Monthly Archives: February 2013

TOP 10 COUNTRIES THAT DISAPPEARED IN THE 20TH CENTURY

TOP 10 COUNTRIES THAT DISAPPEARED IN THE 20TH CENTURY

New nations seem to pop up with alarming regularity. At the start of the 20th century, there were only a few dozen independent sovereign states on the planet; today, there are nearly 200! Once a nation is established, they tend to stick around for awhile, so a nation disappearing is quite uncommon. It’s only occurred a handful of times in the last century. But when they do, they completely vanish off the face of the globe: government, flag, and all. Here then, in no particular order, are the top ten countries that had their moment in the sun but are, alas, no more.

10. EAST GERMANY, 1949-1990

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Created from the Soviet controlled sector of Germany after the Second World War, East Germany was probably best known for its Wall and its tendency to shoot people who attempted to cross over it. Now, it’s one (over-reactionary) thing to shoot foreigners who are trying to enter your country illegally, but these were its own people!

Basically little more than a Soviet satellite state, the collapse of the notorious Wall and, with it, the demise of the old Soviet Union brought an end to this failed experiment in Communism, and it was integrated back into the rest of Germany in 1990. Because East Germany was so far behind the rest of Germany economically, however, its reintegration with the west almost bankrupted Germany. Today, however, things are swimming along nicely, thank you.

9. CZECHOSLOVAKIA, 1918-1992

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Forged from the remnants of the old Austro-Hungarian Empire, during its brief existence it was one of the few bright spots in Europe, managing to maintain one of the continent’s few working democracies prior to the Second World War. Betrayed by England and France in 1938 at Munich, by March of 1939 it had been completely occupied by Germany, and vanished off the map. Later it was occupied by the Soviets, who turned it into another vassal state of the old Soviet Union until that nation’s collapse in 1991. At that time, it finally reestablished itself as a vibrant democracy.

That should have been the end of the story, and probably would have been, had not the ethnic Slavs in the eastern half of the country demanded their own independent state, breaking Czechoslovakia in two in 1992. Today, it exists as the Czech Republic in the west, and the nation of Slovakia in the east, making Czechoslovakia no more. Though considering that the Czech Republic maintains one of the more vibrant economies in Europe, the far-less-well-off Slovakia maybe should have reconsidered.

8. YUGOSLAVIA, 1918-1992

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Like Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia was a by-product of the breakup of the old Austro-Hungarian Empire in the aftermath of WWI. Basically made up of parts of Hungary and the original state of Serbia, it unfortunately did not follow Czechoslovakia’s more enlightened example. Instead, it maintained a somewhat-autocratic monarchy until the Nazis invaded the country in 1941, after which it became a German possession. With the collapse of the Nazis in 1945, Yugoslavia somehow managed to avoid Soviet occupation but not Communism, coming under the socialist dictatorship of Marshal Josip Tito, the leader of the partisan Army during WWII. It remained a nonaligned authoritarian socialist republic until 1992, when internal tensions and rival nationalism resulted in civil war. The country then split into six smaller nations (Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia, Serbia, Macedonia, and Montenegro,) making it a textbookexample of what happens when cultural, ethnic, and religious assimilation fails.

7. AUSTRO-HUNGARY, 1867-1918

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While all of the countries that found themselves on the losing side after the First World War suffered economically, and geographically to some degree, none lost more than the once-powerful Austro-Hungarian Empire, which found itself carved up like a Thanksgiving Day turkey in a homeless shelter. Out of the dissolution of the once-massive empire came the modern countries of Austria, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, and Yugoslavia, with parts of it going to Italy, Poland, and Romania.

So why did it break apart when its neighbor, Germany did not? Because it lacked a common identity and language, and was instead home to various ethnic and religious groups, most of whom had little to do with each other…to put it mildly. In effect, it suffered a large-scale version of what Yugoslavia suffered, when it saw itself similarly torn apart by nationalistic fervor. The difference was that Austro-Hungary was carved up by the victors in WWI, whereas Yugoslavia’s dissolution was internal and spontaneous.

6. TIBET, 1913-1951

 tibet_location

While the land known as Tibet has been around for over a thousand years, it wasn’t until 1913 that it managed become an independent country. Under the peaceful tutelage of a chain of Dalai Lamas, it finally ran afoul of Communist China in 1951 and was occupied by Mao’s forces, thus ending its brief foray as a sovereign nation. China occupied an increasingly-tense Tibet throughout the ’50s until the country finally rebelled in 1959, which resulted in China’s annexation of the region and the dissolution of the Tibetan government. This finished the nation for good and turned it into a “region,” rather than a country. Today it remains a big tourist attraction for the Chinese government, though it still has issues with Beijing, by insisting it be granted its independence once again.

5. SOUTH VIETNAM, 1955-1975

vietnam-map

Created from the forceful expulsion of the French from Indo-China in 1954, someone decided it would be a good idea to split Vietnam in two, roughly at the 17th parallel, leaving a Communist north and a pseudo-democratic south. As with Korea before, it didn’t work any better in Vietnam, resulting in intermittent warfare between the two halves that ultimately dragged the United States into a conflict (again with the Korea comparisons,) that was to result in one of the most draining and costly wars in American history. Finally hounded out of the country by dissent at home, America left South Vietnam to fend for itself in 1973, which it did for only two more years, before the Soviet-backed North finally rolled over the country, bringing an end to South Vietnam and renaming Saigon—its capitol—Ho Chi Minh City. It’s been a socialist utopia ever since.

4. UNITED ARAB REPUBLIC, 1958-1971

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In yet another ill-fated attempt to bring unity to the Arab world, Egypt’s fiery socialist president, Gamel Abdel Nasser, thought it would be a splendid idea to unite with his distant neighbor, Syria, in an alliance that would effectively surround their sworn enemy, Israel, and make them a regional superpower. Thus was created the short-lived U.A.R., an experiment that was doomed to failure almost from the start. Being several hundred miles apart made creating a central government almost impossible, while Syria and Egypt never could quite agree on what constituted national priorities.

The problem might have been rectified had Syria and Egypt managed to link their halves together by destroying Israel, but that nasty Six Days War came along in 1967, dashing their plans for a common border, and handing both halves of the U.A.R. a defeat of biblical proportions. After that the merger’s days were numbered, and finally came to an anti-climactic end with the death of Nasser in 1970. Without the charismatic Egyptian President around to hold the fragile alliance together, the U.A.R. quickly dissolved, restoring the nations of Egypt and Syria once again.

3. OTTOMAN EMPIRE, 1299-1922

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One of the great empires in history, the Ottoman Empire finally came to an end in November of 1922, after a pretty respectable run of over six hundred years. Once extending from Morocco to the Persian Gulf, and from Sudan to as far north as Hungary, its demise was a slow process of dissolution over many centuries until, by the dawn of the 20th century, it was but a shadow of its former self.

But even then, it was still the main power broker in the Middle East and North Africa, and might still be that way today had it not chosen to ally itself with the losing side in World War I. It saw itself dismantled in the aftermath, with the biggest chunk of it (Egypt, Sudan, and Palestine) going to England. By 1922 it had outlived its usefulness, and finally died when the Turks won their war of independence in 1922 and abolished the Sultanate, creating the modern-day nation of Turkey in the process. Still, you’ve got to give it credit for making such an impressive run before giving up the ghost.

2. SIKKIM, 8TH CENTURY CE-1975

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What? You’ve never heard of the place? What rock have you been hiding under? Seriously, it’s not likely you would have heard of tiny, land-locked Sikkim, nestled securely in the Himalayan Mountains between India and Tibet…er, China. About the size of a hot dog stand, it was basically one of those little-known, and largely forgotten, little monarchies that managed to hold on into the twentieth century before it finally realized it had no particularly good reason for being independent, and decided to merge with modern India in 1975.

Its coolest claim to fame? Though just a little bigger than Rhode Island, it has no fewer than eleven official languages, which must play havoc with traffic signs—assuming, that is, that they have any roads.

1. UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLIC (SOVIET UNION), 1922-1991

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What would the 20th century have been without the good ‘ol USSR to stir things up? One of the truly scary counties on the planet until its anticlimactic collapse in 1991, for seven decades it stood as the bulwark of Marxist Stalinism, with all the misfortune that brought with it. It was created in the chaotic aftermath of the breakup of Imperial Russia after WWI, and both survived and thrived despite inept economic policies and brutal leadership. The USSR actually managed to beat the Nazis when no one thought that Hitlercould be stopped, enslaved eastern Europe for over forty years, instigated the Korean War in 1950, and very nearly got into a shooting war with the United States over Cuba in 1962, making its tenor on the world stage nothing if not eventful.

Finally coming apart in the aftermath of the fall of the Berlin wall in 1989, and the subsequent collapse of Communism in eastern Europe, it broke into no fewer than fifteen sovereign countries, creating the largest new block of countries since the breakup of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1918. What followed was the pseudo-democratic Republic of Russia, though it still retains much of the autocratic air it has always been famous for.

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New Pyramids Discovered on Google Earth

Lost Egyptian pyramids found … by Google?
Images from Google Earth reveal what appear to be two long-lost pyramid complexes.
Mon, Aug 13 2012 at 11:43 AM
 
Google Earth pyramids
Have two new Egyptian pyramids been located thousands of years after they were last seen by human eyes? That may be the case, as images from Google Earth appear to show two long-lost pyramid complexes in Upper Egypt near the city of Abu Sidhum,Discovery News reports.
The images were identified by satellite archaeology researcher Angela Micol, who posted her observations on her website, Google Earth Anomalies.
Google Earth is a 3D virtual globe and mapping program that combines satellite imagery and aerial photography. First created by a company funded by the Central Intelligence Agency, the program was acquired by Google in 2004.
Egypt’s best-known pyramids, including the fabled Great Pyramid, are located at Giza, not far from the capital city of Cairo, but 115 others are known to be scattered throughout the country. That number keeps growing. Most recently, the so-called “headless pyramid” was rediscovered in 2008. The 4,000-year-old structure had been documented by archaeologist Karl Richard Lepsius in 1842 but it was lost when desert sands covered it back up for more than a century and a half.
The two new sites are located about 90 miles from each other and Micol has verified with Egyptologists that they are not among the 118 known pyramids. “The images speak for themselves. It’s very obvious what the sites may contain but field research is needed to verify they are, in fact, pyramids and evidence should be gathered to determine their origins,” Micol said in a press release on her site.
The first of the two sites contains what Micol characterizes as “a distinct, four-sided, truncated, pyramidal shape that is approximately 140 feet in width.” The site also contains three small mounds aligned in a diagonal manner similar to the pyramids at Giza.
The second site, shown in the photo above, contains four mounds, the two largest of which are each 250 feet in width. The smaller mounds are each approximately 100 feet wide.
Micol has not revealed the exact locations of the two sites, saying they must first be identified and protected by Egyptian officials.
The researcher has been using satellite images for 10 years to identify previously unknown sites. She recently released an image she identified as a possible underwater city located near the coast of the Yucatan peninsula.
Micol says she is forming a nonprofit organization to promote satellite archaeology and remote sensing and is raising money to fund a documentary about the some of the sites she has unearthed using Google Earth.
Photo above: Google Earth

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Blood of King Louis XVI Authenticated

Blood of guillotined King Louis XVI is ‘authentic’
Now that it has confirmed the blood came from Louis XVI, researchers are planning to reconstruct the entire genome of the deposed French monarch.

Tia Ghose, LiveScience

Wed, Jan 02 2013 at 2:56 PM

A gourd emblazoned with heroes of the French Revolution contained the blood of Louis XVI. (Photo: Davide Pettener)

More than 200 years ago, France’s King Louis XVI was killed (along with his wife, Marie Antoinette) via guillotine, and legend has it someone used a handkerchief to soak up the king’s blood, then stored the handkerchief in a gourd.
Now scientists have confirmed that a squash emblazoned with figures from the French Revolution indeed contains the dried blood of the executed king.
Scientists matched DNA from the blood with DNA from a detached and mummified head believed to be from a direct ancestor of King Louis XVI, the 16th-century French king Henry IV. The new analysis, which was published Dec. 30 in the journal Forensic Science International, confirmed the identity of both French royals.
“We have these two kings scattered in pieces in different places in Europe,” said study co-author Carles Lalueza-Fox, a paleogenomics researcher at Pompeu Fabra University in Spain. The new analysis confirms that the two men “are separated by seven generations and they are paternally related.” [See Photos of the Embalmed Head & Gourd]
French King Henry IV's embalmed head
Two French kings
King Henry IV was born in 1553 and became king in 1589 after a crazed monk killed his predecessor, Henry III. To ascend to the throne, Henry, a Protestant, converted to Catholicism and laid siege to Paris. Through his fair and peaceful reign, he earned a reputation as “Good King Henry.”
But in 1610, a fanatical Catholic assassinated him, and his body was embalmed and laid to rest in northern Paris. There it stayed until the French Revolution, when looters desecrated the graves of bygone monarchs. At this point, someone must have cut off King Henry’s head.
The head (at right) was held privately until 2010, when researchers used a facial reconstruction to argue that it once belonged to Good King Henry. But DNA taken from tissues in the head was too contaminated to analyze for any definitive conclusion.
Meanwhile, a wealthy Italian family possessed the gourd that allegedly contained the blood of the unpopular King Louis XVI. (The handkerchief presumably had disintegrated.)
Louis XVI was born in 1754 and died in 1793, when the rising tide of revolution swept him and Marie Antoinette from power and eventually to the guillotine. At his execution, legend had it that witnesses dipped their handkerchiefs in the monarch’s blood, Lalueza-Fox told LiveScience. Text on the gourd recounts the gruesome story: “On January 21, Maximilien Bourdaloue dipped his handkerchief in the blood of Louis XVI after his decapitation.” [10 Historically Significant Political Protests]
Blood relatives
Last year Lalueza-Fox analyzed the genetic material in the blood and found it came from a blue-eyed European male. But without any comparison DNA, he couldn’t definitively say it was the blood of the last French king.
Last year, however, the forensic scientist who originally studied the embalmed headsent DNA from inside it to the research team. The new DNA was not as badly damaged, and Lalueza-Fox and his colleagues were able to get parts of the Y, or male sex, chromosome, which is often used to identify male lineages.
By comparing the Y chromosome in both samples, the team concluded that the two men were 250 times more likely to be genetically related than unrelated. Both samples had genetic variants characteristic of the Bourbon region of France, and those variants are very rare in Europe today.
Given the history behind the samples, the new findings confirm that both the dried blood belongs to King Louis XVI. It also verifies that the embalmed head once belonged to King Henry IV.
Now that it has confirmed the blood came from Louis XVI, the team is planning to reconstruct the entire genome of the deposed French monarch.
“This could be the first historical genome ever to be retrieved,” Lalueza-Fox said.
Photo: Philippe Charlier
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Monday Dog Pics – Dog Shaming

Sorry this is late, President’s Day threw me off…sigh.  Here are some Dog Shaming pictures for your Monday fun:

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Top 10 single-malt scotch whiskies

Ok, my favorite adult beverage is single malt scotch.  Scotch basically takes like blended whisky without the sweetness.  Single malts from different regions have very distinct tastes.  People are usually off put by scotch because they try cheap scotch.  Cheap scotch tastes like battery acid.  I would not recommend any scotch below the quality of Dewers or Glenlivet.  Below that they taste bad.

scotch-2

Scotch has soared in price because when it was laid down to age, there was much less demand.  If you are buying 12 year old scotch, they had to guess demand 12 years or more ago.  Scotch consumption is through the roof, so you have more people chasing a limited supply.  Recently, single batch bourbon has experienced the same fate.  Makers’ Mark (another of my favorites which I stocked up on) has not changed its recipe ever.  However, restaurants are running out.  So they recently changed it to 82 proof (41% alcohol) from its standard 100 proof (50%) alcohol.  By diluting it, they hope to increase production by at least 8% and they “say” it won’t change the trademark taste…  We will see.

mm

So we come to top scotches…  I found this list online and I have had the fortune to be able to taste all but two.  In fact, I have bottles of Balvenie 12 Year Old Double Barrel, Glenkinchie, Macallan and Glenmorangie in my cabinet right now.  I will tell you hands down my favorite single malt scotches – ever!

1.  The Balvenie 12 Year Old Double Barrel is the very best I have ever tasted.  So smooth, rich and flavorful that when I let people sample it, they give me that look like Santa Claus brought them their favorite toy.  In fact, most cannot believe it is scotch, because it is so good.  When I first started buying this you could get it for $40, now if you can find it, expect to pay upwards of $80.

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2.  Johnny Walker Blue – This very limited batch Johnny Walker retails at around $500 now.  Ok, it is not single malt, it is actually a blend based on an original recipe.  It is aged 18 to 25 years old before bottling.  It is by far the smoothest and lightest on the tongue of scotches, with a rich after taste and scent.  When my daughter was married I paid for her honeymoon trips to Catalina Island and for a cruise of the Caribbean.  I asked her to pick me up a bottle at the duty free shops, and she did.  It was about $150 per bottle then.

jw

3. Oban 32 Year – Oban is not for everyone.  Oban has a strong smoky flavor.  It is almost bourbony with its charcoal after hints, but distinctly scotch accents.  It starts, settles and finishes with three standing ovations of taste.  If you can get it, it now runs over $500 per bottle.  The 14 year is good, but just not the same.  Unfortunately, I ran out of my Oban and can no longer justify buying it at that price.  When I bought the last one it was just over $200.

oban

 

Top 10 single-malt scotch whiskies

Published February 14, 2013

Gayot

  • scotchwhiskies660gayot.jpg
    Gayot

Scotch drinkers like to keep things simple. Sure, you can make a fantastic Scotch cocktail, but most Scotch drinkers want to enjoy the smoky flavor unadorned except perhaps for ice, water or a splash of soda. Instead of trying to find the best mixers, Scotch drinkers are trying to find the top distilleries in Scottish towns from the Highlands to the Lowlands that produce the best Single Malt Scotch. Whether we call it Top 10 Scotch or Top 10 Scotches or Top 10 Scotch Whiskeys or Top 10 Scotch Whiskies, rest assured that our list includes whiskies from the Scottish Isles that are hard to pronounce, but these are all names worth knowing. Enjoy our selection of Top 10 Single Malt Scotch Whiskies.

Springbank 10 Year Old 100 Proof
Campbeltown
Price: $55

We start our list with an easy-to-pronounce whisky. Scotch connoisseurs are familiar with Campbeltown, Scotland, as the home of Springbank Distillery. The brand’s ten-year-old cask-strength Single Malt is a lightly peated, shining example of their craftsmanship which features a unique two-and-a half-times distillation process. On the nose it offers a complex bouquet with an array of aromas including a touch of honey, some fresh cucumber and a hint of brininess, finishing with smoke and peat along with some underbrush mixed with a sherried maltiness. Although it begins its life in Bourbon barrels, it finishes out in Sherry barrels, lending to its richness. The complexity of its bouquet compels you to anticipate a Single Malt of distinction, and it certainly delivers. The 100 proof is needed to support and balance this intense Scotch. The mouthfeel is full, luscious and a tad sweet with a lingering, long finish of smoke, peaty lemon zest and fall leaves.

Royal Lochnagar 12 Year Old
The Highlands
Price: $70

It’s easy to slap the word “royal” into a product name, but this legendary Highland Single Malt really does have a royal connection. A favorite of both Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, this hard-to-find Scotch has long been held in high esteem in Britain, particularly for its classic flavor. Upfront you get earth, freshly cut grass, vibrant spice, a hint of sandalwood and hay. It finishes with light touches of fruit, juicy cereal barley, leather, brown sugar and a coffee maltiness. It makes for a perfect sipper to start off your evening, even if you’re engaged in non-royal activities, like playing Texas Hold ‘Me.

The Balvenie DoubleWood 12 Year Old
Speyside
Price: $50

The Balvenie is one of the great distilleries of Speyside, Scotland. Founded in 1892, it is one of the pioneers of introducing various wood finishes to its malts. Their aptly named DoubleWood is a twelve-year-old Single Malt that spends most of its life in second-fill Bourbon casks prior to being transferred to first-fill Oloroso Sherry casks. There are three levels of flavor in this Single Malt. The original Balvenie imparts heather, honey and clean barley flavors. The Bourbon barrel adds vanilla, a sort of cookie-like taste, as well as marshmallow, caramel and toast. The Oloroso Sherry barrel’s influence is expressed via peach, marzipan, clover, a bit of honey and prunes. Complex and approachable, this Single Malt has a younger brother that’s actually older The Balvenie 17 Year Old DoubleWood was first released in September of 2012.

Bunnahabhain 18 Year Old
Islay
Price: $105
On the northern shore of Islay, for more than 130 years, Bunnahabhain has been carving out an extra peaty niche in Scotland’s whisky flavor landscape. Unlike many Scotch whiskies, this elegant Single Malt is not chill filtered. (Chill filtering prevents the whisky from becoming hazy, but can affect the flavor.) The nose is a perfect balance of smoke and peat at a level of impact that’s both agreeable to a novice drinker and complex enough to please the connoisseur. The hints of subtle smoke, brine, malt sweetness, fruit and nuttiness bloom on the palate. The body of this spirit requires a stronger proof to ensure balance and full palate impact. The finish lingers and demands another taste, as the acidity is persistent and the flavors enticingly rich.

Highland Park 18 Year Old
Orkney Islands
Price: $105

It’s hard to believe that Highland Park’s 18-year-old Single Malt was first released in 1997, as its great reputation belies its youth. It’s an instant classic, thanks to its balance of light toffee flavors and long, lightly smoky finish. On the nose you get honey, Sherry and peat coupled with almonds and light smoke, which makes it not just approachable but irresistible. It is simultaneously subtle and complex while allowing the consumer to enjoy a smooth and dynamic expression of the Orkney Islands’ most prized distillery. It finishes with heather and honey mixed with earth, dried fruit and nuts. Balance and brilliance are the memories this malt leaves dram after dreamy dram.

The Macallan Cask Strength
The Highlands
Price: $75

Like “The Balvenie”, “The Macallan” demands the definite article. (Bourbon whiskeys don’t, as they do not seem classier if rechristened “The Wild Turkey”.) The Macallan brand is synonymous with top-tier Single Malt Scotch, and the unsung hero of their portfolio is their cask strength. This malt hails from the Easter Elchies House of Macallan overlooking the River Spey. Like its better-known 18-year-old sibling, the cask strength has a sherried finish making it bright, rich and accessible; but this one explodes with caramel, brown sugar, toffee and vanilla so complex and intertwined it drinks like a dessert. It’s well balanced on the palate with a sweet, tawny port, cinnamon oatmeal bouquet. At this price point, we think it’s a steal. Make that “The Steal”.

Scapa 16 Year Old the Orcadian
Orkney Islands
Price: $75

Scapa is not just “the other distillery” on the Orkney Islands, having been founded as early as 1885 (more than a century before Highland Park came along!). Scapa makes legendary Single Malt in their 16-year-old “the Orcadian.” Gorgeous to look at with its golden amber hue, this malt produces prodigious, thick, slow-flowing legs down the side of the glass. The nose dances with fresh berries and light smoke as the sea saltiness washes through. Approachable with its creamy honey and broken, subtle peat mixed in with chocolate and pepper, it has a memorable palate. With its dry, peaty and rich finish, this un-chill-filtered whisky has both the personality of a classic malt and the attitude of an innovator.

Glenkinchie 1991 Distillers Edition
The Lowlands
Price: $70

Did you really think you’d make it through a Top 10 Scotch list without seeing one of the Glen’s? Glenkinchie started making world-class Scotch in 1837. This being a Scottish Lowland Malt, we expected a grassy, slightly floral and full-bodied spirit, which is what we got — both on the nose and in the glass. The palate offers a pleasant, subtle mixture of leather, smoke, vanilla, honey, Sherry and stewed red berry fruit. It finishes with surprising strength, based in nutty molasses, brown sugar, smoke and caramel apples. Such complexity is rare for a Lowland whisky, but not for an exceptional Single Malt Scotch.

Lagavulin 12 Year Old Cask Strength
Islay
Price: $90

Lagavulin is the whisky for people who revel in sucking the marrow out of life. This cask strength Single Malt needs every bit of its extra punch to support the nose and palate. The former is an intoxicating and aromatic potpourri of peat, melon-y sea foam, pipe tobacco and Alsatian Riesling. The palate is rich, plummy, sweet, peaty and burnt-rubber-y, but in a good way. This stunning special edition was so well-received that Lagavulin Distillery is producing it as an ongoing mark for its loyal followers.

Glenmorangie 18 Years Old “Extremely Rare”
The Highlands
Price: $100

The Glenmorangie 18 Years Old spends fifteen years of its life in classic Bourbon oak barrels. A portion is then transferred to Oloroso Sherry barrels for the final three years of maturation. These barrels are then reunited to create this silky Scotch, tasting of nuts, dried sticky figs, dates and vanilla. These flavors meld together on the palate in perfect harmony, leaving a nice creamy finish with a hint of fruit, floral, almonds and vanilla. The flavor profile and quality of this exceptional Single Malt Scotch live up to its name: extremely rare.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/leisure/2013/02/14/top-10-single-malt-scotch-whiskies/?intcmp=features#ixzz2L8MHwZLY

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More Ironic Pictures

Irony is in the eye of the beholder.  Hopefully you will enjoy these:

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Who Do You Write Like?

I came across this very cool site on StumbleUpon called, I Write Like:

http://iwl.me/

I Write Like

You put a chapter of a book you wrote/are writing, or a short story, or an article in the provided box.  It then tells you who the writing is similar to.  I can’t attest to its accuracy, but I found it pretty fun.

My results:

Chapter One Draft of Blood Bank – Margaret Atwood

Chapter Two Draft of Blood Bank – William Gibson

Second Chapter, The Travelers’ Club – Fire and Ash – James Joyce

Hop To It, One of my shorts in Twisted History – Chuck Palahniuk

So, I guess it is true I write in a different style whether writing horror, steampunk, or humorous history.

What results will you have?

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Ancient temple discovered in Peru

Ancient temple discovered in Peru

Published February 15, 2013

LiveScience

  • peru-elParaiso

    Excavators stand near a newly discovered temple at the archeological site El Paraíso in Peru. (Peru Ministry of Culture)

Archaeologists in Peru have uncovered what they believe is a temple, estimated to be up to 5,000 years old, at the site of El Paraíso, north of Lima.

Inside the ruins of the ancient room, which measures about 23 feet by 26 feet, there’s evidence of a ceremonial hearth, where offerings may have been burned, archaeologists say. The temple also had a narrow entrance and stone walls covered with yellow clay, on which traces of red paint were found, according to a statement from Peru’s Ministry of Culture.

El Paraíso, located on the central coast of Peru, just north of Lima, is a site made up of 10 buildings stretching over 123 acres. It’s one of the earliest known examples of monumental stone architecture in the Americas, dating back to the Late Preceramic period (3500-1800 B.C.). The newly found building is thought to date back to 3000 B.C., which should be confirmed with a radiocarbon analysis.

Rafael Varón, Peru’s deputy minister for culture, said in a statement that the discovery of the temple “has particular importance because it is the first structure of this type found on the central coast.” It suggests that the Lima region had more religious, economic and political importance during this early period than previously thought, Varón added.

Previously, man-made mounds shaped like orcas, condors and even a duck were discovered in Peru’s coastal valleys, including at El Paraíso, by anthropologist Robert Benfer, professor emeritus of the University of Missouri, who spotted the mounds in satellite photos. One curious mound found in El Paraíso in the Chillón Valley was of a condor head whose burned-charcoal eye was likely the place where offerings were once burned. The condor was also positioned to line up with the most extreme orientation of the Milky Way as seen from the Chillón Valley. [See Photos of the Animal Mounds]

A second mound, right next to the condor, looked like a combination of a puma and alligatorlike cayman, Benfer said. That one was oriented toward the spot where the sun rises on the day of the June solstice, the start of summer.

Dating to more than 4,000 years ago, the structures may be the oldest evidence of animal mounds outside of North America, Benfer said last year. The previous oldest animal structures date to about 2,000 years ago, part of the Nazca Lines. These lines are simple stone outlines of animals decorating the Nazca Desert in Peru.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/science/2013/02/15/ancient-temple-discovered-in-peru/?intcmp=features#ixzz2L7a2CVrS

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Biologists Create ‘Zombie Cells’

Zombies are all well and good for stories, video games, movies and TV, but in real life, they would seriously suck.  Heck, I have zombies in some of my books.  But why on Earth would scientists actually create Zombies?  No joke?  Our own scientists at super-secret Sandia Laboratories in Albuquerque New Mexico have created nano-particle level duplicate zombie cells.  Why can’t anyone read science fiction and heed its warnings?  If a celestial event does not wipe us out, it is only a matter of time until our own stupid, reckless exploration of science does it.

Biologists Create ‘Zombie Cells’ In The Lab Which Outperform Living Counterparts

Huffington Post UK  |  By Posted: 14/02/2013 12:21 GMT  |  Updated: 14/02/2013 12:35 GMT

 
130208_zombied_silica 

Biological researchers have created dead ‘zombie’ cells in the lab which outperform living cells.

Seriously.

A team at Sandia National Laboratories and the University of New Mexico have innovated a technique whereby mammalian cells are coated with silica to form a near-perfect replicas.

The silica replicants can survive greater pressures and temperatures than flesh, and perform many functions better than the original cells did when alive.

By painting the cells with silicic acid in a petri dish, the acid embalms the organic matter in the cell down to the nanometer level.

The silica then acts as a permeable armour, according to Michael Hess at the American Office of Public Affairs.

That means the cell beneath can be used as a catalyst at far greater temperatures than normal.

Heating the silica to around 400C evaporates the protein in the cell, but leaves the silica as a three-dimensional replica of the “formerly living being”, Hess said.

“The difference is that instead of modeling the face, say, of a famous criminal, the hardened silica-based cells display internal mineralized structures with intricate features ranging from nano- to millimeter-length scales.”

The valuable biological material can thus be converted into a reusable fossil, which could have uses in fuel cells, decontamination and sensor technology, as well as commercial manufacturing.

:ead researcher Bryan Kaehr said in a statement that the research distinguishes between a mummy cell and a zombie cell.

“Our zombie cells bridge chemistry and biology to create forms that not only near-perfectly resemble their past selves, but can do future work,” he said, terrifyingly.

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Did Olympic “Blade Runner” Murder His Model Girlfriend?

The first prosthesis runner in the Olympics,Oscar Pistorius, dubbed “Blade Runner” is led away by police in South Africa after his beautiful model girlfriend is killed while at his house the day before Valentines Day.  She was shot four times.  A very sad story for two people who seemed to have so much positive in their lives.

Blade Runner in competition

Blade Runner in competition

The couple, him in circle

The couple, him in circle

Being led away by police.

Being led away by police.re

Reeva Steenkamp an anomaly in a world of pretty faces

Published February 14, 2013

FoxNews.com

  • Reeva Steenkamp AP 660.JPG

    This is an undated portfolio photo supplied by Ice Model Management in Johannesburg of Reeva Steenkamp, during a photo shoot. (AP)

  • Reeva AP.JPG

    This is an undated portfolio photo supplied by Ice Model Management in Johannesburg of Reeva Steenkamp, during a photo shoot. (AP)

  • Reeva Steenkamp 1 AP.JPG

    This is an undated portfolio photo supplied by Ice Model Management in Johannesburg of Reeva Steenkamp, during a photo shoot. (AP)

  • Reeva Steenkamp 2 AP 660.JPG

    This is an undated portfolio photo supplied by Ice Model Management in Johannesburg of Reeva Steenkamp, during a photo shoot. (AP)

Reeva Steenkamp was excited to celebrate Valentine’s Day.

The South African FHM model tweeted just hours before her death that she was looking forward to sharing some Valentine’s cupcakes with friends, her publicist confirmed to Fox News.

But her happy day took a tragic turn when she was shot four times in the predawn hours in the home of her boyfriend, Olympic “Blade Runner” Oscar Pistorius.

PHOTOS: Reeva Steenkamp’s modeling pictures 

Her publicist Sarit Tomlinson confirmed the model’s death to Fox News but said she knew very few details about the incident.

“At the moment we can confirm that Reeva passed away,” she said. “We are all in shock. We are devastated. We didn’t see this coming. No one saw this coming.”

Police said there had “previously been incidents at the home of Mr. Oscar Pistorius.” Police in South Africa do not name suspects in crimes until they have appeared in court but police spokesperson Brigadier Denise Beukes said that Pistorius was at his home at the time of the Steenkamp’s death and “there is no other suspect involved.”

Tomlinson also acknowledged reports that the model’s death could have been an accident, and perhaps Pistorius mistook her for an intruder.

“We don’t know what’s going on right now,” she said, flustered. “We’re waiting for more information… I think by the end of the day we’ll be hearing some concrete information.”

In Steenkamp’s Twitter profile, she describes herself as an “SA Model, Cover Girl, Tropika Island of Treasure Celeb Contestant, Law Graduate, Child of God.”

The model was set to appear in the show “Tropika Island of Treasure 5” this weekend, according to The Sun, and the series execs posted they were “deeply saddened” by her death.

There is also a biography of Reeva posted on the show’s website, which describes her as a someone who “prefers to read a book on her off days and spend quality time with friends and family.”

Steenkamp was born in Cape Town, South Africa and moved to Port Elizabeth as a child.  She then went on to eventually graduate law school, the site states.

Aside from modeling, Steenkamp was passionate about cars and cooking and she had some acting projects in the works at the time of her death, including “smaller TV roles as well as a lead in a new reality TV show.”

Steenkamp also used her Twitter account to speak out against rape and violence against women.

“I woke up in a happy safe home this morning,” she posted on Feb. 9. “Not everyone did. Speak out against the rape of individuals…”

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/2013/02/14/slain-model-reeva-steenkamp-anomaly-in-world-pretty-faces/?intcmp=features#ixzz2L0LOwHpf

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