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Recipe: Ragoût de poulet finlandais d'artillerie

First, little bit of the history of this fine cuisine:

This goes way back to the time when I was doing my national army service in Kajaani Brigade, Kainuu Artillery Regiment, in the eastern part of Finland, near Russian boarder. It was created more out of a need than anything else. We had to spend long times in the forest training. I was, and still am but now in reserves, a Medical Sergeant so our task was to make sure everyone was healthy and in good strength to fight against the Yellow Enemy. It was sometimes really hard. We’d have long periods when you wouldn’t get your supplies replenished or wouldn’t get the regular food deliveries. And no, you couldn’t call Pizza Hut, it wasn’t allowed.

As a solution to our problem, we came up with what we started calling ‘Ragoût de poulet finlandais d’artillerie‘. The name is in French so that the Yellow Enemy wont be able to know what it is if they capture our radio communications. The Yellow Enemy doesn’t understand French.

Basic idea of this cuisine was that it would be very easy to make, wouldn’t matter if you leave it cooking for hours, and the raw materials are ‘durable’, easy to store and last long if not used. Bonus is that the stew itself lasts very long after cooking even if not kept in a refrigerator, a luxury you almost never saw in the forrest. Now, if you’re a quick thinker and know some basic French, you must be thinking something like this: ‘Wait wait wait, chicken doesn’t last a day if not kept in the fridge!’ And you’re absolutely right! It doesn’t. But we never used chicken in it. We just had chicken in it’s name because it would make it easier to pretend it had chicken in it. It’s very important for the troop morale.

Now that you know some history behind this splendid dish, here’s how you make it.

Ingredients:

1 swede

1 onion

3 carrots

3 parsnip

salt and pepper

any available herbs (really, it doesn’t make a difference what you put in)

water

Instructions:

1. Chop everything into small slices or cubes.

2. Put everything into a sauce pan or ‘pakki

3. Cover ingredients with water. Obviously, more water you put in more people you can feed with it. We once fed half a battery with a single swede and two carrots(!).

4. Let it slowly simmer under a lid for 1 1/2 – 5h.

That simple. If you want to be adventurious, you can pop a whole roasted chicken on top, since we now have the luxury of refrigerators. Let me know in the comments if you made it and how it made you feel. I’m just waiting mine to be ready and it smells really nice. Like I’d be back in the forest.

enjoy,

kristian

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Ramak Tavakoli: Nothing & The Other

A new book out by Ramak Tavakoli. Available here, here and here. Also in well stocked bookstores near you.

Photography by yours truly.

kristian

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Going Freelance – Finally

Briefly,

I, as many of you know, and many of you know me from it, have been working at University College for the Creative Arts at Rochester as a digital media technician. I’ve been doing that from the beginning of my last year as a photography student on their excellent BA Hons Photography course.

Due to some events last week, I’ve just left my 6 week notice in. I’m finally going freelance in April. I have been contemplating this for a while now and I feel excited that it is now happening for real.

I’m sure my departure from the University doesn’t burn bridges as I have had some really really great times there in the past five years. I’ve been lucky to meet some very creative and interesting people. I’m sad to leave the place as it’s been a big part of my life for a long time. I hope that they’ll still have room for me to return in some other capacity in the future.

Reason I’m telling about this here, in my blog, is to let you all know that I’m now even more available to be hired. I do many things like web-design and retouching but essentially I’m a photographer.

Please get in touch.

kristian

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tapaninaho.com – revised once again

What can I say? I had to be done. The previous version was just too hideous. (no, i’m not gonna link to it)

I really like this one. It’s dead simple. The slide show provided by Flickr works very well and makes it easy to add images. Have a look here.

kristian

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tapaninaho.com revised, again.

Briefly,

I had to re-design my portfolio again as I was told that it doesn’t work on IE6 or IE7. Now it does. Have a look.

To avoid problems with IE6/7, don’t use it. Use Firefox instead. Get it through the link in the sidebar.

Also, I’ll take this opportunity to promote the official Tapaninaho.com/blog dashboard widget. OS X 10.4+ only, obviously. Enjoy!
-kristian

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Finding Coffee on the Road

If you are anything like me, you depend on having your daily 4-5 cups of coffee. Doesn’t matter if it’s cappuccino, latte, espresso, moccino or just a basic, good old regular filter coffee with a little bit of milk to top it of. You still love your addiction.

If you have this addiction and traveling in the UK, you’re in trouble. I’m writing this after we’ve travelled little over 300 km from Kent to Scotland. I haven’t had a single cup of coffee yet and it’s not that I wouldn’t have tried.

1st cup I tried to have was at a a Texaco garage on M11 15 km north of Stanstead. I have never seen such a coffee machine. It was awesome. The whole front interface was about 1.3 meters wide and 2.4 meters high, this all suggesting that behind all that is a room full of little people making each coffee specially for you after you press the button. Choices were as follows, espresso, black coffee, latte, cappuccino and hot chocolate. And you have a choice of having these in regular or large size. Nice. Well, not so much. I decided to take a latte, thinking that this would be closes to a white filter coffee. They didn’t offer any milk to add so a black coffee wouldn’t have done it. Got back to the car and took off. After getting back on the road properly I decided to have some of it. Horrible. It tasted like a mixture of coffee, vanilla maple syrup and warm milk. Absolutely disgusting.

2nd cup I tried was at a Little Chef just before Doncaster. I wont say anything about the food because we didn’t actually have to pay for it in the end. It was that bad. But we did pay for my coffee and Her tee (hey, you can’t have everything for free). I ordered a milk coffee. That’s all I said, thinking that it’s a quite a universal thing. Milk in a black filter coffee. You could imagine that a place that offers many different types of coffee (mocha, cappuccino, latte, americano, cafetiere of either decafinated coffee or regural coffee, espresso, Macchiato and “a mug of filter coffee + refill”) would have and idea of making a coffee or at least some one who remotely likes the taste of coffee. What I ended up getting was half a tee spoon of Nescafe in a large mug of warm water. Milk was on the side for me to add. Disgusting. Really, really bad.

After leaving Little Chef, I checked if Burger King has coffee but saw that they had the same Nescafe machine as LC so didn’t bother. Also checked the Shell garage across the road but they had this machine, and I saw someone using it, that spurted water, milk, foam and coffee, all from different tubes into a cup. So, no, I didn’t bother with that either.
No coffee for me then.

Has anyone else found it impossible to find a decent cup whiles on the road? Have you ever found a good one? Only once in Britain I’ve had a good cup while on the road and that was at a BP garage on A2 about 7 km west of Rochester. It was a semi-automated machine where you had to insert this capsule and it made a nice cup of coffee.

I guess, these coffee shops are like most Windows PC manufactures. Tons of choices and options but none that are really any good. I only have one type of coffee at my house. It’s from Finland and it is really good. I some times try other coffees but still think that this is the best for my needs.
If you’re lucky enough not to be on the road, have a coffee and be happy.

admin

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