Monday, August 29, 2011

Remarkable Animal Friendships



Never Doubt the Power of Friendship

Written by National Geographic magazine writer Jennifer Holland,Unlikely Friendships: 47 Remarkable Stories from the Animal Kingdom documents one heartwarming tale after another of animals who, with nothing else in common, bond in the most unexpected ways. Here are a few of our favorite photos from the book.










This link from Reader's Digest simply reminded me of a friend's story about his boxer and his brother's hamster... (Thinking about it makes me laugh so hard) ^^

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

FOOD TRIP TIPS FROM HAECHI EPISODE 3: Jangchung-dong's Jokbal Alley

FOODIE FOOD LOVERS!!! This one's definitely for you!!! Meet Haechi and read along! This tip has been reposted from VISITSEOUL.COM

ENJOY SEOULFUL FOOD!!!^^







What is Jokbal?


Jokbal (족발) is a boiled and seasoned pig’s trotters dish, made by boiling pigs’ feet in water along with leeks, garlic, ginger, cheongju (청주; rice wine), sugar and gangjang (간장; Korean soy sauce). The bones are removed and the meat is cut into thick slices before serving. Like bossam, it is served on a large platter meant to be shared with other diners, and eaten with saeujeot (새우젓; salt fermented shrimp). Due to its unique greasiness and strong flavor, jokbal is eaten in the same manner as other Korean grilled meats are eaten, wrapped in lettuce along with other vegetables. As jokbal is considered an anju, it is often eaten with soju or other alcoholic beverages.





Jokbal is known to be good for the skin due as it contains rich amounts of gelatin derived from the collagen inside the pork skin. This natural collagen improves skin elasticity and is effective at preventing wrinkles. Jokbal is also known to be effective at preventing hangovers. For these reasons and more, jokbal has been eaten by Koreans for many centuries. Some of the earliest records of jokbal date back as far as the early 1600s, in the famous traditional Korean medical book, Dongui Bogam.




Dongui Bogam


The Dongui Bogam (동의보감) is a Korean medical book compiled by the royal physician, Heo Jun (1546 – 1615) and was first published in 1613 during the Joseon Dynasty of Korea. The book is regarded important in traditional Korean medicine and one of the classics of Oriental medicine today. On July 2009 it was registered as part of UNESCO’s Memory of the World Programme, an international initiative launched to safeguard the documentary heritage of humanity.



Left: Ddungddungi Halmeoni Jib | Right: In her mid-80s and still going strong, Grandma Jeon Suk-nyeol attributes her health to eating jokbal every day.



Jokbal Alley first began over 50 years ago when Grandma Jeon Suk-nyeol moved her 10-year-old jokbal restaurant from Pyeongyang down to Seoul. What started as one little restaurant with only 4 tables has become a popular food destination with 9 different restaurants all specializing in jokbal! And although Grandma Jeon Suk-nyeol's restaurant has been around the longest, the other restaurants in the alley have been around for nearly as long, the youngest one being about 30 years old.



Ddungddungi Halmeoni Jib Restaurant's 50-year-old Secret Recipe

The secret to Ddungddungi Halmeoni Jib's delicious jokbal lies with the big iron pot in the middle of their kitchen. This big iron pot has been cooking jokbal for over 50 years, its broth simmering with seasonings and flavors that have had over 50 years to blend and fuse into a concoction that yields sublimely delicious jokbal to this day. Every piece of jokbal simmers in this pot for no less than two and a half hours to ensure optimum tenderness. 

And the seasonings used to make jokbal here aren't just any ol' seasonings. The ganjang (간장; Korean soy sauce) used is homemade, made from meju made from scratch (메주; blocks of fermented soy beans) that is lovingly left to ferment for several years. The salt used is natural sea salt collected from Korea's southern coast and the saeujeot used as a dipping sauce is made from fresh shrimp caught off the coast by local fishermen. 

Left: A hemp bag filled with garlic, onions and ginger is thrown into the pot to add flavor and aroma. | Right: Delicious freshly-made jokbal!


Left: This cave-like room was used as an air-raid shelter in the 1900s. Now its being used as a storage room for jokbal ingredients made from scratch! | Right: Homemade saeujeot

How to Eat Jokbal 
If you prefer your meat tender, then order jokbal made from the back legs. But if you enjoy meat that is chewier in texture, order jokbal made from the front legs. When you order, the first thing that will come out is the banchan. The banchan that comes out differs with every jokbal restaurant, but generally jeon (also known as buchimgae) dishes are a popular accompaniment, along with dongchimi and kimchi. Lettuce and perilla leaves are also commonly served, used to wrap up the jokbal before eating.




Makguksu 
Makguksu is a buckwheat noodle dish served in a chilled meat-based broth or mixed with gochujang (고추장; red chili pepper paste) and vinegar. It is very similar to naengmyeon (냉면; the archetypal Korean cold noodle dish) in many ways, but differs in that it has a higher concentration of buckwheat flour in its noodles and that greater amounts of vegetables are used. The dish gets its name—"rough noodles"—from the fact that the buckwheat used is generally unhulled.


Jeon / Buchimgae

Jeon (전), also known as buchimgae (부침개), are savory pancake-like dishes made by mixing various ingredients such as sliced meats, poultry, seafood and vegetables into rice or wheat flour-based batter (sometimes also coated with egg batter) and then pan-frying the mixture with oil. This dish tastes best when it is dipped in a sauce made of ganjang (간장; Korean soy sauce), vinegar and gochugaru (고춧가루; red chili pepper powder).




Dongchimi

Dongchimi (동치미) is a non-spicy variety of kimchi consisting of mu (무; daikon, a type of white radish), baechu (배추, napa cabbage), spring onions, fermented green chili, ginger, Korean pears. All of the ingredients are left to ferment in a light watery brine. Many people enjoy dongchimi because of its clean, refreshing taste!
You can wrap up jokbal in lettuce or perilla leaves, dip it in saeujeot, or even eat it with makguksu! The choices are endless!



Dipping jokbal in saeujeot is not only delicious, it has been scientifically proven to be the perfect accompaniment to jokbal! Because saeujeot is a fermented food, it contains living enzymes that naturally break down the protein in jokbal. So in a way, saeujeot can be considered a natural digestive aid!

And don't forget the makguksu! Nearly all jokbal restaurants will have makguksu on their menu - that's how much of a complement it is to jokbal! The tangy flavor of makguksu goes great with the savoriness of the jokbal. Last but not least, make sure you order some soju or beer to wash it all down with!



How to Get There
Take subway line 3 to Dongguk Univ. Station and go out exit 3. Walk straight for a couple of minutes and you'll reach the beginning of Jokbal Alley.


Restaurant
Phone
Hours
AJokhoegwan
(족회관)
02-2275-086310 a.m. - 11:30 p.m.
BPyeongnam Jokbal
(평남족발)
02-2275-75809:30 a.m. - 11 p.m.
CGangwon Jokbal
(강원족발)
02-2279-863410 a.m. - 2 a.m.
DWonjo ilho Jangchungdong Halmeoni Jib
(원조1호장충동할머니집)
02-2279-99799:30 a.m. - 11:30 p.m.
EPyeongando Jokbal Jib
(평안도 족발집)
02-2279-975911 a.m. - 11 p.m.
FDdungddungi Halmeoni Jib
(뚱뚱이할머니족발집)
02-2273-532024/7
GPyeongbuk Halmeoni Jib
(평북 할머니집)
02-2275-24179:30 a.m. - 2 a.m.
HNodaji Jokbal
(노다지족발)
02-2278-055711 a.m. - 5 a.m.
IHanyang Jokbal
(한양족발)
02-2265-803310 a.m. - 6 a.m.
Prices
Jokbal: Small 25,000 won / Medium 30,000 won / Large 35,000 won
Makguksu: Small 10,000 won / Large 15,000 won
Cost per person: Approx. 15,000 won


Added Bonus!
There are several major tourist attractions located nearby Jokbal Alley. If you're going for lunch, why not go for a stroll afterwards in Jangchungdan Park? Or if you're going at night, you can head over to Dongdaemun Market for some late night shopping!

IF YOU LOVE TO GET MORE TIPS FROM HAECHI, GO TO VISITSEOUL.COM FOR MORE SEOULFUL TIPS!!!^^*

안녕하새요!!!^^*

***The author would like to emphasize that this has just been reposted from visitseoul.com

Monday, August 1, 2011

Seoul with Yorae Episode 25: N TOWER

TOUR SEOUL and learn from Yorae, our tourguide! Check out this comic from visitseoul.com ~~ Fun, fun and more travel tips from Yorae and Sam!
















Comic Reblogged from VISITSEOUL.COM

안녕하새요!!! ^^*

Monday, July 25, 2011

FILIPOS @ BORYEONG 2011

It's a hot, hot summer! So we kinda wanna bum out...so off we spent the weekend at the MUD PITS!!! ^^



Group shots by Marco Barboza
24.7.2011 의자 민박 


The more, the merrier...The crazier, the better!!! ^^



Thursday, July 21, 2011

MUDPROOF YOUR DSLR. LET'S GEAR UP FILIPOS!!!

Even Reuters Photographers Make Camera Armor Out of Plastic Wrap | Popular Photography





We've all had the occasional situation where things have been spilled, dropped, smeared, or otherwise marred our perfectly good cameras — but what could possibly require covering your entire camera in plastic wrap like that? Reuters photographer Jo Yong-Hak covered the Boryeong Mud Festival this year — an annual weeklong summer celebration that involves millions of people visiting a mud-covered beach for sliding, wrestling, massages, competitions, and generally awesome summertime fun.
The festival takes place on Daecheon beach in Boryeong,120 miles southwest of Seoul, and the mud is renowned for being medicinal — though the celebration is as much about fun as it is health.
As much fun as this is for people, high end camera gear doesn't take so kindly to mud flying in all directions, so Jo Yong-Hak did the only thing practical — wrapping all the gear in plastic wrap. It won't protect the glass of your lens from getting smeared, but it'll stop the mud from getting all through the workings of your precious gears.
Though I can't imagine changing settings through all that plastic is particularly fun. But, it's nice to see that even photogs at the highest level sometimes resort to DIY solutions like this to get the shot.

********************************************************************************************************************************
FILIPOS, LET'S GEAR UP AND MUD-PROOF 'EM!!! LEVEL UP AND GO!!! SUN UP AND MUDS ON!!! XD


Kuya Sam's Travel in Korea Rep.


My Travel Pictures in South Korea Slideshow: SAMUEL’s trip to 서울, 대한민국 was created by TripAdvisor. See another 서울 slideshow. Create a free slideshow with music from your travel photos.

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Daddy Jack the Beanstalk's Birthday


Just when you need to laugh hard~ ^^

For my "dad" in FILIPOS who taught me to be more of a gag! LOL. Kidding!

Happy Birthday UOD DAD! XD

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Transformers 3: Dark of the Moon

I got my shades today! MJ oppa got it from the main reception of our building. Blooper: My name was written on the address and they didn't know where to bring the package..Nyark...! LOL







The whole day I've been working on the Fortran code and finally had a meeting with my professor. Getting things done soon! After the meeting, as I got back to my seat in the lab, GJ oppa asked me if I wanna join the others watch Transformers 3. Oh heck yeah! I TDAP want to and I need a good movie break! That movie sure will tweak my wicked programming brain! LOL.


By 6:20pm, I rode a taxi with Jungeol, MJ and Hwanseok to Jochiwon downtown and we headed to CINUS. And whattabonus! It's Hwanseok oppa's treat! How cool is that?! :D


It was still early so we still had much time to have dinner. At the ground floor of the building, we ate at a Japanese restaurant that had this rotating conveyor on a long table where you can just get your choice of food placed on the belt. Pay for the price of the color of the plate of course. :D


I had 알밥 (Al Bab - fried rice with fish eggs) for dinner and it was good (KRW 5000)! After eating, we still had more than enough time so we played some arcade games. First game, Hwanseok asked me to join him. It was a funny game, like a race, where you had to be fast in pressing the huge buttons and the animations were also funny, like crying babies LOL. MJ and Jungeol played table hockey and other shooting games. By 7:15pm, the two bought some popcorns and HUGE DRINKS and we entered the movie. My coke was so large, I could barely drink a quarter of it!


AND TRANSFORMERS BEGAN!!! Wooooot! XD

Monday, June 27, 2011

Puyehue-Cordon Caulle Volcano in Chile

ash cloud|volcano|

Global cooling anyone?

Nigel Tapper
June 16, 2011






Once all the flight disruptions have stopped, the ash has been cleared from the South American highways, and human affairs appear to have returned to normal, the legacy of the ash and dust thrown up by the Puyehue-Cordon Caulle volcano in Chile may well live on.

The longer-term effects of all this ash and dust could be of wider environmental concern than, say, a few hundred thousand stranded passengers, as difficult as it is for those people.

Volcanic eruptions are awesome spectacles. In part this is due to millions of tonnes of tiny ash and dust particles, known as volcanic aerosols, being blasted high into the air. We've all marvelled at the photographs.



Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/opinion/society-and-culture/global-cooling-anyone-20110616-1g4st.html#ixzz1QTyPlKza

Friday, June 10, 2011

Chased by Butterflies

11 June 2011
0504H
In the laboratory fixing my stuff after finally printing my final report. 


I haven't slept yet but I'm quite happy and excited and a bit nervous because in about 4 hours, my class in Anam will start and we will be doing our final presentation of our individual term project. I have been having a great deal of trouble with this one because for weeks I have been trying to figure out how to go about some second order partial differential equation that unfortunately, only a good computer code can efficiently solve based on the lits I've read and it will have to take me a much longer time to develop a code to get the results for comparison. But good enough, I talked things out with my professor yesterday and I was advised to make a comparative analysis instead since time is already against me. WHEW. 


Earlier, or rather, yesterday while having coffee break with Hyunjoo and Junsik oppa at CBTL, a white butterfly fluttered and seemed to be dancing in front of me for several seconds. It seemed to have effectively kept my calm. The rest of the day was spent doing my homework and finishing my final report. 


I had dinner with Hyunjoo, Gwang, Junsik, Daehoon and Daesok at the 5th floor where our food was delivered. I have tasted the mandu ramyeon a few nights ago but I think the restaurant that delivered our food last night has a better mandu ramyeon for the same price of 3,000 won, there was about a dozen mandu with the noodles! Not bad! And it was ma-ssi-seo-yo!^^ Anyway, the dinner ended up with me eating the last kimbap. LOL. 


I went back to the lab, finally got the answers to the homework and decided to take a shower in the dormitory. I came back in the lab at 11:00pm bringing my Urban Hydrology book with me (I'm supposed to study for the quiz but I barely have time anymore so I might as well study during lunchbreak with Minjae oppa -- cram again LOL), my camera and the charger. By the time I got to the lab, I realized that I forgot to bring the adaptor of the charger's plug! Deeeyyym. So I might as well just leave the slr? Since the battery has only 1 bar left? But I'm also thinking that there just might be a good view or food to shoot even for just a few shots! I might miss it! Hmmmm... 


Anyway, I'm keeping the good vibes because just a while ago in the hwa-jang-sil, a green little butterfly also came flying to me and as I subtly chased it back, it landed for a few seconds on my palm. It looked like a four-leaf clover, only that it was flying! ^___^


In a few minutes, I'm going to walk to the bus station for my 6:20am trip to Seoul. 
"FILIPOS teams break a leg for the amazing race!" -- Too bad I can't come to physically cheer and support you guys cos I have class! I even want to be part of the team but darn. I'm fully-booked in Anam. May this be a good day and may the good vibes keep coming!!! ^____^

Meeting a Multi-Lingual Friend!

10 June 2011


I had lunch today with Hyunjoo and her friends because one of them was anxious to meet me. Jean is a Korean but has lived in the Philippines for 16 years and made it a point to set a lunch meeting with me through Hyunjoo. And what a cool gal! She can speak 6 languages well!


When Hyunjoo and I reached the restaurant, they have already ordered samgyeopsal and nengmyeon. At first I was hesitant to talk to Jean in Tagalog. Eventually I asked and we spoke in Taglish and mostly in English so that others could understand us too. She can speak Japanese, Chinese and Spanish! Hyunjoo and I somehow envied her cos Hyunjoo thinks Jean speaks English very well while I've always loved to learn Spanish. LOL. So Hyunjoo and I made a pact. This summer, we'll both practice with each other, language trade! I will practice Hangeul while Hyunjoo will practice her English with me. Yeah! Hopefully, by the end of summer, I'd be able to converse with more Korean friends in Hangeul and Hyunjoo can speak English more fluently and with more confidence. ^^


It's nice meeting a Korean friend who can speak in Tagalog. Jean and I are looking forward to our next meeting. c",)


After lunch, I treated Hyunjoo at CBTL. We both looked tired and needed coffee for energy boosters anyway. LOL. c",)

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Madrid's Air Tree

Just found an interesting article. I wonder how this structure faired out...
Reposting from metafficient.com
Article written by Justin Thomas


Huge “Air Tree” Structure Produces Its Own Power and Oxygen

by JUSTIN THOMAS on JANUARY 16, 2008
In Madrid, Spain they are currently building a huge structure called an “Air Tree” or “Eco Boulevard de Vallecas”. The Tree was created by Urban Ecosystem to be a social center, and to improve the surrounding environment. The structure is also completely self-sufficient, generating all its own power with solar cells. Any surplus energy is sold to the electrical grid. It also produces oxygen using its arrays of plants and trees, hence the “tree” appellation. The designers say:
…Simple air conditioning systems installed in the air tree are evapotranspirators. This is a natural way to air condition a space, not a part of commercial strategy. Rather, it creates naturally conditioned spaces between 8-10°C cooler than the surrounding streets where the residents can take active part in the public domain.

Structure made of mostly recycled materials