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Thursday, October 3, 2024

An LA-Inspired ‘Floating’ Home In The Byron Hinterland

Believe it or not, the site of this spectacular Coolamon House used to be home to a pig and banana farm. On this tricky and degraded site, that held an unsalvageable house among the animals pens, DFJ Architects got to work bringing the new owners’ dream home to life.

Mutual appreciation between the client and architects for mid-century architecture became the basis for the final design, with Fig Landscapes brought on board to heal the steep 20-acre block. The result is a sturdy house made from natural materials that simultaneously opens to its views, and sinks into them.

DIY Decor with Creative Containers

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Should You Weigh Yourself? 3 Signs to Step Off the Scale

About a decade ago, I quit smoking a pack a day and started eating a pint of ice cream every day instead. After six months of being fueled by cookie-dough varieties and whimsical Ben & Jerry’s c

Get a load of umami

FOODGet a load of umami

Get a load of umami

Glutamic acid salts can be manufactured and added to foods as a flavour enhancer. Its more common name as a food additive is MSG

You know that trance that comes over you when you can’t just eat one? That’s the magical power of umami, the fifth, younger, cooler taste.

Umami was discovered in the early 20th century by a chemistry professor, Kikunae Ikeda. He pondered the possibility of a fifth taste while sipping on dashi, a Japanese soup base containing seaweed. Unable to place its distinct taste into one of the known categories, sweet, salty, bitter, and sour, he posited that there was another taste, a savoury taste.

He confirmed his suspicions by breaking down the seaweed to reveal the chemical component of the taste: glutamic acid. This taste was named umami, a derivative of the Japanese word for delicious.

Glutamic acid salts can be manufactured and added to foods as a flavour enhancer. Its more common name as a food additive is MSG. And although MSG is derived from natural sources, such as molasses and tapioca, the additive has actually been linked to obesity and type 2 diabetes.

However, there are healthy ways of attaining that rich umami flavour. It occurs naturally in a variety of foods, including the following:

  • seaweed
  • sardines, tuna, and oysters
  • mushrooms
  • aged and cured meats such as bacon
  • tomatoes
  • miso and other soy products
  • sweet potatoes
  • green tea
  • Parmesan cheese

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