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Last night I made an entree for dinner which was just perfect to start off the evening. It’s almost effortless, and takes a short amount of preparation.

The entree was Pork Belly served with Spinach & Pear puree and beetroot jelly. Here is what you’ll need:

Pork Belly
- 2 Strips Pork Belly
- 0.5 tbsp of good quality sea salt

Spinach & Pear Pure
- 1 bunch spinach
- 1 pear (peeled, cored and quartered)
- 1 tbsp Olive Oil
- 1 tbsp fresh lemon juice
- Salt & Pepper

Beetroot Jelly
- 1 pack of Raspberry jelly (I used an Aeroplane branded one)
- 1 tin of sliced beetroot

First up the Beetroot Jelly (note – this will need at least 4 hours in the fridge to set)

- Unpack half satchel of the raspberry jelly into 0.5 cup of boiling water and mix to dissolve. Add another 0.5 cup of cold water.
- In a flat and shallow pan – place the sliced beetroots tightly next to each other side by side and pour over a tablespoon of the beetroot water from the tin on top of the beetroots.
- Finally pour over the raspberry jelly mixture till it covers the beetroot by 0.5 cm
- Set in the fridge for 4 hours

Next, let’s get on with the Pork Belly. Preheat your oven to 220* C.

I bought 2 strips from David Jones (cost me about $5.50 for the two). There were some bone parts at the bottom section of the belly strips which I cut off. I prefer to sever this boneless.

I made diagonal cuts through the skin (don’t cut into the meat) and then sprinkled sea salt on the top of the strips and massage the skins for a about 20 to 30 seconds. Check that your jelly is getting ready before sticking the pork in the over. You can drizzle the strips with a bit of olive oil – but I put them straight in the oven on the top shelf. After about 15 mins, bring the heat down to 200 and bring the meat down to the middle shelf and then 15 mins later, down to 180. If your skin hasn’t crisped, put it back on the top shelf for another 10 – 15 mins until it’s crisp to your liking. All in all, it should take about 45 – 55 mins to cook.

While the pork is cooking, let’s move on to the puree. In a small saucepan, boil enough water to cover your quartered bits of pear. Let your pear boil for about 15 to 20 mins depending on it’s ripeness. Take it out of the water and let it cool. Meanwhile, wash the spinach and cook that in boiling water (I used the same water as the pear) for 5 mins until it’s soft. Drain the spinach and squeeze out any excess water with some paper towels.

Finally, add the spinach, pear, olive oil, lemon juice, salt and pepper to a blender and blend it until the mixture forms a creamy and foamy mixture. Taste and season to suit your taste buds.

Check that your pork belly is crisp and that there is no pinkness in the meat. Cut a square or rectangle strip of the jelly and place it on the corner of your serving plate. Dollop a teaspoonful of the puree and spread it in a straight line with the back of your spoon. Cut the pork strips into half and serve them with one half leaning over the other. Sprinkle a little sea salt over if necessary.

Voila, there you have it – Pork Belly served with Spinach and Pear puree and beetroot jelly.


Business »

Netflix – the best stock to buy?
By Vicky Lalwani on Tuesday, 10 March 2009 | 3 Comments

netflix-3month-stockprice

The share market is down, Google’s stock aren’t performing like they once did, and the same goes for many other tech companies.

But one in particular seems to be doing alright – Netflix (NFLX).

Since Dec 08, most stock indices have fallen 20% (look at S&P and NASDAQ in above graph). However, if you look at performance of Netflix’s stock price, it stays straight on top – in fact, it grew 50%.

How did they do it? Is it just the best time for their sales to grown? 

Let’s first talk about who and what Netflix does. Back in 1998, founder and CEO, Reed Hasting had an overdue “Apollo 13″ cassette (yes, I said cassette!!). He owed the video rental store $40 for late payment as he had also misplaced the cassette. As he walked to the gym, Reed realised that a gym has a much better model. You pay $x a month, but the gym doesn’t care how much or how less you use their facilities.

He then took that model online for the video rental business and called it Netflix. Based on your subscription with Netflix (usually a flat monthly fee), you create a rental queue. Netflix will mail you the first DVD along with a prepaid envelope. When you’re done with the DVD, you mail it back in the prepaid envelope and they send you the next movie from your queue. Some subscription models allow up to multiple DVDs at time and some with a limit of exchanges per month.

Given this time of economic downturn, most people prefer to have a budget monthly expense with no more or less to pay. A fixed price of US$8.99 per month to have 1 DVD at a time with no exchange limit is a great way to save costs. Saves taking the whole family out to the movies – not to forget those ridiculously priced popcorn and coke.

So, over time subscribers have dramatically grown, and hence their stock climbs further.

Question is – how long will it take for major video rentals stores to move to the same model? 

In Australia, Telstra’s Big Pond Movies seem to have a similar model in place – ranging from AUD9.95 to AUD29.95 per month. 

Not bad Telstra, but I wonder how many subscribers you’ve got – and whether your stock price can jump 50%?


Web »

Twitter down? “That page doesn’t exists”
By Vicky Lalwani on Thursday, 5 March 2009 | 2 Comments

twitter-down

The time is 10:20am Sydney, Australia.

The above image is the error message I get as I try to login on Twitter. It attempts to go to twitter.com/sessions but says that The page doesn’t exists.

Upgrades?


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