins designed restaurant.
Autumn 2008 saw the launch of two exciting projects for Gordon Ramsay protégé Angela Hartnett since her move from The Connaught. On August 21st Angela opened Murano, a fine-dining restaurant in the heart of London’s Mayfair. On 22nd September, York and Albany, located on the edge of London’s Regents Park, opened, comprised of a restaurant with bar, delicatessen and guest accommodation.
In December 2008 Gordon, in partnership with Brand Events, hosted Gordon Ramsay Presents Taste of Christmas in association with Gordon’s celebrating the best in Christmas food, drink and entertaining and was held at London’s ExCeL centre from 4th-7th December.
Source: http://www.gordonramsay.com/corporate/theman/biography/
The New Nintendo DSi
Nintendo DSi: The lowdown
Who should be more scared, PSP or iPhone?
Ninty overlord, Saoru Iwata, took the wraps off the new DS model, the DSi, which continues the handeld's incredibly boring naming conventions.
The lowercase 'i' could be an acknowledgement of the fact that nothing without that one important letter somewhere in the title has any hope of being recognised as a desirable technology product. Or it could be something clever to do with the two cameras that the new handheld is equipped with.
These cameras, located on the inside hinge and on the outer edge of the upper screen, are only equipped with a weak 640 x 480 pixel sensor. That's nowhere near the level of detail necessary for actual photography so they're only there to give game devs an extra gameplay mechanic to toy with. We expect quite a few DSi specific titles to show up around the new hardware's launch.
The DSi gets a major upgrade to its predecessor's multimedia abilities. While each was capable of playing music and browsing the internet, it was only through third-party tools; Nintendo wanted them to be for gaming only, which set it aside from the multifunctional PSP.
The games industry is changing though, especially when it comes to portable devices. The launch of the iPhone App store has brought an influx of games to the handset, leading some to believe that it will soon be seen as major threat to the handheld console makers, as well as rival handset makers.
The DSi includes an integrated photo viewer, MP3 player and web browser; a major step in the multimedia direction that will challenge new mobile devices. All it needs now is a video player and Skype, and PSP will really have to panic.
Furthermore, Nintendo is opening up a new DS Store that will allow you to browse and buy games without making the trip to the shops, which keeps it in pace with the iPhone and Sony's planned PSP Store.
The screen width has been increased by a quarter of an inch, to 3.25". Unfortunately that comes at a cost. The battery life has taken a bit of a battering; on its brightest setting you can only expect 3 hours of gameplay, compared to the 5 hours of the DS Lite.
This might sound pretty bad, but in truth, you rarely need to use the DS Lite's highest brigthness unless you want to punish your retinas. At more restrained settings you can milk as much as 14 hours out of the DSi - easily enough to keep you busy on a trip across the Atlantic.
Source: http://www.t3.com/news/nintendo-dsi-the-lowdown?=36855
Article: Marketiva Forex Trading
Marketiva is a financial services company that has specialized in providing services online forex trading for the trader of high quality. Marketiva is established in early 2005 by a group financial and professional scientists, computer scientists. This team has a combined experience of more than 30 years in the financial markets. Marketiva is one of the over-the-counter market maker in the world's most popular. Marketiva provides over-the-counter market making on the Forex, Funds, and Commodity Index.
Customer funds held by Marketiva stored in a separate account solely for the purposes of client trading activity in the run and never mixed with the operating capital of the company. Withdrawal from bank account only occur as a result of direct customer trading activity, or because of a withdrawal request stated valid.
Marketiva's interesting is a system for trading. You do not need to ask other people to do your trading. Simply make your own trading is. Thus, you can control and directly to the field of trading without any other intermediaries who do trading for you, so you know the exact cycle you both money and profit loss. Here also are not allowed other people to access your account. Only you know your own password to enter Marketiva.
The advantage in using Marketiva services is:
* You will get the real money is $ 5 for you to do trading for free.
* You will also get money for your virtual training is $ 10,000.
* Minimum deposit is $ 1, there is no maximum deposit.
* Margin used is 1:100
* Have news that you can directly see in the platform.
* There is a warning before the news will come out.
* There is no cost inap position.
* There is no cost a continental interest.
* 24 hour customer support (in various languages).
* How to chat while in the trading platform is.
* There are charting and you can put the indicator that has been provided.
* Deposit with a variety of currency such as USD, EUR, JPY, GBP, CHF, CAD, AUD.
There are 4 kinds of things you can trading here, the Forex, Funds, Indexes, and Commodities.
Try Marketiva, just simply go to the website www.marketiva.com
Source:
www.fxpacific.com
www.marketiva.com
Sunday, March 15, 2009
Travelling to New Zealand
Do you like travelling? If you like travelling you can consider New Zealand as your next destination, they have a lot of beautiful scenery really back to nature and not that busy. If you have limited budget but you want to do travelling, you can try this website www.kiwicombopass.co.nz They offer combination of car hire and motels/hotels around New Zealand and it's cheap and afforable but good quality. So, if you want to go to New Zealand visit www.kiwicombopass.co.nz for the good offer.
Review: Adioso Website
Australian Most Job in Demand and Most Competitive Job
February’s top five jobs in most demand were:
If you are seeking a place in these categories and you have the relevant skills and experience, you are lucky and highly sought after. Be it due to increasing demand or a critical shortage of specialised skills, these positions are hardest to fill.
1. Healthcare and medical – Radiographers and sonographers
2. Legal – Public practice solicitors
3. Insurance and superannuation – Risk consultants
4. Consulting and corporate strategy – Policy and planning consultants
5. Banking and financial services – Actuaries
February’s top five most competitive occupations:
If you are looking for a place in one of these categories it is vital that you get a competitive edge and present yourself in the best light – the competition is fierce. Hundreds of applications are received for each position advertised, making these SEEK’s Top 5 most competitive occupations.
1. Manufacturing – Packers and fillers
2. Administration – Data entry personnel
3. Hospitality and tourism – Kitchen and sandwich hands
4. Retail – Sales assistants
5. Accounting – Accounts payable Clerks
source: http://www.seek.com.au
Welcome to Hang Out Café
Thanks,
.:RbN:.