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Miss Adventure's Travels in Techland

Observations, opinions and oxymorons on technology and the internet. Visit LedAstray
Jul 24
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Easy Tarte Tatin

So, I went to France on holiday last week and was dissapointed when I got back that I hadn’t actually eaten a single slice of apple tart. In order to compensate I decided to have a go at making a Tarte Tatin. I’ve never made one before but it was remarkably easy and very tasty so I thought I’d share…

First you’ll need a Tarte Tatin dish something like this which is an anodised heavy bottom deep pan. Why? Because you need to make the caramel and so you’ll need a heavy bottomed pan, and not one of those loose bottomed tins as it’ll leak out and be a disaster!

Ingredients:

  • 3 or 4 sharp eating apples (Granny Smith or the like), peeled, cored and quatered. Although you could use pears, quince or nectarine too.
  • Butter, maybe 2-3oz
  • Brown Sugar, 2-3oz (darker for a richer caramel)
  • 1 pack ready rolled puff pastry

Pre-heat the over to 180°C

Ok, so take your dish and put it on the cooker on a medium heat. Slice thin slices of butter to cover the bottom of the dish and sprinkle a decent layer of sugar over to cover. Let the butter and sugar melt together to form a caramel syrup.

Place the quartered apples in the tin over the caramel sauce. Turn off the heat.

Take your ready rolled puff pastry and cut a circle about 2cm wider in diameter than your tin. Lay the pastry over the apples and then tuck the sides in to seal to the tin - don’t press too hard, you don’t want the caramel leaking over the top.

Bake in the oven for 20 minutes or until the pastry is risen and golden brown. Take out and allow to cool slightly. Don’t worry if the pastry is risen loads, that’ll be sorted out shortly.

You will now need a large plate (larger than your tin). Place the plate over the tin and turn out the tarte onto it. You should have a lovely sticky, caramel apple tarte! Allow it to cool some more before serving with cream, creme fraiche or ice cream.

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Apr 29
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Mar 04
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In light of the Interoperability Principles, as well as feedback from the community, we’re choosing differently. Now, IE8 will show pages requesting “Standards” mode in IE8’s Standards mode. Developers who want their pages shown using IE8’s “IE7 Standards mode” will need to request that explicitly (using the http header/meta tag approach described here). Going Forward Long term, we believe this is the right thing for the web. Shorter term, leading up not just to IE8’s release but broader IE8 adoption, this choice creates a clear call to action to site developers to make sure their web content works well in IE. This topic is one of many things we’ll talk about with respect to IE8 at MIX this week.
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Feb 26
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The Equation Bookshelf is designed by Marcos Breder and is a simple idea of to divide things in priority order. As you can see the design is quite unique, stylish and original.  You can put together the books that you need immediately or more important between (parentheses) or maybe a photo, or something important for you to be the focal point of this bookselhf. Set others between [square brackets] and {braces}. 
via freshome.com

The Equation Bookshelf is designed by Marcos Breder and is a simple idea of to divide things in priority order. As you can see the design is quite unique, stylish and original. You can put together the books that you need immediately or more important between (parentheses) or maybe a photo, or something important for you to be the focal point of this bookselhf. Set others between [square brackets] and {braces}.

via freshome.com

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Feb 19
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The proposed default behavior for version targeting in Internet Explorer solves the problem of “breaking the web” in much the same way that decapitation solves the problem of headaches.

A List Apart: Articles: They Shoot Browsers, Don’t They? Jeremy Keith.

This, is an inspired phrase!

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Feb 12
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This toxic, counterproductive years of experience myth has permeated the software industry for as long as I can remember. Imagine how many brilliant software engineers companies are missing out on because they are completely obsessed with finding people who match— exactly and to the letter— some highly specific laundry list of skills.

Somehow, they’ve forgetten that what software developers do best is learn. Employers should be loooking for passionate, driven, flexible self-educators who have a proven ability to code in whatever language — and serving them up interesting projects they can engage with.

It’s been shown time and time again that there is no correlation between years of experience and skill in programming. After about six to twelve months working in any particular technology stack, you either get it or you don’t. No matter how many years of “experience” another programmer has under their belt, there’s about even odds that they have no idea what they’re doing.

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Feb 05
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