Friday, July 30, 2010

BANANA WITH LIME AND TANGERINES


juice and pulp of 1 lime
1/2 tsp. vanilla
1/2 tsp. cinnamon
2 tangerines, seeded and sectioned
4 bananas, sliced
1 Tbsp. shredded unsweetened coconut

In a small bowl, combine lime juice and pulp, vanilla and cinnamon (it's best to use a whisk or fork so cinnamon doesn't clump up). In a large bowl, combine tangerines, bananas and coconut. Pour lime mixture over them and toss well until the fruit is coated. Serve at room temperature or slightly chilled in small sundae dishes for dessert or breakfast.

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Chile Blackberry Syrup Recipe

For those of you with summer blackberries on hand, you must must must try this recipe. It doesn't lake long, and you are left with enough sweet & spicy, chile-infused blackberry syrup to keep your taste buds tingling right into August. I clipped the recipe out of an issue ofGourmet Magazine years ago. Actually, here we go, it was September 2007. I switched up the chiles, made a few other tweaks, and have been using the syrup to spritz up sparkling water all week. It's also great swirled into yogurt, oatmeal, and crème fraîche. Other good ideas: use it to slather on buttered toast, drizzle over goat cheese, and I imagine it'd be a flashy, unexpected offering at any pancake, crepe, or waffle brunch.

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Perl Cookbook

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

When the second edition of Programming Perl was released, the authors omitted two chapters: "Common Tasks with Perl" and "Real Perl Programs." Publisher O'Reilly & Associates soon realized that there would be too many pages in Programming Perl if it put updated recipes in the new edition. Instead, O'Reilly chose to release the many Perl code examples as a separate entity: The Perl Cookbook.

The recipes are well documented and the examples aren't too arcane; even beginners will be able to pick up the lessons taught here. The authors write in relatively easy-to-understand language (for a technical guide). Through this book and its arsenal of recipes, you will learn many new things about Perl to help you through your toughest projects. The next time you're working on a project at 2 a.m., you'll thank yourself for the guidance and direction The Perl Cookbook provides. --Doug Beaver

From Library Journal

Perl is probably the language holding together more web sites than any other. It is not the fastest or the most elegant, but it can slurp text as no other language can?and it is free. This is an invaluable book for all levels of Perl programmers, from novice to advanced. It contains great working examples of Perl code to do everything from data structures and string matching to reading files and using libraries to CGI programming and programming Internet applications. Highly recommended for all libraries; serious web collections should consider two copies.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

cookbook collection

This blog is create for publish information of cookbooks for slow cooker.

And sometime I will talk something about slow cooker recipes.