Alaskan Cheese Fries Melt (Recipe) まろやか口どけアラスカンチーズフライ レシピ
Simple and delicious! I fried avocado and cheese wrapped with smoked salmon. You can sprinkle them with lemon juice for a refreshing taste! This recipe won the highest award at KRAFT's cheese recipe contest. It became a recipe card. createeathappy.blogspot.jp cookpad.com --------------------------------- Alaskan Cheese Fries Melt Difficulty: Very Easy Time: 15min Number of servings: 8 Ingredients: 8 slices natural cheese 1/2 avocado 8 slices smoked salmon * flour * beaten egg * Panko (bread crumbs) vegetable oil for frying lemon wedge *optional Directions: 1. Slice avocado widthwise into 8 slices. 2. Place a slice of smoked salmon so that the length of it is running flat and vertically towards you. Place the sliced avocado and natural cheese on the end of the smoked salmon close to you and start rolling (you don't have to wrap them securely because you are going to deep fry for just a few seconds). 3. Flour the salmon rolls lightly, dip in beaten egg, then coat with Panko. Use one hand to coat flour and Panko, and use the other to dip in egg to keep one of your hands dry. 4. Deep fry them for a few seconds in oil at 190C (374F) until golden brown. Remove them from the oil before the cheese melts and oozes out. 5. Serve with lemon wedge if you like. ↓レシピ(日本語) cooklabo.blogspot.jp --------------------------------- KRAFT Kireteru Cheese (クラフト 切れてるチーズ) www.morinagamilk.co.jp Music by Josh Woodward I Hate You (Instrumental Version) www.joshwoodward.com www ...
Words at War: Your School, Your Children / The Cross and the Arrow / Scapegoats in History
Gustavus Myers (1872--1942) was an American journalist and historian who published a series of influential studies on capital formation. His name is associated with the muckraking era of American literature. In 1891, Myers went to work as a reporter for the Philadelphia Record, leaving the next year for New York City, where he remained for the rest of his life.[1] In the 1890s, Myers became a member of the People's Party (commonly known as the "Populists"), later joining the Socialist Party of America (SPA).[1] In the decade of the 1910s, Myers emerged as a leading scholar of the American socialist movement when he authored a series of volumes for Charles H. Kerr & Co., the country's largest publisher of Marxist books and pamphlets. Between 1909 and 1914, Myers published three volumes on the history of family wealth in the United States, one volume on the same topic for Canada, and a history of the Supreme Court of the United States. These publications were frequently cited and used in an academic setting for several decades, with Myers' History of the Great American Fortunes revived in a single volume format in 1936.[1] Myers split with the Socialist Party in 1917 over the SPA's position against American intervention in World War I.[1] In 1918 Myers contributed to the American war effort by publishing a book attacking what he called "Germany's Sinister Propaganda" entitled The German Myth: The Falsity of Germany's "Social Progress" Claims. Myers received a Guggenheim ...