Archive for February, 2011
BoxWave Capacitive iPad Stylus (Lunar Blue)

While capacitive touch screens are great, one flaw is the inability to use a stylus. Not anymore! BoxWave’s Capacitive Stylus allows you to use your iPad without ever touching the screen with your finger.  Perfect for the ladies out there who have their nails done, or for those who don’t want to take their gloves off during a cold day. The Capacitive Stylus is conveniently sized, and designed like a pen to fit just about anywhere.
A Look at Some of the Recipes for Preparing Elderberry Wine
The earliest known production of wine Georgia and Iran. For a long time now wine has been made from natural fermentation of grape vine juice. Today, there are other different types of wines made from different fruit juices. Some of the most famous being the apple juice wine, elderberry wine, barley wine and rice wine. All these ingrediants for making wine have naturally occuring starch, enzymes and other nutrients. The grapes harvested from farms in South Africa, California, and Greece are crushed and then fermented with yeast. Yeast helps in converting the sugars found in these fruits into alcohol.
Included in the category of fermented alcoholic drinks, elderberry wine is one of the most well flavored fruit liquor produced at home or in industrial conditions. Fruit wine is often preferred to the traditional type of beverage due to the lower alcohol concentration in the structure, not to mention that it is sweeter and more juice-like than any other beverage of the kind. Together with strawberries, elderberries are some of the few fruits that have all the right amounts of natural substances to create a respectable and tasty wine. Elderberry wine contains acid, sugar and tannin that allow a natural and rapid fermentation.
The elderberry wine is made from the fruits of a shrub that produces blue and black berries; it usually grows in the wild and the right time for the making of this liquor is in mid summer. Elderberry wine is very well flavored and its aroma is directly connected to the area where it grows: moist land, rich soil, particularly on river banks and pastures. It is the juice of these fruit that makes the right ingredient for the elderberry wine, being also used to make jelly for instance. Do not cook the elderberries, they need to be raw in order to make the perfect wine.
There are plenty of recipes for preparing elderberry wine: some of them recommend the use of fresh fruit some others rely on dried elderberries. The color of the wine as such can be enhanced if you place the wine vessel into a dark room during the fermentation process; even afterwards when the elderberry wine is ready, always store it in dark bottles and in dark places in order to preserve its qualities. When you pour such a wine in your glass, you’ll be truly delighted with the result as it appeals to the senses through the visual impact, the smell and finally the taste.
The fruits you use for the elderberry wine need to be completely clean and have the stems removed, afterwards wash them with fresh water and mash them wearing rubber gloves. Elderberry wine usually requires the use of a certain amount of sugar, as the fruit are pretty sour; in order to do things properly, always follow a recipe so as to make sure all the necessary steps are taken. The making process can take up to at least two months, and during this period of time you’d have to take care of the elderberry wine progressively and persistently. However, the effort is worth making; enjoy it!
Originally published here.
Muna wa Wanjiru
A working life: The crematorium officer
Allistair Anderson from the City of London cemetery explains why discretion and professionalism are so important in his line of business, as is a good sense of humour Outside the north chapel of the City of London cemetery and crematorium in east London, a single magpie hops around on the grass. Close by, a family is waiting for Allistair Anderson, the cemetery’s senior crematorium officer, to …
Published Feb 21, 2011.
Read more: Guardian Unlimited