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Showing posts with label Food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Food. Show all posts

Sunday, 2 June 2013

What is Magic Mushroom

Officially known as psilocybin or psychedelic, magic mushrooms go by many other slang or street names. These include shrooms, liberties, magics, or mushies. They are also scientifically known as psilocybe semilanceata and biological genera include copelandia, gerronema, hypholoma, inocybe, pluteus, galerina, conocybe, agrocybe, and psilocybe. Magic mushrooms either grow wild or are cultivated in controlled environments and most of them contain the hallucinogens psilocin and psilocybin.

Magic mushrooms are not plants but fungi. They grow from mushroom spores and this is usually in damp dirt or on decaying plant materials.


Uses of Magic Mushrooms

Magic mushrooms can be eaten raw, cooked, dried, or even stewed. Like many other mushroom varieties, magic mushrooms contain vitamins and other nutrients and some of them are edible, though some varieties are poisonous. The edible ones can be used for flavoring and adding a meaty texture to many kinds of foods including risottos and pizza.
Magic mushrooms are also widely used as hallucinogens. In this regard, they have some effects that many people looking for a high find in them,

Effects of Magic Mushrooms

Once you have taken some magic mushrooms, it may take between half an hour and a couple of hours for you to feel its effects. These effects may last between four and ten hours. Some of these effects include distortion of color, objects, and sounds, speeding up and slowing down of time, enhanced creativity and enlightenment, and some nausea and disorientation. Of course, all these effects depend on the individual and the person’s condition at the time such as the mood and whether the person had eaten.
Magic mushrooms may also make the user feel some alcohol-like euphoria, convulsions, deep sleep filled with vivid dreams, slurred speech, and poor coordination. Some long term effects include flashbacks and anxiety.

If you are pregnant, it is best if you avoid using magic mushrooms. They may have some negative risks on the baby’s development. Magic mushrooms are not addictive but users tend to build up some resistance to it so they end up requiring more of it to attain a high.

Magic mushrooms have been used by many cultures over thousands of years as psychotropic drugs for recreational purposes. They have been used in social spheres and in some cultural and religious ceremonies over the centuries. They can be found in the wild in almost any climate in the world. They can also be grown at home or in other controlled environments quite inexpensively. 

Saturday, 3 November 2012

The History of Sushi

4th Century B.C: Introduction


One of the best known delicacies to come out of Southeast Asia is Sushi, a Japanese dish that every tourist must try when visiting. It can be traced to a few parts of China and Southeast Asia as far back as the 4th Century B.C. Sushi started out as a simple meal of preserved fresh-water fish, salted and fermented in rice. The traditional type, known as Nare-zushi, was prepared by cleaning and gutting freshwater fish, then salting it and storing it in rice that has been fermented using milk. The fermentation of the rice over a period of a few months not only preserved the fish, but added a unique flavor that many found mouthwateringly delicious. The fish was eaten while the fermented rice was discarded or fed to domestic fowls.


8th Century A.D: Heian-Muromachi Eras

Due to trade and travel, the mode of fish preservation and preparation slowly spread over china and the rest of Southeast Asia. By the Heian period, which was around the 8th Century AD, it had been introduced to the Japanese coastal regions. However, the Japanese preferred to consume, rather than discard, the rice. By the end of the Muromachi era, the Japanese version, seisei-zushi, had become a popular gourmet meal. It differed with the previous version in that it was served while the rice had not yet fully fermented and the fish was still partly raw. This type of Sushi was also popularly referred to by the locals as namanare or namanari.

17th Century: Edo/Tokugawa Period

The Japanese improved on the methods of preservation and preparation, and this led to the creation of haya-zushi. To prepare this, the rice was mixed with vinegar, an assortment of herbs and vegetables, and other dried foods. This ensured that neither the rice, nor any other ingredient used in the preparation, went to waste.

19th Century: End of Edo Period

In the late 1800’s, Tokyo’s food supplies were mainly hawked by mobile food kiosks/stalls. These hawkers combined the fish with some forms of delicious seaweeds collected from Edomae (Tokyo Bay Area) to create the nigiri-zushi. Due to the origin of the seaweeds and fresh fish, this type of sushi was, and it still is, commonly referred to as the Edomae-zushi. The Great Kanto earthquake of 1923 resulted in the migration of many people from Tokyo and Edomae area. This included chefs who spread and popularized the Edomae-zushi in many other parts of Japan as they fled the earthquake and the resultant economic hardships of Tokyo.

21st Century: Globalization Era

Widespread international travel, education, socialization, business practices such as franchising, and many other aspects of globalization today have reduced the world to a “virtual village”. This, in conjunction with the increased health consciousness and awareness worldwide, has popularized sushi in every corner of the world as one of the best and safest source of protein. Besides being considered a delicacy, Sushi’s health benefits have been lauded by nutrition experts and doctors. The introduction of the California Sushi Roll in the 70’s changed Western perceptions about eating raw fish and this was a gigantic step in the worldwide popularization of sushi. The invention of sushi machines that make mass production easy and the operation of sushibar in almost every major city in all the continents has further popularized the dish and increased its availability.