Saturday, July 21, 2012

Tofu Dango - Món Ngọt Cho Người Thích Ăn Đậu Hủ

Chào bà con cô bác,
Hôm nay mình kiếm dc công thức làm món này trên Youtube. Cooking with Dog chỉ nè. Công thức trong đó nên mình không chỉ lại ha =))))



Trước khi làm nó như thế lày. Xếp hàng ngay ngắn chuẩn bị bị quăng vô nồi 
















 Nhìn kĩ nó hao hao giống cái quạt nhật. (giống cái quạt đồ chơi của le hơn, nhưng mà kiếm ko ra hình -.- ) 




Nhìn cũng ok quá đó chớ  


Làm chung với nước sốt đây (Làm từ nước tương Kikkoman đó) 


Măm măm thôi ! 
























LỪA TÌNH ĐÓ !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 

Ng ta làm thì ngon. Mìn làm thì ăn như shit dzay !!!! :(((((( AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAaaa

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Cuộc xâm lăng của binh đoàn côn trùng

Damn, damn, damn, damn!!!!! Từ ngày bước chân qua mỹ, mềnh gặp rất là nhiều điều bất ngờ, nhiều đến độ kể ko hết như là bầu trời nhìn như đồ giả, 2 bên dg đào cái rãnh giống như để bẫy xe, báo việtnam viết sai chính tả trầm trọng, vân vân và vân vân. Điều bất ngờ nhất là côn trùng: ruồi, muỗi, nhện, gián, mọt, mối .......

Kinh tởm, kinh dị, creepy, muốn ói !!!!!! nhắc lại còn rợn da gà . Mà lạ một điều là tụi côn trùng nó theo mùa, theo đợt chứ ko xuất hiện cùng một lúc. cứ như chúng nó sợ nhau vậy đó. trong 1 cái nhà chỉ có một loài dc tồn tại thôi. Mọi chuyện nó xảy ra như thế này.

Khi mình mới qua là mùa đông, ko có con nào sống nỗi hết (or tụi nó đi ngu đông bà nó rồi) nên mình rất là dzui. Wa mỹ ko có gặp cái tụi nhìu chân hôi hám đó nữa. But... (lúc nào cũng có chữ này)

Vào tháng 3, thảm họa bắt đầu.

1 buổi sáng đẹp trời, mình ngủ dậy bước ra bếp, thấy một bé ruồi bé bé xinh xinh, liền lấy cây đập nó một phát. Bé liền bẹp dí mà chết. Ngay tức thì, nghe rất nhiều tiếng đập cánh. Một binh đoàn ruồi bay ra bao vây mình. Má má má má. Sáng hôm đó, mình đập dc 9 con trong 15', còn nhiều hơn số lượng mình đập trong 18 năm ở VN. Bắt đầu từ đó, một ngày mình phải đập ít nhất 20 con/ ngày. Ko bít làm sao mà chúng nó bay vô nhà mình dc. Nhà kín cổng cao tường. Cửa ra vào còn ko mở thì làm sao vô dc ko bít.

2 tuần sau, bỗng 1 ngày ko thâý một con ruồi nào. Vậy là thoát nạn ruồi. Phải đi ăn mừng mới dc. Lấy cơm ra nấu. Bắt dc 5 con mọt gạo trong 3 lon gạo. Thật ra ko nhiều lắm nên bỏ qua. Ngày hôm sau, đang ăn cơm, thấy xác 3, 4 con trong chén cơm của mình. WTH? lập tức di lọc cái thùng gạo, bắt dc 20 con. Á á á. Tụi nó hoành hành suốt 2 tháng trời. Chúng nó bò khắp nhà, bò vào phòng ngủ, bò ra phòng khách, bò l6n giường, lên gối. Tóm gọn lại là ở đâu cũng có tụi nó. trời ơi.

Bây h thì tới nạn gián. Trời ơi, lúc này chỉ ước gì tụi mọt nó way về để tụi gián nó ra đi. Tụi này thiệt là ghê quá đi. Mính ko sợ chúng nó bò dưới đât mà mình sợ tụi nò bu trên tường or nhày dù từ trên trần nhà xuống giường lúc mình đang ngủ. :(((((((

Hôm nay mình gặp 2 con. Một con buổi trưa và một con buổi tối. Buổi trưa đang làm đồ ăn nhìn qua thấy 1 con đang bò trên cửa sổ cách mình có 2 bước chân. Ông anh chạy ra xịt thuốc, dính thì có dính con gián nhưng mà khổ cái, ta phải rửa lại đống chén. Buổi tối, sau khi rửa chén, lau bếp đầy đủ. Đang cảm thấy hạnh phúc là mình dọn sạch thía này chắc chắn ko có con gián nào bò ra. Tự nhiên thấy lạnh ng, nhìn xuống, thấy một con đang bò bò, cách mình chỉ 3cm. Má má má. Mẹ bà!!!!

Trời ơi, sắp tới sẽ tới con gì nữa đây. :((((((

P/S có cách nào viết blog mà ko sến ko ta. Sao viết hồi sến chảy nước thía này -.-

Monday, July 16, 2012

Bánh Flan

Hôm qua chủ nhật nên rảnh rổi ngồi làm bánh ăn. Như đã hứa, mềnh làm bánh Flan cho các bạn. Đây là một món rất là dễ làm nên lười quá không up recipe dau. post hình lên nhìn chơi thôi :P

 Vừa làm bánh vừa coi phim là sướng nhất. Hiện đang coi lại phim Dương Quý Phi của TVB. Phim này lâu lắm rồi nhưng mà coi lại vẫn thấy nó hay như thường. :X
 Trộn xong rồi nè.

Bỏ vô lò thôi

 (Sau 50') Thành phẩm nè 

Vừa ăn vừa viết Blog, dơ hết cái bàn -.- 


Sunday, July 15, 2012

Magnolia - Nhóm Dịch Truyện Mới Toanh

Cái này chắc có nhiều bạn trẻ không hứng thú đọc đâu nhưng mà bạn Mer To rất là khoái.
Nhóm dịch truyện đã bắt đầu từ tháng 6 rồi nhưng hiện tại đang trong giai đoạn kén chờ nở thành bướm ấy mà. (sến thấy ghê luôn)
Các thành viên cốt cáng bao gồm Zunie Cao, Kiet Prof và Mer To
3 thành viên đang ôm hết các nhiệm vụ: Translator, Proofreader, Editor, Quality Checker và Leader.
Các bạn trẻ nào hứng thú thì đăng ký với bạn Quyên nhá. Làm translator + editor có thể "trao dồi" thêm khả năng tiếng anh + không bị mất gốc tiếng việt dù đang học trường quốc tế hay là đang ở nước ngoài.

Ongoing project: 

Magnolia


Tác giả: Naked Ape (Dolls, Switch, and other doujishins~♥)

 Năm phát hành: 2010

Thể loại : Action, Comedy, Drama, Fantasy, Gender Bender, Harem, Romance, Shoujo (và SA/YA trá hình =)) )

 Nội dung: Thái tử Ayato là một bán nam bán nữ, nhưng vào năm 16 tuổi, Ayato phải chọn giới tính cho mình. Tùy vào giới tình người yêu, Ayato sẽ là nam hoặc nữ. Nhưng anh ấy sẽ mất gì khi anh chọn một trong hai, tình thân? bạn bè? quyền lực? Chúng ta hãy cùng đón xem Magnolia do nhóm Magnolia dịch.


Let's Lagoon 


Tác giả: OKAZAKI Takeshi

Năm phát hành: 2007

Thể loại: Drama, Mystery, Romance, Seinen, Supernatural, Ecchi

Nội dung: Yamada bị trôi đến một hòn đảo hoang và phát hiện mình bị mất trí nhớ. Từ những thứ trong túi, Yamada đoán là mình đang đi dã ngoại với trường và quyết định chờ cứu hộ. Nhưng chờ suôt mấy ngày vẫn không thấy một chiếc thuyền nào, Yamada quyêt định tự làm một chiếc thuyền. Trong lúc đó, một cô gái xuất hiện. Cô ấy là ai? Cô ấy có ảnh hưởng gì đến tương lại của Yamada?

Giới thiệu đến đây thôi. Từ h trở đi, Nhóm dịch truyện Magnolia sẽ cố gắng dịch nhiều hơn, phục vụ cho mọi người.

Friday, May 11, 2012

The Magic of My Modern World



I had a big fight with my literature teacher eight years ago. She asked me to write twenty daily journals which would be due the next month. Now that I remember it, how embarrassing! Please someone, bury me alive! How could I do something so shamefully and so disrespectful? That’s a literature exercise. Of course I had to write. How silly was I?
“A picture is worth a thousand words so why should I write journal? It’s such a waste of paper, ink and space,” I said. I also argued that when rereading it, it costs effort to reconstruct the background, people’s faces and many things else. Sometimes, it takes effort to “decode” what they wrote. They may have bad handwriting, for example, or they didn’t want other people to learn their secrets so they “encrypted” the messages. Now they forget how to “decrypt” them. That is too ironic, isn’t it?
                My opinion hasn’t changed since then. I tried to write journal once because my teacher said it could help me to improve my writing (Although it lasted only one week, I was too lazy to continue). Several years later, I reviewed it and … “What did I write?” Writing is totally inefficient to me while in the opposite, a photograph already “saves” the whole world inside it.
As time passes, things change and memories fade out, even more quickly with some people. It’s the rule, a fact everybody knows and cannot deny.  However, people, landscapes, animals, everything in the pictures never changes; even the ones in Harry Potter series won’t. They move around freely, sometimes out of the frame, but they will never grow old or have plastic surgery. It’s as if the photograph has put a stop in time. Isn’t it amazing for us, humans, to be able to go against nature?

Jogging....
     The memory of how my passion for photography started was vague. I think I inherit it from my father. My family used to own a camera studio in Ho Chi Minh city, Vietnam. Since I was four, I have been watching my father and mother working in their workshop, taking pictures of people. Each of them posed in front of beautiful backgrounds, wore beautiful clothes, and smiled very happily, which lit up the whole room. I admired them very much. It had become a habit of mine to sit at the back of the studio, next to the two-meter-wide black wooden closet in which my parents kept their equipments, wigs and stuff toys; observing and helping them some chores. I didn’t do much help but our customers always praised me when I brought them water and snacks. After our customers went home, I would always stay and help my father cleaning up the studio. Usually, my father spoke very little but during that time, he told me a lot of things about camera such as their history and how they work. I have forgotten most of them but what I do remember best is the image of him holding his camera. That’s when I think my passion started to grow.    
                However, not until I was ten years old did my parents allow me to touch a camera for the first time. I will always remember that day: the twentieth of May 2004 in front of the Third Merlion in Merlion Park in Singapore. I’m still impressed with the imposing landscape that day: wide open blue sky without even a single cloud; crowded people, both young and old, walking in the white park with a lots of high perrons which, to a child like me, seemed to be like mountains made of granite brittles; then a little far away, there was a long, huge green river which connects to the ocean at its end where you would be able to find hundreds or thousands of heavyweight commercial ships with various beautiful colors and decorations; and in the center of all, an enormous statue of a legend animal, half lion, half fish, the pride of the whole “Singapura”, the city of the lion.
                By this time, my family had already moved to a different house where my parents started their camera and accessories shop. In the old studio, my parents only owned one set of manual single-lens- reflex (SLR) so they would obviously not permit me to use it. If I accidentally broke it, we would be dead. However, at that time, we had many different kinds of machines, professional and compact, in our store. So they allowed me to take one photo as I had always wanted. Whenever I look at it, a special feeling arose. The grandiose scene and the cheerful smiles of my parents form the most terrific and unique picture ever. That first photograph I took still remains one of my favorites in the family album.
                 How a camera produces a picture was like magic when I was a child and it still is today. Just using one simple principle which is using a piece of glass to redirect light beam bounced off of an object to form a real image that is captured and stored in a medium such as a film or a memory card, the scientists have improved the technique of photography so much that a normal person could not even imagine. The world had its first photographic image in 1814 by Joseph Niepce using a camera obscura. The photo was not only black and white but also required eight hours of light exposure for the image to appear. However, it faded very quickly afterwards. Twenty three years later, Louis Daquerre succeeded to create the photograph that never decolorized and reduced the eight hour light exposure to thirty minutes. [1] But this camera could only take pictures of still objects under many strict conditions. For example, a photographer wanted to take picture of a person, the model had to stay immobilized in at least 300 seconds and had to put no less than one-centimeter-thick white cream all over their body to create an obvious, visible difference between them and the background in order to have a clear image. Staying still for more than five minutes to have a picture? That’s totally insane. But look at the present, there is nothing’s image people cannot capture, from tree, animal, sun, moon, star or even a drop of water. Now, it only takes 1/6000th second to create a photograph. All we need is one click and Voilà! We have saved an image into the memory card. There are no words that can express how miraculous the scientists have unstoppably pursued the perfection of photography.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/l_s_g/4258054937/sizes/m/in/pool-907335@N22/
Nowadays, owning a camera has become very usual. Millions of people have their own, either professional or portable or maybe both. That’s right! I have, you have, your friends have, your neighbor has. What’s so extraordinary about it? Compared to the past when it’s firstly invented, people will be astonished with how many things have changed in just a couple centuries. Back then, a camera was extremely expensive so the number of owners could only be counted on the finger tips. The weight and the high level of difficulty of using it also limited the opportunity of seeing it to in some important ceremonies or inside the high class mansions. Furthermore, countless myths were invented, especially in Asia where habitants were superstitious at that period of time. The majority of them believed that camera was the evil tool that trapped human’s souls inside the photograph which could be used for cursing. Some even believed that camera was the secret weapon the Westerns sent to destroy their countries. Don’t be surprise; I’m talking about the citizens of the 19th century. Seeing the exact image of them was a fearful thing. They were here, how could they be there? What would happen if their little selves got destroyed? Would they suffer the same fate? The lack of knowledge and the false analogy of the idiot priests created propaganda. But when people feared something, they had crazy actions. As a result, the photographers accidentally became the victims. Instead of receiving respect because of their modern minds, they were beaten up; were assassinated; their houses were burnt down and many things else. Photographer was considered as one of the most dangerous jobs in Asia at that time. From something hardly seen in years, it turns to a phenomenon, an electronic gadget available in every household.
                Technological development has reduced both the price and the size of the cameras so that normal people can afford them. That’s what I hate and love at the same time; it is a contradict but it’s my true feeling. If they have not reduced the price and make camera easier to use, I guess I never have the chance to own one. But because everyone had one, they don’t value it anymore. To them, camera is nothing but a cheap toy. How many of them do realize its beauty and delicateness?
“If one doesn’t respect his or her camera, one can’t produce beautiful photographs.” That’s my motto. Like a cook grew inseparable to their knife or a hair stylist to their scissors. I heard this story one morning when I went to cut my hair. It was a sunny Saturday and expected to be my wonderful 15th birthday. In the evening, our family planned to go out for dinner.  Of course I wanted to look beautiful in my own party. So I and Trang, my closest friend, went to the salon which was on the newspaper the week before for high quality service. Fortunately, that day, the owner served me. She is the winner of the “National Beauticians” competition. “Lucky day!!!”, I chuckled. She greeted me politely with her soft Northern Vietnamese voice and asked what hairstyle I wanted. She was in such a good mood that I could not imagine anything that could make her piss-off. However, it all changed when she picked the scissors. Suddenly, she yelled angrily “Who used my scissors?” Every staffs in the store outraged, too. They seemed to feel insulted.
                “Who did this?”
                “Is she insane?”
                “How terrible!”
                “Clank”, the owner put the pair of scissors to the table violently, said to me “Wait there” then headed furiously to the stair. I was scared the hell out of me. “What just happened?” I wondered. Five minutes later, she came back, took another pair out of her pocket and started to cut my hair. While doing it, she was smiling delightfully, partly from relief, partly from satisfaction.
                “Please forgive for my rudeness”, she whispered softly, “I don’t mean to scare you. Today’s service is free”
                “Whatever, I’ll never come back”, I thought disgruntled, “‘nowhere has better customer service’ It should be ‘Nowhere has worse customer service’. That damned newspaper! It ruined my whole day.”
                She continued to explain airily, in a formal tone that it sounded weird, “You may not believe me but to us, scissors are the holiest thing on Earth, our best teacher and friends. A skillful stylist can feel their energy running within their scissors. The more we and they connect the better they become. However, one pair of scissors is meant for only one hair stylist. If someone uses yours, they broke them. That’s the most terrible mistake a hair stylist should never make, never ever.”
                “If you don’t respect your teachers and friends, you’ll never be able to do anything great, right?” she concluded then added “Luckily, I have my practice ones at home.”
Somehow, her words reached me. I have the same thinking when I take pictures. It’s like the photo, the camera and me connecting with each other. The camera is my eyes and the photo is my memory.
“If she understands it, indeed this is not a bad shop,” I mumbled as she flicked the remaining hair off my shoulder.
“Please don’t scare me again next time, okay?” turning my head around, I insisted a little ironically. My black, perfectly cut flying with inertia quickly returned to its new form.
“I won’t, miss;” replied she while smiling back to me.
“Promise?”
“Promise.”
Then as in some old movies, we suddenly burst into laughter. Since then, I become their loyal customer and her loyal friend. As long as we are together, there’s no boredom and time seems to flow too fast.
And to make the day even more remarkable, I had one of the most enjoyable birthday party. To my surprise, my parents took the whole family to a famous French three star restaurant located in downtown. The meal started with Hors D’oeuvres and Milk Soup, then the salad, beef steak and Mille-feuille as the dessert. I felt like we were in a wedding, not in a birthday party. The beef steak was even bigger than my two hands together and the smashed potato was awesome. After I was finishing the main course, suddenly the pianist played the song “Bonne Anniversaire” and a waiter came to me, brought a small package with a line of text “From Mom and Dad” on a plate.
“A birth day present! For me? Really? Wow!” I thought.
Many people would wonder why I had that reaction. But my family didn’t have the tradition of giving any of their members gift in their special day. We only went out for dinner and that was it, nothing more, nothing less. That’s totally extraordinary. I tore the wrap at light-speed out of excitement and discovered inside the latest Nikon black mechanical and digital type model. The happiness froze me for more than thirty seconds. I couldn’t believe it. My own camera?  It meant from then on, I could take picture whenever, wherever, as much as I want. And those pictures belong to me and my alone. I promised to myself that I will keep it by my side anywhere I go.
http://photography-cameras.org/tips/how-to-choose-a-digital-camera-key-features
True photography only comes from real camera. That’s the lesson I learnt myself. Nowadays, various devices can take pictures besides camera such as cell phones which are the most popular machines. Three months after I received my birthday present, my mother gave me the first mobile phone of my life in order to celebrate I got into high school. I continued to carry both for three more months. But then I started to grow tired of it. The camera became heavier and heavier until the level that I treated it as a burden. Why don’t I take picture with my cell phone? It’s quicker and more convenient. Happy with my decision, I put it into the separate highest drawer of the cupboard at the corner of my room. 
Four months ago, I planned to study at the United States so I began to organize my belongings by emptying one drawer after another. When I thought everything was done, while taking the last look at my dear territory, I realized that I had forgotten that drawer. Because it’s above my eye sight, I reached out my hand trying to check whether there was anything inside. Suddenly, I hit something. It’s big, hard and heavy. “What is it?” I wondered so I grabbed it out. Holding it in my hands, I took an overall look of my birthday gift: clean, fully charged, in perfect shape. Unexpectedly, the tear ran down of my face. Someone must have taken care of it for all these time. Is it Mom? Or is it Dad? Not only had they forgiven me for thinking little of their feeling but they also took effort to keep it fine and square so I could use it anytime I want. The guilt filled up my heart and mind that I could not stop crying. How long haven’t I touched a real camera? How long have I abandoned my best friend? How long have I surrendered myself to the fake, pseudo-photography? How long have I forgotten this feeling?  How long…? More and more kept coming up to me, echoing in my head.
It makes me realize the great variance in my feeling between the camera and the cell phone. When I hold my Samsung phone, things become light-weighting. Isn’t it just like a kid playing with the device? She just clicks the button spontaneously; capture everything within her vision without putting her mind into it. No thinking, no feeling; there’s nothing that makes the picture unique, unforgettable while they are the factors that make up photography.
                So in the end, what’s the difference between taking pictures by a camera or by any other device? Actually, each people has their own answer. As long as they have the “attitude”, as long as they are serious, they are the photographers; what they create is the “magic of the modern world”, the magic of their own world. 


P/S: This memoir is full of surprise, starting with the topic. At first, when I consider what I should write, it didn't even cross my mind. I only remember the dramatic memories I experienced in the past because they have big impressions in my life. But after a while, suddenly I thought, "I am very happy now. Why should I make it seem to be terrible?". That's when this memoir began. Secondly, it doesn't follow my plan at ALL. Things just flowed out of my head naturally. May be we should be spontaneous sometimes. And last but not least, I couldn't imagine that there is a time when I share these memories with anyone. To many people,  the story of a child realizing how important a passion is to her seems meaningless and useless. This is an unique experience. 



[1] Bellis, Mary. "Photography Timeline The Art of Photography - Timeline of Photography, Film, and Cameras." About.com Inventors. N.p., n.d. Web. 9 Mar 2012. <http://inventors.about.com/od/