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Grill Both Sides of the Bread for the Perfect Grilled Cheese Sandwich

Making a grilled cheese sandwich isn't rocket science, but making a great grilled cheese sandwich is a bit of an art. Thankfully, J. Kenji L?pez-Alt over at Serious Eats shows us how to get the best grilled cheese every time. For starters: grill both sides of the bread, then add the cheese.

Kenji goes through all of the elements of making a great grilled cheese: using the right cheese and the best bread. You've probably heard the rules: pick a flavorful melting cheese, stick with slices over grated cheese, day old bread works well for grilled cheese, and don't use a bread with too many holes.

However, he also tackles the method of making that sandwich so you get the best possible results. Here's what he suggests:

The best method I've ever seen for making a perfect grilled cheese comes from Adam Kuban. His secret? Grill the bread on both sides. That's right. Grill two slices of bread in butter, flip'em over so that the browned sides are facing up, add your cheese, and close your sandwich so that the cheese is sandwiched between the browned surfaces. Not only will this get you better tasting bread infused with more butter, but it'll also give your cheese a head start on getting extra-melty.

He also suggests using salted butter instead of unsalted (or seasoning the sandwich with a pinch of kosher salt), and points out that low and slow is the best way to cook your grilled cheese: That the browning you get should be browning of the bread, not the milk solids in the butter (we have a tip to help make sure you don't over-brown, too). Hit the link below for more next-level grilled cheese tips.

The Food Lab Turbo: How To Make The Best Grilled Cheese Sandwich | Serious Eats

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/0F34a6i1z3w/grill-both-sides-of-the-bread-for-the-perfect-grilled-c-476699998

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সোমবার, ২২ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

Pakistan won't have Musharraf to kick around anymore

General Musharraf was a somewhat benign autocrat who wanted to be like Ataturk; but his return from exile to get elected in the top job, smacks of miscalculation.

By Robert Marquand,?Staff writer / April 18, 2013

Pakistan's former President and military ruler Pervez Musharraf leaves the High Court in Islamabad, Pakistan, Thursday. Musharraf and his security team pushed past policemen and sped away from a court in the country?s capital on Thursday after his bail was revoked in a case in which he is accused of treason.

B.K. Bangash/AP

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Pervez Musharraf, Pakistan?s former Army chief and national ruler today escaped a set of judges and an Islamabad arrest order, climbed in a black bullet proof SUV, and sped red-faced away for the protection of home.

Skip to next paragraph Robert Marquand

Staff writer

Over the past three decades, Robert Marquand has reported on a wide variety of subjects for?The Christian Science Monitor, including American education reform,?the wars in the Balkans, the Supreme Court, South Asian politics, and the oft-cited "rise of China." In the past 15 years he has served as the Monitor's bureau chief in Paris, Beijing, and New Delhi.?

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For General Musharraf, who once held all the reins of power in Pakistan, it seems a spectacle of humiliation and miscalculation, or as the BBC calls it??high drama and farce.??

The Islamabad judges that Musharraf sought to muzzle and dismiss in 2007 now appear to have muzzled him ? ultimately thwarting his aim to run for high office May 11, in what will be the first formal civilian transfer of authority in Pakistan?s history.

Musharraf?s lawyers will likely appeal the charges of malfeasance against him for ordering 60 judges to be removed in 2007. But for Musharraf, born in New Delhi before the partition of India and Pakistan, and who of late has been living in self-imposed exile in Dubai and London, a chapter may have closed.

He long dreamed of himself as Pakistan?s Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, forging a path similar to the Turkish military ruler that secularized that Muslim country. ?He hoped to be a moderating force of reason, a ?chief executive,? a secular reformer with clout in a land of Taliban and madrassas, the guy that could keep things together and running while the nation modernized, someone that impressed US Pentagon chief Colin Powell.

But last week Musharraf?s much-touted return to Karachi did not excite crowds; efforts to run his All-Pakistan Muslim League party failed in four districts. And he?s ended up looking more like Don Quixote than an Ataturk.

The Guardian describes Musharraf?s bid to return home as doomed and offers today that the general is:

...politically what Imran Khan was in the mid-1990s, when the famous cricket-turned-philanthropist launched his own career in politics: a high-wattage name that grabs a disproportionate share of the media spotlight but has negligible traction with the voting public. Now that he has been barred from contesting the upcoming general election by a judiciary that has not forgotten Musharraf's?attempt in 2007 to sack Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry, Musharraf still faces a sea of legal trouble, brought into sharp focus by Thursday's refusal to extend the bail granted to him last month. Musharraf may yet be able to return to life abroad ?but his political obituary has long been written.

Musharraf now finds three criminal cases thrown against him: He?s charged with not providing enough security to prevent the 2007 assassination of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, allegations that he ordered the killing of a Baloch nationalist leader in 2006, and the court case he walked out of today.

Whether Musharraf, who in court brushed past police on his way out, will finally be made an example in his own country and put behind bars is unclear. The Los Angeles Times quotes a prosecuting attorney:

?The security he has been given is only meant to safeguard his life, not to allow him to avoid the law,? said senior lawyer Chaudhry Muhammad Aslam Ghumman, the complainant in the judges' detention case against Musharraf. ?They are flouting the law. The people responsible for implementing the order of the court are facilitating the culprit.??

But Musharraf?s lawyers said today that the Islamabad court ruling against him wasn?t about law and order, but was?"seemingly motivated by personal vendettas."

Though many?Pakistanis started to loath Musharraf by the time he stepped down and he may not have stood a chance at actually securing the position of prime minister, fair questions may be asked about whether Pakistan is better served by fewer candidates running for the high office.?

And unlike ostensible current front-runner Nawaz Sharif, who hails from the Punjab, and who in the late 1990s as national leader was unable to reign in the growing jihadis in places like Lahore, Musharraf could crack down. He is one of about two current candidates for high office not part of the small coterie of regional family dynasties that rule the nation.?

While Musharraf gets called a former ?military dictator,? ?anyone who has watched Pakistani politics might think the term overly harsh, considering the Muammar Qaddafi or Bashir al Assad end of the ?dictator? spectrum. Unlike those dictators, after all, Musharraf stepped down.

Future of Pakistan

Pakistan may be just about rid of Musharraf, but in a country where judicial authority has been distorted so often, it remains unclear what kind of future leadership Pakistan will see.

The nation is fractured, faces a need for more IMF bailouts, has an uncertain but powerful military influence, grudges are rife in every direction. ?

Though today it is a different world than when he last held power, it is worth remembering that at one point Musharraf may truly have been within striking distance of peace with India over the jewel of Kashmir. Steve Coll asked Musharraf about it in an interview he wrote up in 2009 the New Yorker:

"I've always believed in peace between India and Pakistan," [Musharraf] replied. "But it required boldness on both sides. . . . What I find lacking sometimes is this boldness ? particularly on the Indian side." He then reviewed a long negotiating session he had had, many years before, with former Indian Prime Minister Vajpayee, in which the pair had tried and failed to agree on a particular joint statement. As he recounted the incident, the pitch of Musharraf's voice rose slightly; he seemed to be reliving his frustration.

He returned to the subject of the 2007 talks. "I wasn't just giving concessions ? I was taking from India as well," he said, a touch defensively. Then he calmed. He fixed his gaze and added, "It would have benefitted both India and Pakistan."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/yPYfUqKfw50/Pakistan-won-t-have-Musharraf-to-kick-around-anymore

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বুধবার, ১০ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

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Louisville guard Ware upbeat despite broken leg

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) ? Injured Louisville guard Kevin Ware will travel to the Final Four on his crutches and expects to be a big presence for the Cardinals.

Cleared by doctors Wednesday to accompany Louisville to Atlanta, the sophomore tells The Associated Press he plans to be a full participant in the team's preparation for Saturday's game against Wichita State.

Ware says the overwhelming support he has received has helped him maintain his spirits and strengthened his confidence of a full recovery. He hopes by next season to be helping the Cardinals defend the national championship he believes they'll win this weekend.

The normally reserved 20-year-old calmly recalled how he felt when he suffered the devastating injury, saying he doesn't think Louisville would be in the Final Four if he had lost his composure.

Ware credits teammate Luke Hancock for calming him down.

"He got me to that point where I really had to put the pain on hold," said Ware, with his leg in a cast propped up on a couch at the Cardinals' practice facility. "Once he said his prayer, I was kind of thinking the whole time, 'you can either be a crybaby about it or you're going to get your team back and get them in the right mindset'.

"Luke said his words, and I just kept repeating, 'y'all gotta go win this game.' I'm fine. ... It really helped the team."

But it wasn't easy for the Cardinals, many of whom cried after seeing Ware's gruesome injury ? his bone protruding through his skin.

Even Louisville coach Rick Pitino was emotional, wiping tears from his eyes and later saying that the sight of his player's injury almost made him vomit.

The Cardinals eventually regrouped to lead at halftime en route to an 85-63 victory over the Duke Blue Devils in Indianapolis.

Through it all, Ware said he had to remain strong. He was placed on a stretcher and wheeled out of Lucas Oil Stadium to cheers of 'Kevin Ware, Kevin Ware,' before heading to Methodist Hospital.

Ware underwent a two-hour operation to repair compound fractures of the tibia that left the leg at an odd angle. He awoke the next morning to discover he had become an overnight sensation, and the afterglow hasn't waned.

His condition and progress have been featured every day on the major networks, the Internet and especially social media. The Cardinals' practice facility was surrounded by a phalanx of satellite trucks, and the interview requests helped Ware get an early jump on his rehab as he shuttled back and forth between makeshift sets.

Ware said he has heard from several of his NBA idols, including Kobe Bryant, Kevin Durant and Charles Barkley. The Louisville guard said he has even heard from the Rev. Jesse Jackson.

For the soft-spoken Ware, the support and media attention has meant more interviews than he ever imagined.

"I had no idea I would get this kind of attention," he said. "I'm one of those guys who just likes to play basketball. But the injury opened up a lot of peoples' eyes and I really appreciate all the support. It really means a lot."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/louisville-guard-ware-upbeat-despite-broken-leg-165414456--spt.html

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