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Garlic Soup – Winter Special Recipe By Food Fusion
Try this exceptionally great tasting Garlic Soup recipe, perfect for your immune system and to keep your body warm. #HappyCookingToYou #FoodFusion
Written Recipe:
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Garlic Soup
Serves 2-3
Recipe in English:
Ingredients:
-Chicken bones 250g
-Gajar (Carrots) 2 medium
-Hara pyaz (Green onion) œ Cup
-Pyaz (Onion) 1 large
-Tez paat (Bay leaf) 1
-Sabut kali mirch (Black peppercorns) 6-7
-Namak (Salt) 1 tsp or to taste
-Sirka (Vinegar) 1 tsp
-Water 3 Cups or as required
-Makhan (Butter) 2 tbs
-Olive oil 2 tbs
-Pyaz (Onion) chopped 2 medium
-Lehsan (Garlic) 20-25 cloves
-Aalo (Potato) cubes 1 medium
-Namak (Salt) 1 tsp or to taste
-Kali mirch (Black pepper) crushed œ tsp
-Doodh (Milk) Ÿ Cup
-Fresh parsley/Coriander chopped 2-3 tbs
-Kali mirch (Black pepper) crushed Œ tsp
-Fresh parsley/Coriander chopped
Directions:
-In saucepan,add chicken,carrots,green onion,onion,bay leaf,black peppercorns,salt,vinegar and water,mix well and bring it to boil (remove scum),cover and cook on medium low flame for 20-25 minutes,stock is ready then strain & set aside.
-In a pot,add butter,olive oil and let it melt.
-Add onion and sauté until translucent.
-Add garlic cloves,mix well and cook on medium low flame until light golden (10-12 minutes).
-Add potato and mix well.
-Add prepared stock,salt and black pepper crushed,mix well and bring it to boil,cover & cook on low flame for 10-12 minutes.
-Add milk,mix well and bring it to boil,cover and cook on low flame for 4-5 minutes.
-Turn off the flame and blend well with the help of hand blender.
-Turn on the flame,add fresh parsley/coriander and black pepper crushed,mix well and cook for a minute.
-Garnish with fresh parsley/coriander,bread croutons & serve!
Recipe in Urdu:
Ajza:
-Chicken bones 250g
-Gajar (Carrots) 2 medium
-Hara pyaz (Green onion) œ Cup
-Pyaz (Onion) 1 large
-Tez paat (Bay leaf) 1
-Sabut kali mirch (Black peppercorns) 6-7
-Namak (Salt) 1 tsp or to taste
-Sirka (Vinegar) 1 tsp
-Water 3 Cups or as required
-Makhan (Butter) 2 tbs
-Olive oil 2 tbs
-Pyaz (Onion) chopped 2 medium
-Lehsan (Garlic) 20-25 cloves
-Aalo (Potato) cubes 1 medium
-Namak (Salt) 1 tsp or to taste
-Kali mirch (Black pepper) crushed œ tsp
-Doodh (Milk) Ÿ Cup
-Fresh parsley/Coriander chopped 2-3 tbs
-Kali mirch (Black pepper) crushed Œ tsp
-Fresh parsley/Coriander chopped
Directions:
-Saucepan mein chicken,gajar,hara pyaz,pyaz,tez paat,sabut kali mirch,namak,sirka aur pani dal ker ache tarhan mix karein aur ubal anay ka bad scum ko nikal lein aur dhak ker darmiyani halki ancch per 20-25 minutes kliya paka lein,stock tayyar hai phir strain ker ka side per rakh dein,
-Pot mein makhan aur olive oil dal ker melt ker lein.
-Pyaz dal dein aur translucent hunay tak sauté ker lein.
-Lehsan dal ker ache tarhan mix karein aur darmiyani halki ancch per light golden hunay tak paka lein (10-12 minutes).
-Aalo dal ker ache tarhan mix karein.
-Tayyar yakhni,namak aur kali mirch crushed dal ker ache tarhan mix karein aur ubal anay ka bad dhak dein aur halki ancch per 10-12 minutes kliya paka lein.
-Doodh dal ker mix karein aur ubal anay ka bad dahk dein aur halki ancch per 4-5 miutes kliya paka lein.
-Chulha bund ker dein aur hand blender ki madad sa ache tarhan blend ker lein.
-Chulha on karein,fresh parsley/hara dhania aur kali mirch crushed dal ker ache tarhan mix karein aur ek minute kliya paka lein.
-Fresh parsley/hara dhania aur bread croutons sa garnish ker ka serve karein!
Demi Adejuyigbeâs Grub Street Diet

Demi Adejuyigbe conjuring Hawaiian pizza.
Illustration: Ryan Inzana
Demi Adejuyigbe is a prolific comedian and writer who has written for shows like the Good Place and James Cordenâs Late Late Show, hosted two popular podcasts, and been called the âfunniest person on the internet.â (Heâs known for his musical bits like the annual âSeptember 21â videos, an oeuvre that includes his rejected lyrics to Successionâs theme and an end-credits song for Green Book in the style of Morrissey.) This year, heâs been on a baking tear, graduating from cookies to lemon cakes, but itâs less about perfectly crimped pie crusts for him. âThe process of cooking is like saying, âI am worth spending this time on, and itâs just good for my own mental health,ââ he says. Thatâs continued since he joined the writersâ room for Peacockâs new Amber Ruffin Show, and last week he made two types of pies, along with cinnamon rolls and lemon cakes for friends. He ate salmon and turkey, too.
Tuesday, November 24
Sat on my couch at 12:05 a.m. eating Double Milk Chocolate Milano cookies. This is not how I expected this diary to begin.
Around nine, I got out of bed for more Milano cookies. Kinda like that one damn Yoda meme.
Milanos are up there for me. The shortbread is so good and so crunchy, but chewy, and then the chocolate. Unfortunately, Iâll be walking around in Albertsonâs and Iâll be like, âAll right, no junk food,â and then Iâll see the Milano cookies. Yeah, theyâre great. As someone who keeps trying to make different types of cookies, I think thatâs the cookie I ate so much as a kid â those and the thumbprint cookies, the raspberry ones â that Iâm just like, âOh, if I can make those, game over.â But I donât have the patience to make them, not the way they do. Maybe one day.
In the afternoon, I cooked salmon for a salad with arugula and honey-lemon dressing and ate a whole sleeve of raspberry shortbread cookies from Ikea. I got those when I must have been trying to replace one of the pieces of my old bed frame, because I was like, âI need this thing or I canât sleep in the bed.â So I went to Ikea and of course I can never just get the one thing. I walked through the store, and at the end, they have those raspberry thumbprint cookies, and I was like, âYeah, okay, give me some of those.â
Absentmindedly ate dried pineapple slices as I put away groceries. Then I had the last bit of salmon from lunch for dinner. Followed by late-night gummy bears.
After midnight, I baked apple turnovers for my neighbors. Our new neighbors, diagonally from us, gave us some cookies as a welcome. A âsorry we canât say because of COVIDâ thing. They left us a note with the cookies. So to return the favor, I baked them a box of apple turnovers and left them at their place, and they also loved it.
The turnovers are just a hit. Itâs so fun to make, and everyone is sort of like, âHoly shit, you can do this.â Iâm like, âItâs very easy, but I appreciate being thought of as impressive.â
Wednesday, November 25
Couldnât eat before 2 p.m. because of a doctorâs appointment. I spatchcocked and brined my Thanksgiving turkey in the morning and afternoon. This is the first year Iâve ever cooked the turkey for Thanksgiving.
I used Samin Nosratâs recipe. She mentioned buttermilk brining the turkey, when I was on her podcast with my friend Hrishi Hirway, and how that makes it really juicy, and I thought, Okay, that sounds like the thing to do. I told myself, âI know I want to make the turkey this year,â because I was already in the throes â my entire identity is cooking through the pandemic. Her recipe sounded very easy, and I saw another from Williams-Sonoma, I think, about buttermilk brining with herbs and spices, and I thought thatâs gonna be good at bringing out the flavor. But then I also read the recipe too late, and I needed 48 hours for it, and another day or so to thaw the turkey. I didnât have that time. So I looked up another recipe that was for less time, and sort of mixed the three together. Saminâs was definitely the most helpful in terms of explaining the process and talking about what spatchcocking is.
Ate some fuckinâ Kit Kats and a few Cadbury chocolate buttons around 4:30 p.m.
For dinner, I made Beyond Meat burgers with apple-jalapeño jelly, roasted garlic and onion, and kale. Iâve been an on-and-off pescatarian for probably five years now. I sort of made a pact with myself to be vegan by the age of 30, which is just for climate reasons and the guilt of, well, I donât have a good reason to continue eating meat. Now Iâll give myself salmon. I lean on salmon, so much, and shrimp and other fish, but salmonâs also just the most malleable fish. I end up cooking it a lot. It tastes really good in so many different ways.
Itâs the kind of thing where every so often Iâll eat a hamburger or âOh, my friend is ordering chicken and Iâll get some of that, too.â Itâs sort of that laziness transcends my pescatarianism, but when it comes to cooking, I do pretty closely stick to it, except when it comes to the Thanksgiving meal.
From 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., baked mango custard pies, with a graham-cracker crust â I needed to cool them overnight â from my friendâs motherâs recipe. Specifically, Hrishi, who has been a great friend for so many years. I got to try this mango pie two Thanksgivings ago. It was great. It was a Thanksgiving food that I suddenly made in my head as A Thanksgiving Food. So I decided to make it this year.
I watched Fiddler on the Roof in the meantime. It was a suggestion from a friend. I jokingly called it a Thanksgiving movie, even though itâs not. But it fits so perfectly in the wheelhouse of things I love. Iâd never seen it, but watching it, I realized, âOh, I know all of these songs, the dancing is so fun, this movie is so full of joyâ â for the first half. Itâs so long I donât think I wouldâve given myself the opportunity to enjoy it unless I was either sitting in a theater or doing something like baking.
I think because I have a new home I recently moved into, at the same time that I have to cook all this food, I feel very domestic. I keep describing myself as a sort of northeastern Martha Stewartâtype Vermont mother. I want gingham patterns everywhere, and I want to cook things and have people come over and get a pie off my windowsill. So I have different friends who are spending Thanksgiving with me, and I asked if there were any drink requests. I was trying to cover the gamut of what weâve got. Someone said boozy cider, and I thought that would be nice. So I whipped that up with brown sugar, cinnamon, clove, anise, orange slices, and bourbon.
Last thing I did was make pie crust for another pie and set the dough in the fridge to cool overnight.
Thursday, November 26
The turkey had brined for almost 24 hours, so I moved it to the oven to cook for a couple hours.
Breakfast was peanut-butter granola and Chobani strawberry-banana Greek yogurt.
Rolled out the pie-crust dough, cut some nice autumnal shapes, and pre-baked it while watching Grease. Itâs the movie I saw the most as a kid. I was obsessed with it; they had us do lip-syncing competitions to it at the local mall. I watched it for the first time since being a kid, I want to say, two months ago. The movie still rules. I still think itâs perfect, despite it being also politically awful in every way. I decided to put it on again as something to have in the background that I could enjoy without paying attention to it.
Once the crust was prebaked, I prepared the filling for the pecan pie off a Dorie Greenspan recipe.
Simultaneously peeled and prepared to bake some candied yams. Three or four years ago for Thanksgiving, another comedian, Jaboukie Young-White, had moved in with me. He lived with me for a year. And he had some friends over for Thanksgiving and they made candied yams and a few other foods that were so good. Iâve always valued Friendsgiving more than Thanksgiving, just because Thanksgiving was never a huge thing for me back home. My mom would get a turkey from Popeyes or whatever, and weâd eat it. But it wasnât as if we were staunchly about Thanksgiving, and my parents never ask me to come home for Thanksgiving.
Pie finished baking. Looked like shit! My roommate told me it looked fine.
Candied yams were baked, and I was free from my cooking. I absentmindedly ate apples while waiting for my friends to finish cooking.
We had Thanksgiving dinner in my backyard: mango custard pie, turkey, stuffing, candied yams, chicken and dumplings, rolls, spicy cranberry relish, and Brussel sprouts. Way too much food for five people. The chicken and dumplings were my friend Lizâs doing. She is from Kentucky; she also made the rolls off a 100-year-old recipe thatâs been in her family for generations. That was nice, because Iâm from Texas and it felt very much like a food I wouldâve ate growing up.
Around 10:30 p.m., I continued eating this mango pie as we played games and watched Scooby-Doo: Monsters Unleashed. I have to say I ate one whole mango pie. Itâs delicious.
Friday, November 27
I woke up and bit into a Cadbury hazelnut chocolate before even having breakfast.
Around 11 a.m., I had banana-nut granola and Chobani strawberry yogurt.
I offered Thanksgiving leftovers to anyone who wanted some and two friends came by to take me up on that. I offered them all mango pie.
Had a plate of leftovers for lunch. Turkey, stuffing, and yams. The tryptophan in the turkey made me so tired, I napped for like three hours.
At night, my friend came by to paint in the front yard as I baked lemon cakes. I put on Sister Act for us to watch through the window.
For dinner, I made another Thanksgiving plate, this time with no turkey. I wonât get fooled again.
Around 11 p.m., the lemon cakes were done, but I decided it was also the perfect time to start baking vegan orange-glazed cinnamon rolls, which was a mistake because they take like two separate periods of 90 minutes to rise before baking. These arenât finished until 4 a.m. (and, because I kept pausing it, neither was Sister Act).
Saturday, November 28
Woke up and ate graham crackers.
At noon, I ate one of the vegan orange cinnamon rolls (which were made for some friends â whoops).
Glazed one of the lemon cakes in preparation for a friend to come and pick it up. In removing the cake from the pan, a bunch of gooey lemon-glazed crumbs gathered and I ate them all like a disgusting little gremlin.
When we had to go into quarantine, I was still enjoying baking, so I would make cookies and wondered what else I could make. I started branching out to lemon cakes and orange cinnamon rolls and all sorts of other things. I realized I really enjoy this time in the kitchen, and I started to realize cooking was a very meditative thing for me. It felt like it sort of gave me time back that I had trouble getting. Part of that is my friend Neal used to tell me that cooking is very good for someone like me because it enriches my self-worth. The process of cooking is like saying, âI am worth spending this time on,â and itâs just good for my own mental health. I thought it was baloney back then, but the more that I cook, the more I realize thatâs exactly what it is.
I made fried rice with carrots, onions, soy sauce, leftover stuffing, and leftover turkey. I have not learned my lesson â it knocked me out for another four hours or so.
Around nine, I walked to the corner store to get Gatorade and eat gummy candy. I have a go-to Gatorade color, which is blue. Something about it feel refreshing. I think itâs Cool Blue, but Iâm always just like, Gimme the blue one.
Sunday, November 29
I woke up and immediately ate gummy candy.
Had peanut-butter granola with Chobani strawberry-banana yogurt.
At noon, a friend swung by to pick up the orange cinnamon rolls and gave me some strawberries he picked up at a farm in return. His girlfriend is vegan, so I thought there was an opportunity to make cinnamon rolls and make them vegan. âCause Iâd never really made too many baked goods that are vegan, and they turned out really well.
Another friend came by to pick up the lemon cake, along with finally freeing me from all the leftover food I had by taking it to pass out to unhoused neighbors. I think there is something nice about making food and at the end of it having something to share with people, especially during quarantine when itâs so hard to see anyone. Itâs just nice to have this thing where I can drop it off at a friendâs house and have a moment to say hi to them or even show them Iâm thinking of them. Giving them this thing I spent a lot of time on feels very connecting and enriching and nice. A lot of people feel like itâs very selfish to go through, but I think itâs entirely selfish because I love the process of baking and that I get to give you this thing that you think was a lot of work for me.
I ate a bunch of the strawberries while looking up recipes I could use them in. They were delicious, of course.
Made dinner at 10:30. Beyond Meat burgers again, with the same ingredients as before but additional persimmon and Monterey Jack. Which is wild for me because I decided as a child I do not like cheese and only recently have been like, Oh, maybe cheese can be good in the right circumstances â hmmm.
Itâs such a thing that I feel that whenever I start dating someone this becomes the point of contention. As a kid, I think I had a cheeseburger, I remember it being from McDonaldâs, that I didnât like. So for years, I was like, Yeah, I donât eat cheese. Itâs weird, but I donât do it.
Earlier in quarantine, I ordered brisket tacos and they gave me a quesadilla instead and I didnât want to make a stink so I ate the quesadilla. Then I was like, âOh, that was actually really delicious.â Even further in the pandemic, I made a grilled cheese off a recipe and it was really delicious and I posted to Instagram saying, âI just made and ate my first grilled cheese ever, I wonât answer any questions.â Everyone was like, âOkay, but next time you do it, use mayonnaise.â I was like, âShit, this is delicious too.â That is also a food I did not really grow up with. I came to know it as a very white people food, and it was not in any dish that I ate as a kid. I didnât really eat sandwiches or anything.
I update my friend every time I make grilled cheese. Now Iâll text her and ask, âWhat cheese is good for grilled cheese? What cheese is good with this?â Iâll try out different cheeses, and itâs been very fun to open my eyes to one of the most popular foods for the first time, at age 28.
I still donât eat cheeseburgers, but Iâll eat cheese pizza, and Iâll try to figure out what the difference is. I think maybe itâs the texture, or how itâs melted, or how instrumental it is to the meal. I really like Hawaiian pizza. I want to say thereâs some element of contrarianism involved because I do love it a lot, but I just end up ordering it more because itâs a thing where everyone says, âHawaiian pizza is so gross.â I donât know? Ham is great, pineapple is great, they all taste great together. I think I like it a normal amount, but the fact that people complain about it as if itâs a controversial food? Itâs really not. I get a hankering for it every time. I also think it isnât very fun when I order pizza and thereâs so much tomato sauce and cheese that it melts off. I think whenever itâs Hawaiian pizza, the cheese and sauce are on there pretty securely. I donât know if thereâs just less tomato sauce or what. I genuinely am like, âThis is the best way pizza is.â
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How To Watch Elf Streaming – December 2020

Where Is Elf Streaming?
So, where is Elf streaming this year? Well, you can currently watch Jon Favreau’s 2003 timeless story of Buddy the Elf finding his father (and true love) on Starz. You can watch the movie on the Starz website or through the premium channel’s add-on option on Amazon. Amazon offers a 7-day trial of Starz if you haven’t signed up already.
If you end up streaming Elf on Starz, don’t forget to check out all of the great bonus titles related to Elf. In addition to the movie, you can enjoy a collection of deleted scenes, a mini-documentary about how the stop-motion animation was produced, a behind-the-scenes feature with Will Ferrell, another one on the creation of the film’s sets, and even “Buddy’s Sing & Cheer Along,” a sing-a-long version of the movie.
Ro Jordan – Been Here Before (Official Video)
Ro Jordan – Been Here Before (Official Video)
Been Here Before | Brand New Single By Ro Jordan OUT NOW
Directed by Lewis M Jordan
Filmed by Lewis M Jordan
Edited by Lewis M Jordan
Music & Lyrics by Ro Jordan
– A Ro Jordan & Milkyway Recordings Production –
Visit the Official Ro Jordan Website for more content:
www.rojordanofficial.com/
Links To Socials:
Instagram- www.instagram.com/rojordanofficial/?hl=en
Twitter- twitter.com/rojordanmusic?lang=en
Facebook- www.facebook.com/rojordanofficial/
The latest single, âBeen Here Beforeâ from BBC Introducing supported Artist and Producer, Ro Jordan, gives us listeners yet another powerhouse vocal performance in this triumphant soulful Pop ballad. From being featured in the Top 25 Most Played on BBC Radio, to national magazine features, Ms. Jordan is causing some excitement within the music industry.
– © Ro Jordan 2020 / in association with Milkyway Recordings & Royale Artists / All Reserved Rights-
Producer: Ro Jordan (Ms. Jordxn)
Writer: Ro Jordan
Vocalist: Ro Jordan
Mixer: Ro Jordan
Mastered: Ro Jordan
Audio is owned by Ro Jordan, distributed and provided to Youtube by Tunecore.
Chacata Sound System – Give The Drummer Some Mo' / Vinyl Mix
The Dub Room presents Give The Drummer Some Mo’ Vol 2
Afro-Cuban, Jazz & African Excursions In Rhythm Madness Mix
as heard previously on Podomatic
Another B-Side Inkie Joint
âcomo mi ritmo no hay dosâ
Say No To GMOs (Generic Music Operators)
Beware of the Blunted DJ
© La Ultima Nota Productions
If it snaps, crackles & pops â itâs a Chacata Sound System Podcast!
Where an educated listener is our best customer
fair use – no money shakin’ dj here
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