Ahad, 6 April 2014

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

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The Malaysian Insider :: Food


US diners gorge on oysters as polluted bay revives

Posted: 06 Apr 2014 06:17 PM PDT

April 07, 2014

An employee of the Hollywood Oyster company unloads trays with fresh oysters at the company farm in the waters of Chesapeake Bay near Hollywood MD on March 20, 2014. – AFP/Relaxnews pic, April 7, 2014.An employee of the Hollywood Oyster company unloads trays with fresh oysters at the company farm in the waters of Chesapeake Bay near Hollywood MD on March 20, 2014. – AFP/Relaxnews pic, April 7, 2014.Cage after cage, oysters destined for a sprinkling of lemon juice and a delighted diner are pulled from the majestic Chesapeake Bay, where 20 years ago they had nearly disappeared.

"Those will be at the restaurants tomorrow," says Tal Petty, 55, an oysterman who has worked these waters for 40 years.

Today, the mollusk's reintroduction is playing a vital role in the health of the bay and Petty is quick to point out the dual ecological and gastronomical benefits.

In recent summers, Petty says, he could not see much in the water at his farm in southeastern Maryland, because of a thick algae that thrived in the region's sweltering summers.

But last year "all summer long, I was able to see the bottom, which means the oysters were filtering and cleaning," he said, talking to AFP at a cove near the small community of Hollywood.

The eastern oyster, or Crassostrea Virginica as it is known scientifically, was once abundant in the Chesapeake, one of the world's largest estuaries and a major US waterway.

But it nearly disappeared here at the end of the 20th century due to overfishing, disease and pollution.

In 1607, when English explorer Captain John Smith – famous for his encounter with American Indian princess Pocahontas – explored the bay, "ships were running aground on oysters because they were so plentiful," says Steve Allen, biologist and senior manager at the Oyster Recovery Partnership (ORP), a public-private entity that is facilitating the mollusk's rehabilitation in the Chesapeake.

Two decades ago, no more than one percent of the stocks that had existed in the Chesapeake a century earlier remained in the bay.

This was troubling because the oyster cleans water by filter-feeding on phytoplankton that flourishes when excess nitrogen and phosphorus disrupt the water's ecological balance, the biologist said.

In addition, the mollusk can clean 200 litres of water a day, which basically makes it "the kidney of the bay".

The oyster's reefs also provide shelter for other animals such as fish, mussels and especially blue crabs, the pride of the state of Maryland and Chesapeake.

Maryland and Virginia, the two states that border the Chesapeake, have in recent years launched rescue programs, creating sanctuaries and giving subsidised loans to develop oyster farms.

Over the course of 10 years, ORP reintroduced 4.5 billion oysters, along with a recycling programme for empty shells to serve as nurseries for larvae.

Virginia saw 10,000 tonnes of oysters collected during the winter of 2012 to 2013, double the year before and twenty times more than 15 years ago, although it represents only 1% of what was collected in the 1950s.

Petty created his company Hollywood Oyster and left his job in finance five years ago to embark on his Chesapeake Bay venture. He never looked back.

Baseball cap on head and cell phone to the ear, Petty takes orders from wholesalers and local restaurants from his boat.

"We're growing the operation because of the demand," he says.

"Two years ago, I started a million and a half oysters, last year I started almost 3 million oysters and this year I started almost 4 million," he said.

"We are really lucky that chefs and customers love the taste profile of this cove, this is very, very good oyster water" he said, describing his oysters as having "a nutty taste with a cucumber finish".

And thanks to American consumers' growing fondness for shellfish and local products, oysters are coming back into fashion.

The Oyster bars that flourish in nearby Washington promote the local Chesapeake oyster with gusto.

Tony Kowkabi, owner and manager of Catch 15, an oyster bar that opened three months ago a stone's throw from the White House, says it is a logical choice for his menu.

"Chesapeake Bay oysters are delicious, we are in the neighbourhood, it makes sense for one of the best oysters in the country to be on my list," he says. – AFP/Relaxnews, April 7, 2014.

Prize Normandy cattle enjoy cider tipple

Posted: 06 Apr 2014 05:54 PM PDT

April 07, 2014

French farmer Francois-Xavier Craquelin, 40, poses with a bottle of his cider in front of oxen, at his farm in Villequier, northwestern France, on February 14, 2014. – AFP/Relaxnews pic, April 7, 2014.French farmer Francois-Xavier Craquelin, 40, poses with a bottle of his cider in front of oxen, at his farm in Villequier, northwestern France, on February 14, 2014. – AFP/Relaxnews pic, April 7, 2014.French livestock farmer Francois-Xavier Craquelin believes a little pampering goes a long way when it comes to producing meat prized for its melt-in-the mouth tenderness.

Cattle at his farm in northeastern France enjoy classical music, a special massage machine and even regular tipples of Normandy cider.

In Japan, Kobe cattle – one of the wagyu breeds recognised worldwide for its quality – are treated to sake or beer. But in Normandy, cider is king.

So, in his quest to produce ever better meat, this farmer and organic cider producer has been putting the Japanese technique into practice at his farm not far from the banks of the River Seine at Villequier, between Rouen and Le Havre.

Six animals get extra-special special treatment with music, massage, organic food and plenty of fresh air. And when Craquelin, 40, fills up a bucket of cider with around 15 litres for his cattle, there is never a drop left.

"I give them 150 litres four months before slaughter. For an animal of nearly a ton that represents the equivalent of 1.5 litres for a human," he told AFP.

The alcohol is said to help create highly marbled meat with the muscle finely interspersed with monosaturated fat, giving the meat moisture and tenderness.

Meat with marbling – or intramuscular fat – is especially high in oleic acid, a monosaturated fat also prevalent in olive oil, and commands the highest prices.

Experts say the lower melting point also gives the meat a distinctive flavour which tastes better to most people.

Craquelin, who took over the family farm a decade ago after studying at business school, has around 100 Normandy cattle of which six have recently had the "cider treatment".

Fed on organic food and put out to graze on pasture for seven months of the year, the farmer sends the cattle for slaughter after three years.

Then from March onwards the meat from his "cider beef" cattle starts to find its way onto the plates of some Normandy and Parisian restaurants.

Two animals are slaughtered each month with everything consumed by the end of May.

Some restaurateurs like Christophe Mauduit, from Jumieges in Normandy, reserve early to avoid missing out.

This is a good product, with beautiful marbling," Mauduit told AFP.

But it's not just this beef that Craquelin feels passionate about.

As well as promoting this niche product, he also wants to promote the Normandy breed from which the region's famous butter and Camembert cheese is made.

The breed won a blind test organised by Gault Millau, one of the most influential French restaurant guides, said Cindy Lebas, quality manager for the Rouen-based firm Grosdoit, a meat wholesaler which promotes the breed.

And now, backed by the region's Pays de Caux-Vallee de Seine tourism office, Craquelin would like to see it gets its own "appellation d'origine controlee (AOC)" label, of the sort awarded to wine certifying its geographical origin.

Despite being famed for its other produce, Normandy has yet to be recognised for its beef in the same way as Charolais or Limousin cattle from central France have been.

It won't be an easy task, admits Craquelin, adding however that he is determined to work towards his goal over the "long term". – AFP/Relaxnews, April 7, 2014.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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Italy fight back to beat Britain and reach Davis Cup semiss

Posted: 06 Apr 2014 08:51 AM PDT

April 06, 2014

Italy's Andreas Seppi celebrates after winning his Davis Cup quarter-final tennis match against Britain's James Ward in Naples today. – Reuters pic, April 6, 2014Italy's Andreas Seppi celebrates after winning his Davis Cup quarter-final tennis match against Britain's James Ward in Naples today. – Reuters pic, April 6, 2014Italy staged a superb fightback today to beat Britain in the Davis Cup quarter-finals as Fabio Fognini shocked Andy Murray, and Andreas Seppi eased past James Ward in the decisive fifth match.

After securing back-to-back wins over Italy yesterday for a 2-1 lead, Britain required one victory to reach their first Davis Cup semi-final since 1981, but Fognini was in inspired form on the Naples clay as he cruised past Murray 6-3 6-3 6-4.

With the scores level at 2-2, it was left to the world number 161 Ward to claim an unlikely victory, but he went down in straight sets to Seppi 6-4 6-3 6-4.

World number 13 Fognini, who has won all three of his career ATP singles titles on clay in the last nine months, punished Murray's sloppy serve throughout the match and he recorded a routine victory over the Wimbledon champion.

Seppi, world number 34, was rarely troubled in the decisive fifth rubber by his lowly-ranked opponent and, after taking the first two sets in simple fashion, he comfortably saw out the third to give Italy a 3-2 victory.

Italy will play Switzerland or Kazakhstan in September's semi-finals, their first appearance at that stage since 1998. – Reuters, April 6, 2014

Davis Cup should be every two years, says Japan captain

Posted: 06 Apr 2014 08:32 AM PDT

April 06, 2014

Tennis should scrap the Davis Cup's current format and hold the competition every two years to reduce wear and tear on players, Japan's captain Minoru Ueda told AFP in an interview today.

"If we don't have a break, players are simply going to break down," Ueda said after Japan had been whitewashed 5-0 by title holders the Czech Republic in the quarter-finals.

He believes asking players to squeeze international duty into increasingly packed schedules threatens to push the Davis Cup to breaking point.

In the last five years the 'big four' of Roger Federer, Rafa Nadal, Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray have skipped as many ties for their countries as they have played.

Czech talisman Tomas Berdych chose not to play in Tokyo, calling for the Davis Cup to be played "at least every two years", a sentiment shared by Ueda.

"I think so too," he said. "It should be every two years, maybe four. Probably two years is best. These days it's more unusual for players not to be pulling out with injury, especially the top players."

Ueda, who lost Japanese number one Kei Nishikori to a groin injury before the Czech tie, supported Berdych's claim that the strain being placed on players risks diluting the magic of the competition, which has been going for 114 years.

"To maintain the status of the Davis Cup and boost its profile, the scheduling needs to be looked at closely, to make it something everyone wants to play in," said Ueda.

"We shouldn't be relying on players having to choose. The ITF (International Tennis Federation), and the ATP Tour need to sit down and create a scenario where players can have a proper off-season, rest and be able to achieve peak performance."

Ueda said he understood how players would be wary of biting the hand the feeds them but insisted something had to be done.

'Right balance'

"It's a tough one," said the 56-year-old. "The tours bring in money and provide a living for the players so you need to find a balance."

While the ATP Tour has blazed a trail in new Asian markets, in countries which do not stage top-level tennis events, the Davis Cup generates soccer-style support and valuable revenue – as in the Czech Republic.

"The emotions we experienced with our country and fans is something you cannot buy," said Radek Stepanek, a toddler when Ivan Lendl led what was then Czechoslovakia to win the title in 1980.

Ueda suggested setting aside a week in the season to play Davis Cup top-16 ties.

"With the World Group, you could perhaps open a spot in a calendar where the teams play a tournament," he said. "It would attract massive attention."

Ueda, meticulous in his preparation and a deep thinker of the game, guided Japan to the Davis Cup quarter-finals for the first time under the modern format this year but was stung by his team's drubbing by the Czechs. "Right now it hurts," he said, leaning back on his chair and biting his lip. "We had chances. You keep thinking 'what if?' It's hard.

"The players now know what it's like when Nishikori can't play, which was a new challenge and a good experience. It will give us extra energy to do better next year," he added.

Ueda already has one eye on the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, and beyond. "I want to take Japanese tennis in a direction where it's full of people with passion and intellect, where analysts and health specialists are as common as trainers and coaches," he said.

"The Olympics should be a stepping stone to a bright future." – AFP, April 6, 2014

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The Malaysian Insider :: Books

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Naturalist author Peter Matthiessen dies at 86

Posted: 05 Apr 2014 09:32 PM PDT

April 06, 2014

Globetrotting US naturalist and writer Peter Matthiessen (pic), known for books such as "At Play in the Fields of the Lord," has died at his New York state home, his publisher said yesterday.

He was 86.

"Peter passed away this evening. We are honored to have known him and his beautiful and wild mind," his publisher Riverhead Books said in a statement.

Matthiessen, who reportedly had been treated for leukemia in the past year, had been awaiting publication of his final novel, "In Paradise," April 8, Riverhead confirmed.

Matthiessen was among the founders of the prestigious literary magazine The Paris Review.

In 1961, Matthiessen, a wilderness trekker and liberal environmentalist, raised his profile as a novelist with "At Play in the Fields of the Lord." The story of missionaries in the crosshairs of indigenous people and mercenaries in Brazil's Amazon jungle was made into a Hollywood film starring John Lithgow and Daryl Hannah.

He also earned National Book Awards for "The Snow Leopard," about a spiritual trip to the Himalayas, and for "Shadow Country."

Though he grew up a child of privilege, his life took dramatic turns as his personal adventures took him from Asia to Australia to New Guinea and South America; he was even a CIA spy in Paris in the 1950s.

While he wrote more than 30 books, the peripatetic Matthiessen – arguably better known for his non-fiction – called fiction his greater calling.

Yet they were complementary talents, among many.

Indeed, he was the only writer honored with the National Book Award in both fiction and non-fiction. – AFP, April 6, 2014.

Garcia Marquez to leave hospital soon

Posted: 05 Apr 2014 06:38 PM PDT

April 06, 2014

Nobel-prize winning novelist Gabriel Garcia Marquez (pic) yesterday was feeling better after treatment in a Mexico City hospital, but staying put for now, family and officials said.

The 87-year-old Colombian, who has lived in Mexico for more than three decades, was admitted as a precaution on Monday suffering from dehydration and a lung infection.

"He is doing well now and he is eager to get home," his son Gonzalo Garcia Barcha told reporters outside the National Medical Sciences and Nutrition Institute.

While an assistant earlier said the 1982 Nobel laureate might be able to go home as soon as yesterday, Garcia Barcha said it looked likely his father would be released on Tuesday.

Garcia Marquez, widely credited with putting magical realism on the map, is seen as one of the finest writers of the 20th century.

His masterpiece "One Hundred Years of Solitude" has sold millions of copies and been translated into 35 languages. – AFP, April 6, 2014.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa

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Usah terpengaruh lambakan maklumat tragedi MH370 dalam media sosial, kata Saravanan

Posted: 06 Apr 2014 02:11 AM PDT

April 06, 2014

Golongan belia dinasihatkan tidak mudah terpengaruh dengan lambakan maklumat tidak tepat yang disebar menerusi media sosial mengenai tragedi pesawat Malaysia Airlines MH370.

Timbalan Menteri Belia dan Sukan Datuk M Saravanan (gambar) berkata mereka harus bijak menilai fakta yang dipaparkan dan tidak terus mempercayai sepenuhnya jika terdapat sebarang perbezaan maklumat daripada apa yang didedahkan kerajaan.

Mereka jangan mudah terpedaya dengan tindakan pihak tertentu, sama ada mana-mana saluran media atau pun media sosial yang suka melemparkan tuduhan kononnya kerajaan selama ini menyembunyikan fakta sebenar mengenai tragedi itu, katanya selepas merasmikan persidangan Tahunan Ke-7 Persatuan Malaysia Pranava Yoga Theraphy Centre di Klang hari ini.

"Para belia jangan percaya maklumat yang disebar itu sebagai sesuatu yang benar sedangkan kerajaan kita berusaha keras mencari pesawat berkenaan dan mendedahkan apa saja maklumat yang kita terima kepada umum," katanya.

Tambahnya, tragedi pesawat MH370 itu bukan sekadar isu negara ini, tetapi ia adalah isu antarabangsa kerana turut melibatkan kehilangan rakyat pelbagai negara antaranya China, Amerika Syarikat dan Australia.

Sehubungan itu katanya, usaha Jabatan Latihan Khidmat Negara untuk menambah baik modul latihan pengurusan media sosial terhadap pelatih Program Latihan Khidmat Negara adalah tepat pada waktunya.

Menyifatkan masalah kekeliruan fakta dan persepsi dalam kalangan golongan muda kini semakin ketara, Saravanan berkata langkah itu diharap dapat memberi panduan kepada para belia dalam mengadaptasi sebarang maklumat yang diterima.

Beliau berkata modul itu yang dipupuk pada peringkat awal juga dilihat mampu menangani masalah penyebaran maklumat tidak tepat serta tidak berasas menerusi pengunaan media sosial kelak. – Bernama, 6 April, 2014.

Cadangan pembinaan helipad di Taman Tasik Titiwangsa diteruskan

Posted: 06 Apr 2014 01:19 AM PDT

April 06, 2014

Taman Tasik Titiwangsa akan mempunyai helipadnya sendiri selepas Kementerian Wilayah Persekutuan meluluskan cadangan itu walaupun di protes penduduk di sana. – Gambar fail.Taman Tasik Titiwangsa akan mempunyai helipadnya sendiri selepas Kementerian Wilayah Persekutuan meluluskan cadangan itu walaupun di protes penduduk di sana. – Gambar fail.Kementerian Wilayah Persekutuan akan tetap meneruskan cadangan pembinaan helipad (lapangan pendaratan helikopter) di Taman Tasik Titiwangsa walaupun diprotes oleh penduduk setempat.

Menterinya, Datuk Seri Tengku Adnan Tengku Mansor berkata rancangan itu bukan sahaja boleh dimanfaatkan ketika berlakunya kecemasan, malahan dapat menyediakan produk pelancongan baru iaitu "Heli City Tour" yang menyediakan pakej meninjau ibu kota dari udara.

"Saya merayu kepada penduduk di situ supaya jangan mementingkan diri dan mereka mesti faham bahawa Taman Tasik Titiwangsa di bawah DBKL (Dewan Bandaraya Kuala Lumpur) dan bukannya ekslusif untuk mereka, ia harus dimanfaatkan oleh seluruh rakyat," katanya ketika ditemui media selepas menyempurnakan Program KL Pagi Bebas Kenderaan kali keempat hari ini.

Katanya, terdapat juga permintaan dari pelancong antarabangsa yang menggunakan jet persendirian ingin terus ke bandar raya dari Lapangan Terbang Sultan Abdul Aziz Shah, Subang dengan menaiki helikopter.

Beliau berkata pihaknya juga berhasrat mengembalikan semula buaian roda gergasi, Eye On Malaysia, yang dipindahkan ke Taman Kota Laksamana, Melaka ke lokasi asalnya, Taman Tasik Titiwangsa, sekiranya keadaan kewangan mengizinkan.

Tengku Adnan berkata dengan adanya helipad dan Eye on Malaysia, pakej pelancongan yang terdapat di Kuala Lumpur akan menjadi lebih sempurna dan setanding dengan bandar raya di luar negara. – Bernama, 6 April, 2014.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion

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GST: Who’s the liar, Barisan or Pakatan?

Posted: 05 Apr 2014 05:25 PM PDT

[unable to retrieve full-text content]After much anticipation surrounding the introduction of a new Goods and Services Tax (GST) regime in Malaysia, the GST Bill 2014 was finally tabled in the parliament last Thursday. The raging...
    






GST: Who’s the liar, Barisan or Pakatan?

Posted: 05 Apr 2014 05:25 PM PDT

[unable to retrieve full-text content]After much anticipation surrounding the introduction of a new Goods and Services Tax (GST) regime in Malaysia, the GST Bill 2014 was finally tabled in the parliament last Thursday. The raging...
    






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