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26 Jan 04:22

Receta de revuelto fácil de huevo y tomate

by Maria Jose

Receta de revuelto fácil de huevo y tomate

Esta receta de revuelto fácil de huevo y tomate me trae recuerdos de mi infancia. Mi madre nos la preparaba muchas veces para cenar a mis hermanas y a mí. No tengo por costumbre hacerla, pero el otro día me acordé de ella y disfruté mucho. Estoy segura de que no tardaré en volver a repetirla.

Además, es un plato que admite muchísimas variaciones para acomodarlo a nuestros gustos. Podemos añadirle piñones tostados, trocitos de jamón ibérico o incluso aromatizarlo con nuestras hierbas preferidas.

¿No os tienta? Pues en pocos minutos está listo.

Ingredientes

Para 2 personas
  • Huevos 3
  • Aceite de oliva virgen extra
  • Sal
  • Tomate maduro 4

Cómo hacer revuelto fácil de huevo y tomate

Dificultad: Fácil
  • Tiempo total 20 m
  • Elaboración 20 m

Pelamos los tomates, los troceamos menudos y los ponemos en una sartén con un poco de aceite para que reduzcan. Podemos dejarlos más o menos hechos según nos apetezca, no hace falta llegar a la consistencia de salsa de tomate.

En un bol batimos ligeramente los huevos con un poco de sal, los añadimos al tomate y con una cuchara de madera removemos el conjunto hasta que el huevo haya cuajado. Servir inmediatamente.

Dap Revuelto Tomate1

Con qué acompañar el revuelto de huevo y tomate

Os aconsejo servir esta receta de revuelto fácil de huevo y tomate inmediatamente, pues caliente es como mejor sabe. Acompañadlo de una rebanada de pan y una ensalada, de este modo es un entrante estupendo o una deliciosa cena. Veréis como os engancha si lo probáis.

En Directo al Paladar | Cómo hacer revuelto de bacalao. Receta En Directo al Paladar | Cómo hacer un revuelto de morcilla con pasas y piñones. Receta

-
La noticia Receta de revuelto fácil de huevo y tomate fue publicada originalmente en Directo al Paladar por Maria Jose .

26 Jan 04:20

Woodworking porn

26 Jan 04:15

Why I Think of Pasta as a Crouton, Not a Main Dish — Loving Food While Losing Weight

by Joy Manning
Sautéed broccoli slaw topped with spaghetti sauce and a handful of cooked pasta.
Pin it button big

Poor pasta. That most comforting of comfort foods has really had some bad press in recent years. If you’re going gluten free, or paleo, or just following the common sense advice to eat less refined flour, pasta is not on the menu as much anymore.

When I first cut back on it, I missed its ease. Pasta night is a delicious breeze of a weeknight meal. But then I discovered a use for pasta that can be summed up in one word: croutons.

READ MORE »

26 Jan 04:14

Rhetological Fallacies

by Barry Ritholtz
26 Jan 04:10

The ‘X-Files’ Is Getting a Reboot

by Remy Carreiro

xfiles1

Holy crap, the X-Files is getting a reboot. Though they have been in talks for years about bringing this exciting show to the masses once again, up until now it had only been speculation. As of yesterday, speculation crossed over into fact (like an actual X-Files episode). From Vanity Fair:

Over the weekend, Fox confirmed that they were in the logistical phase of rebooting the series. That is to say, they were checking to make sure they could get all the original players back and available at the same time because, Fox promised, they’re not doing The X-Files without Mulder and Scully.

I will admit, I am a huge fan of the original series, and watched it weekly without missing an episode. And even though it sounds like they’re doing it right by getting the original cast, I’m a tad bit hesitant. While I am very excited about the prospect of getting to explore the paranormal with agents Mulder and Scully again, can lightning strike twice for this prestigious series? Guess we will have to just wait and see. I have faith, though. I KNOW the truth is still out there, so their work isn’t done yet.

[Story from VanityFair | Image Source]

The post The ‘X-Files’ Is Getting a Reboot appeared first on Geeks are Sexy Technology News.

26 Jan 04:06

Elton John talks about Freddie Mercury

26 Jan 04:03

seananmcguire: natalunasans: nanodash: Today I want to talk...





seananmcguire:

natalunasans:

nanodash:

Today I want to talk to you about my new favourite scientist. His name is F.D.C. Willard.

F.D.C. Willard is a co-author on a single paper in the 1970s about low tempurature physics. F.D.C. Willard is also a Siamese cat. That image is his signature.

You see, a physicist named John H. Hetherington wrote a paper. He used “we” a lot when writing it. Based on the standards at the time a paper written by one person would never be accepted if it said “we” right the way through. J.H. Hetherington was far too lazy to re-type it though, so he just made up a fancy name for his cat Chester. Who was sired by a cat called Willard.

F.D.C. Willard

Felis. Domesticus. Chester. Willard.

(This is not F.D.C. Willard, just a nice example of Siamese Cat)

but i want to know did the cat help with the research?!

He sat on it a lot.

26 Jan 04:00

Adult Swim Gets Piracy

26 Jan 03:51

The Last Straw

26 Jan 02:26

I know you're out there, and you're not an asshole.

26 Jan 02:25

sexghosts: Actual Richard Nixon campaign paraphernalia





sexghosts:

Actual Richard Nixon campaign paraphernalia

26 Jan 02:20

Thanks, Video Game Store, For Helping Parents Out

26 Jan 02:18

seananmcguire: farorescourage: busket: sixpenceee: alloursong...







seananmcguire:

farorescourage:

busket:

sixpenceee:

alloursongswillbelullabies:

sixpenceee:

Doesn’t that look beautiful?

Like something you’d find on one of those soft/nature blogs?

Well you are in for a surprise

The Bolton Strid in England is one of the most innocent looking streams. 

Though it looks like you could just hop across the rocks, but if you miss you will die for sure. It packs very rapid currents just a couple of feet below its surface. No one really knows how deep it really is. Nobody who has ever fallen into the Strid has survived. It has a 100% fatality rate.

It’s always the things I google expecting to be false that wind up being horribly true.

I forgot to add but here is a SOURCE

"It’s relatively common for people to assume they can jump the creek, walk across its stones or even wade through it (again, just looking at it, the Strid really seems to be only knee-deep in places, and certainly not the instant, precipitous drop into a watery grave that it is). Most of the time, they never even find the body. Which means there are just dozens of corpses down there, pinned to the walls of the underground chasms, waiting for you to join them…"

how dare you leave out the best quote

“It’s exactly how water works in a video game: It looks all stupid and harmless, but the second your foot touches the surface, you get some bullshit drowning animation and die instantly.”

I tried and tried to get someone to take me here while I was in England, but apparently “chases frogs into traffic” and “has been known to fall into ponds she wasn’t even close to” is a combination that makes my friends forbid me the Strid.

26 Jan 01:45

"GamerGate seeks to drive women out of computing by choosing some targets, harassing them until they..."

GamerGate seeks to drive women out of computing by choosing some targets, harassing them until they go into hiding, and warning the remaining women (and the declining number of women pursuing computer science degrees) that they might be next. Methods for achieving this include:  

  • anonymous threats of assault, rape, and murder.
  • anonymous messages to employers seeking to have the victim demoted or dismissed.
  • publicizing the target’s sexual history, both as an end in itself and as a way to make the target less attractive to prospective employers.
  At an early date, GamerGate identified Wikipedia, “the encyclopedia anyone can edit,” as ideal for their purposes. It’s conspicuous. Google loves it: for most everyday people, Google will make Wikipedia its first or second hit. No one admits it, but reporters use Wikipedia as a crib all the time. It’s anonymous, and it’s rich enough to make that anonymity stick.”

-

Mark Bernstein: How GamerGate Uses Wikipedia as a weapons platform.

These GamerGate assholes are explicitly and implicitly supported and have been enthusiastically endorsed by Adam Baldwin. You may want to think about this, if you’re considering attending a convention where he’s appearing.

26 Jan 01:42

coldmorningsun: bidyke: robothugscomic: New Comic! I’ve had...





















coldmorningsun:

bidyke:

robothugscomic:

New Comic!

I’ve had this one sitting in my to-do pile for a while, and was finally galvanized to draw it up after going to a talk around intersections of sex, gender, and race this weekend. The topic of pronouns and terminology came up and the speaker just sort of smirked and said ‘yeah, we all know who wrote the dictionaries, don’t we?’ and I was like YES I HAVE A WHOLE THING ABOUT THAT.

My proudest moment of this comic is that I managed to sneak a penis joke into it.

Relevant!

Also, dictionaries take so long to collate they become obsolete before their completion, almost by definition (har har)

26 Jan 01:31

January 25, 2015


The secret kangaroo penguin club meeting went really well. I couldn't believe all the celebrities who showed up!
26 Jan 01:30

Watch the northern lights captured in real time in 4K

by Andrea James
This video is so beautiful. Crank the resolution way up to 4K and enjoy. Read the rest
25 Jan 22:22

Police: Suspect Is White Male, Average Height & Build, Has Mouth, Two Eyes

by Kevin

The lead-in by ABC13 News in Houston pretty much sums it up:

the mask

The Rosenberg Police Department admitted that this might be a "long shot," but decided to release the sketch anyway, because you never know. On the department's Facebook page, they asked readers to "pay special attention to the details around the eyes and mouth," which seems like good advice here.

24 Jan 23:27

carry-on-my-wayward-butt: jennifermorriswan: frog-and-toad-are-...













carry-on-my-wayward-butt:

jennifermorriswan:

frog-and-toad-are-friends:

freedummring:

cubebreaker:

This helpful guide about what 200 calories looks like reminds us just how much healthy food we’re giving up each time we have a treat.

yeah, asshole. how dare you eat an order of french fries when you could have literally shoved 22 banana peppers in your fucking face-hole. what a piece of shit you are.

"Why would you eat a hot dog when instead you could eat a pound-and-a-half of baby carrots"

Let me eat what looks like 30 celery stalks, instead of a delicious muffin.

aside from the chocolate chips and the peanut butter maybe, everything on the left is cheaper than the right.

A value size mcds fries is like 99 cents and that amount of peppers is about 3.50 (I have a bag. recommended if u have the money, chop em up in ur eggs)

I really really hate posts like these because they always carry this gross “look it’s so easy to do this and it’s your fault you’re unhealthy” or whatever kind of tone. half the time posts like these completely ignore the convenience/prep time, income level/cost, and location. shit like this always, ALWAYS, whether intentional or not doesn’t matter, they always carry classist, blaming undertones.

not to mention, celery is almost entirely water. there is no flavor, there are barely any nutrients, and it’s not filling. Eat that cheap ass 99 cent gas station muffin and survive the morning while Harry Health-Kick goes and fucks himself

Reblogging (again) for commentary

24 Jan 23:24

January 24, 2015


POW!
24 Jan 20:14

Star Wars

A long, long time (plus 40 years) ago, in a galaxy far, far away (plus a corrective factor involving the Hubble constant) ...
24 Jan 19:18

Bird showers before school.



Bird showers before school.

24 Jan 11:28

Swedish reality TV show will hunt online trolls

by Mark Frauenfelder

CBC interviews Robert Aschberg, who is hosting a new reality TV show in Sweden about exposing online bullies.

The Swedish reality TV show Trolljägarna (Troll Hunter) sets out to expose the anonymous users and shady characters fuelling online hatred and harassment.

Read the rest
23 Jan 04:07

Photo



23 Jan 04:03

"Being a girl was complicated. It was swallowing rusty nails and clawing our way towards something we..."

Being a girl was complicated. It was swallowing rusty nails and clawing our way towards something we didn’t even know we really wanted.

When I was thirteen I told Stephanie that drinking orange juice could stop you from fainting because it raises your blood sugar. In sophomore year, she slammed her head, saw stars, and ended up drinking an entire carton in one sitting. She vomited on her kitchen floor, but she couldn’t tell if it was from the concussion or from a pint of orange juice sitting in her stomach. Her doctor told her mother, “All girls try throwing up at some point.”

I remember the first time one of my friends came to me with eyes so red I thought she’d inhaled a desert. She said her mother had died from breast cancer the night before. She said her home was an open grave, a holy space. She said she’d rather be in school than dealing with an absence so loud nobody could speak. I still think about her every time someone says “save the ta-tas” instead of “please god save our mothers haven’t enough of us suffered.”

On certain Saturday nights we’d all get dressed up like we were going somewhere fancy and then sit in and watch Disney movies. We filled ourselves up with popcorn and gossip. When Patty showed up with a black eye again, we all said nothing about it. We were too young to make fists out of fingers, I think.

A girl on the train was reading a book I love. We got to talking. She’s from the Peace Corps, she said, gave me a smile like a thousand volts. She was one of those people who make you feel good about yourself. When she got up to go, she gave me a little wave. I said “Go stop violence,” and she laughed. Hanging off the back of her bag was a little pink can of mace.

We learned to be secret defend-each-other types. We were going to hold the world down until it liked us. There is something bold about being defiant. There is something about having soft petal skin and still showing sharp teeth.

The box was little and teal and had a bow attached to it. Inside was a pair of brass knuckles in the shape of cat ears. “In case,” my father said, “In case.”

I remember my sister, body wrapped in a towel, saying, “It’s not as bad as it looks,” her shinbone a mess of blood where her razor slipped. She said she saw the patch of skin she removed. She wiggled her eyebrows while holding up her pointer finger. “This long,” she said, “And pretty thick.” She had to throw it out rather than let it clog the drain.

He was tall and gawky and if you asked him personal questions, his ears turned red. He asked if I wanted to go out to the pond in the woods. I blushed and told him I couldn’t swim, and he gasped as if he’d been stung. He picked me up so easily, like I weighed nothing. He put me in the trunk of his car. We were laughing.

Much later, a stranger the same size would say, “Hey mama, wanna come home with me?”

I remember I met this one girl passed out on a couch, her dress hiked up around her hips. She was lying in her own vomit. “Let’s keep walking,” someone said, “Don’t get involved.” I was too much empathy in a small body to let her go unprotected. She shivered in the shower we put her in. Her skin was so blue around her eyes, I thought maybe she’d slipped the sky in there. She looked terrified. I asked her how much she drank, she couldn’t say. I asked her how she got here, she bit her lip and shook her head. “My friends… Just left,” she said, “They just left.” Sometimes friends are like that, I guess.

In late nights, I heard Kathrine crying about the things her father had said to her. She once told me that if it was a choice between being born with her learning disabilities and being born without a tongue, she’d choose the latter one. I whispered something of an apology that fell as flat as I felt, we don’t talk about it ever again.

Skeleton hands never stop shaking me awake. Sometimes I think we’re drowning and sometimes I think we are just painted that way. There’s never an excuse not to be dainty. Someone once told me that beauty is pain.

I remember her lips and how they were bright pink, because the words out of them were sick green things. Maggie said she’d swallowed eighty-nine Tylenol two days before. She said they’d filled her with charcoal and had her spit back up the blackness that was swelling like a river inside of her. We were fourteen.

We flirted with people we didn’t know, we used other people’s hands to mess up our hair, we got home late. We towered in heels that hurt to look at. We felt fierce, on fire. We painted our lips blood red and kissed the mirror until we got a perfect mark out of it. We’d spend ages just getting ready. It was the fun part of parties, I guess.

Her spine cracked while she rested her head on my leg. She said, “Let’s never get old, okay?” and I told her that sounded great. Sometimes in the darkness, she’d sound serious about it. I wanted to ask her if she was fighting bigger demons than the ones I can raise, but before I found out, she moved away.

We belonged to a group that was all punchline. Someone says, “teen girls, am I right?” and laughter spreads like ripples through the room.

I remember the first time you find out that they hurt one of your friends, because that’s how you find out you’re not safe either. She looked so whole, and that was the problem. Her mascara wasn’t even running. I watched her tell the story five ten twenty times to officers who shuffled papers and sniffed at every other word and sighed often and looked at their watch even though they were the reason she was talking. They asked her what she was wearing, she gestured to her body: jeans, tee-shirt, hoodie. They asked her if she knew him, she said no. They asked her if she provoked him, she said no. They asked her if she told him to stop, she fell silent. After a while, she’d try to explain the fear that had crept up her throat until she had choked. They sighed. Asked for the story again. She had this look on her face that I still dream about. It looked like someone had sucked her soul out.

Kelly in the ninth grade with her shining face telling me, “One of us is the better person. Everyone always compares us.”

A waiter looking down my shirt and saying, “Just a water for you, huh?”

Ballet class with pin-thin shaking hands and bathrooms that smelt like a bad dream. A teacher who said, “Don’t eat unless you faint, darlings.” You get used to cigarettes in the hands of young girls. You get used to the backstage addictions of “only nine hundred more crunches to go.” You get used to seeing this stuff until one day someone asks you why you know all the calories in a grapenut.

The television saying, “Lose weight, feel great.”
The television saying, “Girls mean nothing.”
The television saying, “If you’re not pretty, you’re not worth discussing.”
The television saying, “If you’re pretty, your personality is awful.”
The television saying, “Spend your money.”

My father telling me: there’s nothing wrong with this system.



- Memories // r.i.d (via inkskinned)
23 Jan 03:47

Hi

image

Yo

23 Jan 03:47

Доброе утро!



23 Jan 02:53

How to sneak choclate into American movie theatres.

23 Jan 02:52

The First Historical Thesaurus of English Contains Almost Every English Word From Old English to Present Day

by Rebecca Escamilla

Excellent
An example of results for the word “excellent”

The Historical Thesaurus of English Project, started in 1965 by British historical linguist Michael Samuels, works to chart “the semantic development of the huge and varied vocabulary of English.” After 44 years of research and collaboration primarily at the University of Glasgow, a print edition of the thesaurus was published in 2009.

Language is always changing, of course, so the project is ongoing at the Historical Thesaurus of English website, launched just last week on the 50th anniversary of the start of the project. The digital version–containing almost 800,00 words–is the self-proclaimed “first historical thesaurus ever produced for any language, containing almost every word in English from Old English to the present day.”

The thesaurus is arranged in a hierarchical style, with words classified in semantic categories.

This hierarchical structure differs from the organization of many other thesauri; Historical Thesaurus categories relate to others not just linearly, but can operate either horizontally (on the same hierarchical level) or vertically (on a higher or lower level, either containing or being contained by another category). In addition, each concept is able to contain a series of subcategories within itself, separate from the main sequence. You can see this on any category page on this site, which each have navigation options to travel “Up the hierarchy”, “Down the hierarchy”, a set of subcategories (if present), and links to move horizontally to other parts of speech which refer to the same concept. Choosing to go up the hierarchy and scrolling down to the bottom of a category page can let you see the neighbour categories of any given concept.

Dolt
An example of results for the word “stupid”

images via Historical Thesaurus of English

via Evening Times

Thanks, Jason Laskodi!

23 Jan 02:51

okej

by rade