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Here's the same small bowl of Yang Rou Pao Mo, about 1/3 finished. That brown/red/purple thing in the bowl is blood. They make it cold, and then when they put it in the hot soup it stays that way. It doesn't taste like anything in particular.. just kinda squishy.
www.shetland.org/60n/blogs/posts/reestit-mutton-soup
Sounds good!
Shetland Museum; Lerwick, Shetland, Scotland, United Kingdom.
A butcher sells mutton in his tiny shop in Leh, Ladakh, Jammu and Kashmir in northern India. October 2015. © David Hill.
Along the Mutton Brook we pass under the north circular - the weird line on this is the railing!
Nikon f801, 50/1.8, Agfa RSXII 50, cross-processed
This scene reminded me of a funny incident my cousin narrated to me long back.
My cousin worked as a personal assistant for a big timber exporting company's boss. He used to drive the car for his boss all the time and in his absence another guy who knew very little english. Now you need to understand that all the shops that sell meat(butchers) in tamilnadu are mostly called mutton stall or mutton shop something, along those lines.
So my cousins boss has clients from all over the world visiting to sample his timber and they are driven to the timber plantation for a demo. Once it so happened that my cousin could not drive the foreign dignitaries and his friend, the non english speaking guy had to in his absense.
They were driving along the road real fast on a similar place like this. Suddenly a herd of Goats crossed the road the driver hit the brakes sudden and hard, the passengers asked "Driver, what happened?".
Now our dude did not know what Goat was called in english. (Its called "Aadu" in tamil and he did not know the effective english equivalent).
So all our brother can remember is the "Mutton" he loves to eat often and he said, "Sir, Mutton Jumping Sir!"
The English dignitaries roared with laughter and had a good time at the expense of the driver's english.
I remembered this when i saw these goats crossing the road and when our driver breaked hard too, well i did not ask him why he breaked so hard since i was sitting right next to him in the front seat and was shooting this.
Canon EOS 400D with the 50 MM F/1.8 EF-S II Prime Lens, Aperture Priority @ F/8, 1/250th of a second.
$6.99 at 5 Stars Punjabi. This used to come in one of those sushi boats
5 Stars closed for good recently.
Shot @ Mosque Road,Bangalore, July 2013
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Keema kaleji \ Mutton mince and liver in a spicy curry recipe. myeverydaymusing.blogspot.in/2014/09/keema-kaleji-mutton-...
I just got back from a 5 day hike in the Abel Tasman National Park. Here's one of the sunrises I enjoyed during my stay there. There's a stream in the foreground that very nicely and randomly takes a new path for every low tide.
Kaleji or mutton liver is a common mutton preparation in India. Spicy, scrumptious and a great coming together of most of the common Indian spices, Kaleji Masala is a common dry preparation that can be enjoyed as an appetizer, with rotis or kerala parotta and even plain white rice. Here is how to make it.
Only a mile from the busy A52 that links Ashbourne and Derby, the visitor must think they are in another world when they arrive at Osmaston. Delightful half-timbered cottages under thatched roofs, lattice windows, a duck pond overlooked by a village green, a 160-year old church and an old world pub all combine in a beautiful picture postcard setting. Thatched cottages are rare in Derbyshire, but at Osmaston, even the village hall has a thatched roof.
Osmaston, an old village, was known as Osmundestune when the Domesday Book was compiled and had a population at that time of 60 to 80 people. One hundred and fifty years later the village’s present name was in use, along with other versions. In 1845, the first stone was laid in the construction of Osmaston Manor and, four years later, it was completed. It was built for Francis Wright, owner of Butterley Iron Works, who during his lifetime built St Pancras Station as well as carrying out other important projects both at home and abroad.
Wright was a considerable benefactor to the village, building a new church and schools before work started on his home. He also built or rebuilt the estate properties in the village and planted a considerable number of trees. At Ashbourne, he had St John’s Church built. However, although there is a memorial erected in his honour in Ashbourne Market Place, he was not a universally popular man. His action in putting a stop to the annual fair, of which he disapproved, and his efforts to stop Shrovetide football did not go down well with many of the inhabitants.
George Brittlebank, a lawyer, lived at Monument House in Ashbourne. When in 1864 the police banned Shrovetide football he threw the ball to the angry crowd, after it had been smuggled to him across the market place in a shopping basket carried by a local woman. He promised to defend, at no cost, anyone arrested playing the game. This was the prelude for the game to begin, and the tradition still continues in the 21st century.
Francis Wright died in 1873, and today nothing remains of Osmaston Manor except the garden terraces and the kitchen gardens. The most interesting feature is an ornate 150 feet high Italian-type tower that keeps visitors guessing as to its purpose. It was a communal chimney, built to serve the whole manor. The house had 70 rooms, a bake-house, wash-house and a brew-house and a central tunnel carried smoke to the chimney in the garden.
After Wright’s death, his heir only lived spasmodically at the house before departing permanently after putting the house up for sale. In 1883, Sir Andrew Barclay Walker, donor of Liverpool’s Walker Art Gallery, purchased and moved to the manor with his family. However, the situation changed when one of his descendants, Sir Ian Walker, inherited the Okeover estate on the western side of Ashbourne in 1955. He added their name to his own and moved to Okeover Hall six years later. With no buyer forthcoming for the manor, the decision was taken to demolish, and in 1966, the last stone was removed, but the family continued to maintain the estate.
The Gothic Park Lodge remains and the former polo ground that used to attract thousands of well-dressed visitors to Osmaston now belongs to the village. The Annual Ashbourne Agricultural Show, organised by the Ashbourne and District Royal Shire Horse Society, whose patron is the Queen, is held there on the third Saturday of August every year. The area has a strong tradition for breeding shire horses. Apart from the shires, other animals are on display at the show, together with craft stalls and trade stands. Plenty of family entertainment is provided.
The two oldest cottages, both with thatched roofs, overlook the duck pond, where an unusual seat can be found made up of discarded horseshoes. It looks uncomfortable, but is not.
The four thatched cottages facing the car park were built to celebrate the coronation of King George VI. The village hall was opened on Coronation Day 1937; it is used for various functions including providing dining facilities for the children who attend the local school. A Post Office operates four days a week in an out-building of the popular Shoulder of Mutton public house.
The Wright family built most of the remaining buildings in the village for the occupation of their workers. St Martin’s Parish Church, built in 1845 to replace an earlier building, has many tributes to its benefactors, the Wright family. The register of the church dates back to 1606.
Drimoleague to Baltimore Railway Line - MP Cork 46.
Remains of Mutton Road Bridge, spanning the R593, near Drimoleague, Cork 16th June 2009.
A delicious in-law's mutton samosa. We can only savor this in Singapore.
We learned how to fold the triangle shape samosa using a square spring roll sheet and the actual tested combination of ingredient.
Anyone want to know the secret?