Sunday, September 23, 2007

Ratatouille - The Movie and the Recipe

My kids liked the movie Ratatouille .




I hope they will like the vegetable stew as well ...

Try out this Ratatouille recipe from Provence & Beyond :


Recipe (12 servings makes about 4.5 litres)
1.6 kg tomato [tomate]
700 g eggplant (2) [aubergine]
500 g zucchini (2) [courgette]
700 g bell pepper (2-3) [poivron]
1 kg onion [oignon]
6 cloves garlic [ail]
Herbes de Provence (basilic,thyme, parsley)
olive oil [huile d'olive]
salt, pepper [sel, poivre]
140 g tomato paste

Common Method

This method, or a variation, takes fewer pots, is somewhat faster, yet keeps the flavors well and is commonly used. About 65 minutes cooking.

1. Peel and drain the tomatoes (don't mind the seeds): cut out the stem cores; drop the whole tomatoes into boiling water for 2 minutes. Remove into a collander. The skin should split for easy removal; otherwise, make an X cut in the top, then peel off the skin.

2. Chop the onion and garlic. Clean the bell pepper, cut into small strips.

3. In a large cooking pot with thick bottom, put in olive oil, onions and chopped garlic. Add in the bell pepper. Cover to keep in the moisture. Cook for 20 minutes, stiring frequently, and add olive oil as necessary to prevent singing.

4. Add the peeled tomatoes and herbs de Provence. If you don't have good garden tomatoes with flavor, add a small can of tomato paste. Stirr well and cook for another 15 minutes. [35']

5. Cut the eggplant into rondelles. Cut the un-peeled zucchini into rondelles.

6. Add the eggplant and zucchini to the pot. Cook for about 30 minutes. [65']

Classical Method

This is the "old fashioned" method. We did it this way the first couple of times, just for the experience. It fills the kitchen surfaces with pots and pans, takes a bit longer, but doesn't really add to the flavor.

1. Cut the eggplant into rondelles; keep separate. Peel the zucchini, cut into rondelles, keep separate. Clean the bell pepper, cut into small strips, keep separate. Chop the onion, keep separate.

2. Peel, de-seed and drain the tomatoes (*)

3. Using four separate cooking pots, put some olive oil in the bottom; put in the eggplant, zucchini, pepper, and onion into their own pots; sprinkle some flour onto the eggplant and onto the zucchini. Put the four pots on to cook slowly. Each cooks for about 30 minutes, but test and cook each until correctly soft.

4. In a large cooking pot with a thick bottom, put in olive oil, chopped garlic, herbes de Provence. Squeeze the tomatoes in by hand. Cook slowly until you have a thick tomato sauce.

5. Add the four separately cooked vegetables to the tomato sauce, mix thoroughly and heat. Pour off the excess oil from the top. It's ready to serve.

Our Method

The first couple of times we made our ratatouille we used the pure "Classical" method, juggling our separate pots and being astounded when our chaos resulted in success. Having done it the "true" way, we then used the "Common Method" a few times: a single pot but everything still very time-sensitive. Our current method is much simpler, and produces the same great results. When we serve it to our neighbors and local friends it gets good reviews. When we admitted to some of the old-timers about our short-cut ways, they've told us that that's the way "it's always been done".

1. Prepare a large cooking pot with thick bottom, put in plenty olive oil.

2. Chop the onion, put it into the pot and start it cooking slowly. Chop and add the garlic.

3. Wash the bell pepper, cut into small strips, and stir it in.

4. Wash the tomatoes, chop them up in big chunks, and throw them in (no peeling) and stir in well.

5. Add the herbs de Provence and pepper. If the tomatoes are flavorless (all too common these days), we add a small can of condensed tomato sauce at this time.

6. Cut the eggplant and the zucchini into big chunks, then throw them into the pot. Then then need to be stirred down frequently until they've merged with the rest of the ingredients.

This takes about an hour, from when we first start chopping until everything is in the pot together. We then cook slowly for one to two hours, depending on how chunky you want in and how eager you are to try it.

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Expat in Germany

Here is an informative site for those who plan to live and work in Germany ...

http://www.howtogermany.com/

Customer Experience


Innovation and Strategic Growth


From: imootee, 4 months ago








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Content Management


Markus Evans: Web Content Management | 30.05.2001


From: DRUKFF, 3 weeks ago





Some early history of ECM ... 2001 ... one of the first slide presentations explaning ECM Enterprise Content Management. Markus Evans Senior Executive Forum: "Web Content Management - Vom Content Management zum Change Management", Berlin, Germany, 30.05.2001, Keynote by Dr. Ulrich Kampffmeyer, PROJECT CONSULT, at tthat time vice chair of AIIM Europe. (c) AIIM 2001 & PROJECT CONSULT Unternehmensberatung 2001. The term ECM Enterprise Content Management emerged late in the year 2000. AIIM, the international ECM association choose ECM as their new message and focus when Web Content Management started to overcome traditional document management. One of the first presentations in Europe was held by Dr. Ulrich Kampffmeyer, member of the board of directors of AIIM Europe in those days, in Berlin at the Markus Evans Senior Executive Forum "WEB CONTENT MANAGEMENT - Vom Content Management zum Change Management" (30th May until 1st June, 2001) at the Hotel Inter-Continental in Berlin. In 2001 the term Enterprise Content Management was explained as follows: "The technologies used to create, capture, customize, deliver, and manage enterprise content to support business processes”. This presentation already contains the basic settings of ECM which where later on enhanced to todays perception of ECM Enterprise Content Management by AIIM ( http://www.aiim.org/about-ecm.asp ): "Enterprise Content Management (ECM) is the technologies used to capture, manage, store, preserve, and deliver content and documents related to organizational processes. ECM tools and strategies allow the management of an organization's unstructured information, wherever that information exists." (definiition in August 2007)


SlideShare Link

Slideshare

Need some ideas for your next powerpoint presentation? Take a look at Slideshare.

http://www.slideshare.net/

Online German Dictionary

There are lots of online German dictionaries in the Internet. But LEO is the one I am particularly fond of.

http://www.leo.org/leo_home_en.html

German Verb Conjugations

This is a site to look up on conjugations of German verbs and its Spanish equivalent.

http://verben.awardspace.com/