Thứ Ba, 13 tháng 2, 2018

Waching daily Feb 13 2018

- (screams) It's so fluffy, oh my God!

(upbeat music)

Hey guys I'm Brenda, I'm a tasty producer

and today we will be comparing American

versus Japanese cheesecakes.

Now I'll be taking care of the classic

creamy cheesecake that you guys all know really well.

- And I'm Alvin, and I'll be making

the jiggly Japanese cheesecake because I think it's such a

unique twist on cheesecake that you

probably seen online and it's so cool.

I'm gonna show you exactly how it's done.

- Okay let's start this American cheesecake.

So to make the base, you get your graham crackers,

and you smash until they turn into this.

The reason why I begin with the crust is that

it has to be baked twice.

Once by itself, and then with the cheesecake mix.

So while this is baking, you can just go ahead

and get started with your cheesecake mix.

I'm not gonna run all my ingredients at once.

What I'm actually doing is starting

with the sugar and the cream cheese.

I also have all my ingredients at room temperature.

All of this will make it easier to avoid lumps,

and will help me combine everything perfectly.

Let's go back in time to this recipe Alvin filled before,

which happens to inspire my recipe.

Look at the way it comes in.

The texture that it appears to have, it's just beautiful.

(upbeat music)

- Let's cook this Japanese cheesecake.

So the process is very different

than a traditional cheesecake,

this starts with making a liquid cheesecake mixture

of cream cheese, milk, butter and sugar.

And once that gets all nice and smooth,

that gets folded into egg yolks

and that becomes this sort of like creamy,

liquidish kind of batter,

and that sort of your cheesecake base.

When I went to Japan to work with the Taste of Japan team,

we had our eyes set on this jiggly cheesecake

that had been like a viral trender on there

for a really long time.

It was just as amazing as it looked.

It's a very light, fluffy, soft cheesecake

that's very airy, it's like a cloud.

So it's like almost you're making a meringue,

and then you sort of fold the meringue

back in to that cheesecake batter.

The funny thing is that you could eat the entire cheesecake

because 80% of this is air.

When we were in Japan, it was not uncommon to see

someone buying a whole cheesecake for themselves

and finishing it on their walk to work.

You need to bake it in a water bath.

So what that does, it creates like a nice steam barrier

around the cake, so the cake will never get too hot

because the water will take excess heat away from it.

- [Brenda] This is one of my favorite parts Alvin

because you're pretty much unveiling this mythical creature.

It looks super impressive,

you know it's gonna be very fluffy.

- [Alvin] You know those Tempurpedic commercials,

this is like memory foam for my hand.

(upbeat music)

- Let's taste it.

- Let's do it. - Alright.

- This cake right here, is creamy, and it melts,

it's not too dense.

- Your cheesecake, at least in my opinion,

in terms of texture is superb.

This thing is super fluffy.

Which one's your winner and why.

- It will probably be the Japanese one.

When I want something in a dessert,

I want something that isn't too heavy

so I can take more than one bite.

- I'm gonna go for the Japanese version.

Yes, this is easier to make,

but it seems a little more adventurous

to go for this one, and the texture, the fluffiness,

and the jiggling is just like out of this world.

In a taste test, one out of three,

said that they would go for your cheesecake.

I asked people on Instagram, right there.

69% on yours.

- 31% on this one so.

- There you go.

- The crowd and the internet have spoken.

Brenda, that's raw egg.

- [Brenda] It's still delicious.

(jazz music)

For more infomation >> American Vs. Japanese: Cheesecake - Duration: 4:19.

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Who are the Black Nobility - Duration: 6:45.

Who are the Black Nobility

The �Black Nobility� are/were the oligarchic families of Venice and Genoa, Italy, who in

the 12th century held the privileged trading rights (monopolies).

The first of three crusades, from 1063 to 1123, established the power of the Venetian

Black Nobility and solidified the power of the wealthy ruling class.

The Black Nobility aristocracy achieved complete control over Venice in 1171, when the appointment

of the Doge was transferred to what was known as the Great Council, which consisted of members

of the commercial aristocracy (among them the infamous de�Medici family).

Venice has remained in their hands ever since, but the power and influence of the Venetian

Black Nobility extends far beyond its borders, and today it is felt in every corner of the

globe.

(Don�t forget, our modern banking system originated in Italy.)

In 1204 the oligarchic family parceled out feudal enclaves to their members, and from

this epoch dates the great building-up of power and pressure until the government became

a closed corporation (don�t we know this from somewhere?) of the leading Black Nobility

families.

More of this can be found in the works of Dr. John Coleman, Black Nobility Unmasked

World-wide, 1985; Conspirators� Hierarchy: The Story of the Committee of 300, 1992.

The Black Nobility earned its title through dirty tricks, so when the population revolted

against the monopolies in government, as anywhere else (aren�t we), the leaders of the uprising

were quickly seized and brutally hanged.

The Black Nobility uses secret assassinations, murder, blackmail, the bankrupting of opposing

citizens or companies, kidnapping, rape and so on� hence their name.

Who are these families today?

Well, the most important ones are:

� House of Bernadotte, Sweden

� House of Bourbon, France

� House of Braganza, Portugal

� House of Grimaldi, Monaco

� House of Guelph, Britain (the most important one)

� House of Habsburg, Austria

� House of Hanover, Germany (the second most important one)

� House of Hohenzollern, Germany

� House of Karadjordjevic, Yugoslavia (former)

� House of Liechtenstein, Liechtenstein

� House of Nassau, Luxembourg

� House of Oldenburg, Denmark

� House of Orange, Netherlands

� House of Savoy, Italy

� House of Wettin, Belgium

� House of Wittelsbach, Germany

� House of W�rttemberg, Germany

� House of Zogu, Albania

� all the families you will find on the Windsor family tree

All the families listed are connected with the House of Guelph, one of the original Black

Nobility families of Venice, from which the House of Windsor and thus the present Queen

of England, Elizabeth II, descends.

The Guelphs are so intertwined with the German aristocracy through the House of Hanover that

it would take several pages to mention all their connections.

All (almost) European royal houses originate from the House of Hanover and thus from the

House of Guelph � the Black Nobility.

An example: the Hanoverian British King George I came from the Duchy of Luneburg, a part

of Northern Germany, which had been governed by the Guelph family since the 12th century.

Today the Guelphs (the Windsors) rule by dominating the raw materials market, and for years they

have fixed the price of gold (a commodity they neither produce nor own).

The House of Windsor also controls the price of copper, zinc, lead and tin.

It is no accident that the principle commodity exchanges are located in London, England.

Companies run by Black Nobility families are British Petroleum, Oppenheimer, Lonrho, Philbro

and many many more.

Another Black Nobility family are the Grosvenors in England.

For centuries this family lived, as most of the European families, on ground rent.

Today the family owns at least 300 acres of land in the centre of London.

The land is never sold, but leased on a 39 year leasehold agreement � the ground rent

of the middle ages.

Grosvenor Square, in which the American Embassy is located, belongs to the Grosvenor family,

as does Eaton Square.

In Eaton Square apartments are rented out at 25,000 to 75,000 pounds a month (and that

does not include maintenance costs).

This is to give you an idea of the immense wealth the Black Nobility families garner

from ground rents, and why families like the Windsors are not at all interested in industrial

progress along with the excess population it supports.

This is the main reason why these �noble� families are behind most, if not all, of the

wrong-headed pro-environmental movements of the world that ultimately and covertly (of

course) aim to curb population growth.

Prince Philip and Prince Charles are the most visible symbols of these movements, and both

have often spoken with the utmost callousness about the need to rid the world of unwanted

people.

The Black Nobility are the founders of the [modern] secret societies of our day from

which all the others that are connected to the Illuminati originated from � the Committee

of 300.

The Club of Rome, the C.F.R., the R.I.I.A., the Bilderbergers, the Round Table� all

originate from the Committee of 300 and therefore from the European Black Nobility families.

Co-operating with the European Black Nobility are American families like the Harrimans and

the McGeorge Bundys.

The House of Hanover seems to be German, but is really Jewish.

So is the House of Habsburg.

So it wasn�t really the Germans who took over

the British throne�.

For more infomation >> Who are the Black Nobility - Duration: 6:45.

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McMafia Season 1: 'Get to Know the Cast' Behind the Scenes - Duration: 4:19.

The characters are drawn

from a wide variety of criminal environments.

Not only they're business, but they're family guys.

[Children scream playfully]

Ritchie: But actually, behind the scenes,

they're a ruthless, murdering bunch of criminals.

Strathairn: It's also a story about family

and what happens to those that get involved in this world.

Semiyon: If you want to protect your family,

this is what you have to do.

I have a friend in Israel.

He's very interested in investing.

We're too small for your friends.

Our central character is Alex Godman.

He is a London financier

who's created his own hedge fund.

But his parents are of Russian extraction.

His father was a Russian gangster.

He has worked hard

to differentiate himself from his parents.

He wants to be legitimate.

I started the fund from scratch.

I never took a penny from my family or their friends,

and I've made it a policy not to invest in Russia.

He has a great life.

He has this wonderful girlfriend, Rebecca,

he's close to his family.

Katya and Alex are very, very close.

She sees him as a protector, someone that she can trust.

Alex gives her that brotherly love that she really needs,

that she doesn't necessarily get

that kind of love from her parents.

Amini: You have the father, Dimitri,

who finds it very hard to adjust.

Ritchie: He's not assimilated into London life.

He's not taken the language.

He would love to go home to Russia,

so he struggles with life.

He'll go home soon.

That's bull(no audio)

It's been years. People lied to him,you know.

Everyone in this life seeks refuge in something.

Dimitri's escape is in drinking and trying to end it all.

-Come on, Papa. -She's losing Mitri...

[Exhales deeply]

...and she can do nothing about it.

The story really is about a family and how they deal

with these situations that arise

that are somewhat out of their control.

What I love about Rebecca is that she really believes

that there's a way to do things better.

Some people would describe her as morally upright.

Alex and her, at the beginning of the story,

really share this way of wanting to do things differently.

Watkins: But he's also troubled about his identity.

He's been brought up within an English system,

and he's got this English polish of English private school.

But underneath it all,

there's this kind of Russian soul.

What is his identity? Who is he?

Is he a criminal? Is he a legitimate banker?

Norton: There is this side of him

which both he and the people around him --

and hopefully the audience -- will be afraid of.

But that's kind of what makes people interested, you know?

Ritchie: Although exiled from Moscow...

Uncle Boris.

...Boris is still clearly dabbling

in the criminal underworld

and is the catalyst, really, for our story.

You've never done anything you don't want to.

You could have gone to someone else, but you came to me.

Strathairn: In this world, there are no heroes,

and there are no antiheroes.

So no one is all good, no one is all bad.

It's just what they have chosen to involve their lives in.

I have many friends who will like you --

men I do business with.

Ritchie: Semiyon Kleiman is a member of the Knesset,

the Israeli parliament.

Strathairn: He's a chess player.

He uses the lure and the power of money

as a way to get what he wants.

Money.

Moving money is your weapon.

That's how you destroy a person like Vadim.

In Moscow, we have Vadim.

Ritchie: Vadim is really the main focus of all of Alex's issues.

Glenny: They are both having to involve themselves

in a very violent, life-and-death business,

but at the same time, look after their families...

[All shout "surprise" in Russian]

...who are threatened by their very involvement.

Amini: That was something that was very important to try to capture,

the fact that the things we do, whether it's good or bad,

are often for the people we love.

♪♪

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