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![]() Uzhunnu Vada served with coconut Chutney Finally I made it and here’s the recipe for you.. Ingredients:- Urad dal soaked in water for 2 hours – 2 cups Method:- Grind urad dal and salt together adding very little water,into a coarse paste.It would be better if you don’t add water at all.But if you think,your grinder won’t coperate,just add necessary water little by little.
Pat your hands with water and make a ball with the paste.Flatten it and make a hole in the center like a doughnut.Wet your hands with water,when ever needed.
Drop the vadas into hot oil and deep fry till golden brown in color.Serve with chutney or Sambar. Note: We can make without onion too … it is great taste … Ven PongalAuthor: Saravana RubyDec 7 Ven Pongal is a typical tamilnadu breakfast. Less ingredients and easy to prepare and yummy to eat.
Ingredients Method
1. In a pressure cooker fry the moong dal with little ghee until it becomes slightly brown and a nice aroma comes out from the dal.
Mother Teresa QuotesAuthor: Saravana RubyDec 6
Mother Teresa Quotes::Author: Saravana RubyDec 6
*MOTHER TERESA*Author: Saravana RubyDec 6
~:: Mumbai After The Smoke Has Cleared ::~Author: Saravana RubyDec 6 On Monday most of Mumbai, India attempted a return to normal activity, in the wake of the 60-hour-long siege last week. Some facts about the attacks are a bit clearer now, others still hazy. Based in part on the confessions of the only terrorist captured alive – Azam Amir Kasav (also identified elsewhere as ‘Ajmal Qasab’), Indian officials now say that there were only 10 gunmen involved, all members of Lashkar-e-Taiba, a Pakistani militant group with links to the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir – though Pakistan officially denies any involvement. According to recent reports, the ten attackers were responsible for the deaths of 172 people, including 19 foreigners, and 239 wounded. While mourners of the victims attended to their loved ones, and people all over the world held vigils, a Muslim graveyard in Mumbai refused to bury the nine dead gunmen – an official saying that they were not true followers of the Islamic faith.
1
An Indian soldier stands guard outside the Taj Mahal Palace & Tower Hotel following an armed siege on November 29, 2008 in Mumbai, India.
2 Photographers and members of the media cover a gunfire at the Taj Hotel in Mumbai November 28, 2008. At the front of the Taj, bleary-eyed journalists who had earlier mobbed National Security Guards chief J.K. Dutt when he announced the end of the siege were pushed back roughly behind a rope that had marked an unofficial boundary for them. Hundreds of media workers dived for cover as stray bullets whistled above them during the final stages of a firefight.
3
Indian commandos stand on a balcony of the Taj Mahal Palace & Tower Hotel after they gained control of it, on November 29, 2008 in Mumbai, India.
4 The lobby area of the Taj Mahal Hotel is seen in Mumbai, India, Saturday, Nov. 29, 2008, shortly after Indian commandos killed the last remaining gunmen holed up at the luxury Mumbai hotel Saturday.
MSecurity officials survey a destroyed room inside the Taj Mahal Palace & Tower Hotel after the armed siege on November 29, 2008 in Mumbai, India.
6
A policeman, shot at five times, holds up his metal belt buckle which saved his life on November 29, 2008 in Mumbai, India.
7
The interiors of Nariman House, Mumbai headquarters of the ultra-Orthodox Chabad Lubavitch movement, are seen after the commando operation in Mumbai, India, Saturday, Nov. 29, 2008.
A member of a Hindu congregation holds his hands in prayer to mourn those killed in the Mumbai, India terrorist attacks, while at the Hindu Temple and Cultural Center of the Rockies November 29, 2008 in Littleton, Colorado. The congregation listened to a prayer and then paused for two minutes of silence in solidarity with those killed in the attacks.
9 Muslims release pigeons symbolising peace during a rally in the western Indian city of Ahmedabad against the Mumbai attacks November 29, 2008. An Indian Catholic woman prays following a Sunday Mass, at the Cathedral of the Holy Name, in Mumbai, India, Sunday Nov. 30, 2008. Policemen and their families attend a meeting to pay tributes to Mumbai’s policemen, in photographs in background, who lost their lives in terrorist attacks in Mumbai, India, Sunday, Nov. 30, 2008. 12 Dhole Deepk, a policeman who was wounded at the Taj Mahal Palace & Tower Hotel during the armed siege with militants that ended yesterday, is seen at the Mumbai hospital, on November 30, 2008 13 Mumbai Residents walk with candles in the street near The Oberoi Hotel during a demonstration against the recent terror attacks in the city on November 30, 2008 in Mumbai, India. 14 People standing on the roadside shower flower petals as the body of Hemant Karkare, the chief of Mumbai’s Anti-Terrorist Squad is taken for cremation in Mumbai, India, Saturday, Nov. 29, 2008. 15 Sunil Yadav, A National Security Guard (NSG) commando who was injured during an operation in the Taj Mahal hotel, shares his experience with media in a hospital in Mumbai November 30, 2008. People make offerings and take the aura from the light of the Artee, at the end of an inter-faith service at the Hindu Sabha Temple in support of Mumbai attack victims, in Brampton, Canada. on Sunday Nov. 30, 2008. Forensic experts sit outside the Nariman House Jewish centre, which is guarded by police, at Colaba Market on November 30, 2008 in Mumbai, India. The body of a suspected terrorist lies in the wreckage inside the Nariman House building in Mumbai November 28, 2008. This is an undated image released by Mumbai State police department on Monday Dec. 1, 2008, of Azam Amir Kasav who the police said was the sole terrorist captured alive in the recent attacks in Mumbai. Kasav is purported to be the same terrorist photographed in the act here. Waiters organize for reopening the site of the first target of terrorist attacks this week, the Leopold Cafe on November 30, 2008 in Mumbai, India. Raflles Eeaus Codes, a tourist from Spain who was wounded at the Taj Mahal Palace & Tower Hotel, lays in a bed at the Mumbai hospital on November 30, 2008 in Mumbai, India. Moshe Holtzberg, the 2-year-old orphan of the rabbi and his wife slain in the Mumbai Jewish center, cries during a memorial service at a synagogue in Mumbai, India, Monday, Dec. 1, 2008. Holtzberg will fly to Israel Monday on an Israeli Air Force jet with his parents’ remains and the Indian woman who rescued him, an Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman said. Muslims pay homage to the victims of the Mumbai attacks during a special prayer meeting at a mosque in the northeastern Indian city of Siliguri November 29, 2008. A boy attends a candle lighting ceremony in Mumbai, India on Sunday, Nov. 30, 2008. 25
Relatives and neighbors mourn as they attend the funeral of Haresh Gohil, 25, who was killed by gunmen near Chabad-Lubavitch center,also known as Nariman House in Mumbai, India, Saturday, Nov. 29, 2008. Several burning funeral pyres of victims who died in the attacks in Mumbai, India, Saturday, Nov. 29, 2008. 27 Family members of Maibam Bimolchandra Singh react as his body is brought to his hometown Imphal November 29, 2008. Singh, an employee in the Trident-Oberoi hotel in Mumbai, died in the Mumbai attacks.
28 An Indian commando signs autographs for a crowd of grateful people in Mumbai November 29, 2008.
Manoj Kanojia, 27, cries as he speaks to his mother on the phone at a hospital in Mumbai, India, Saturday, Nov. 29, 2008. Manoj suffered two bullet wounds in Wednesday’s shooting at the Chhatrapati Shivaji Train Station in Mumbai. Afroz Abbas, age 10, winces as he is helped to lie down on his bed at a hospital in Mumbai, India, Saturday, Nov. 29, 2008. Afroz was injured in the back and said he lost his parents and three other relatives in Wednesday’s shooting at the Chhatrapati Shivaji Train Station in Mumbai. Workers sweep the ground in front of the Taj hotel in Mumbai November 29, 2008.
A rubber dinghy lies in a police station in Mumbai, India, Thursday, Nov. 27, 2008. Indian security officers believe the gunmen who went on a terror rampage in Mumbai may have reached the city using a black and yellow rubber dinghy found near the site of the attacks.
People wait on the platforms of the landmark Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus train station, one of the several places where the attackers shot at people, in Mumbai, India, Monday Dec. 1, 2008. Mumbai returned to normal Monday to some degree, with many shopkeepers opening their doors for the first time since the attacks began. As authorities finished removing bodies Monday from the bullet and grenade-scarred Taj Mahal hotel, a Muslim graveyard refused to bury the nine gunmen who terrorized this city over three days last week, leaving at least 172 people dead and wreaking havoc at some of its most famous landmarks. People eat at Cafe Leopold, one of the several places where terrorists shot at people, after it reopened in Mumbai, India, Monday, Dec. 1, 2008.
35 A woman cries, during a candlelight march for the victims of the Mumbai terrorist attack in which more than 195 people were killed, in Mumbai, India, Saturday, Nov. 29, 2008. Biggest Fireworks in the History… Atlantis Hotel (Dubai) OpeningAuthor: Saravana RubyDec 6 How to Know True Love ?Author: Saravana RubyDec 1 How do you know when you have found true love? I have heard this question countless times and have to be honest with you. No one really knows how true love works. There are different types of love. Puppy, true, and false are the three most common forms around. The best way to really identify true love is to explain the differences between these three. Puppy love is the type most teenagers experience. It is pure infatuation. The parties involved in a puppy love will feel the need to constantly stay at each other’s side.
Usually, puppy love is found in couples without any previous relationships. These couples feel the need to boast about their feelings, often displaying heavy public emotion. They constantly feel the need to physically touch one another and have an obscene knack of showering one another with pet names and compliments. Without their companion, by their side, they may exhibit a lack of self-confidence, bouts of depression, and serious jealousy issues. It is this immature nature that separates puppy love from true love. This type of relationship has a legitimate threat for abusive situations. False love is exactly that. This is a relationship based on lies. These relationships tend to base primarily on their passions and lusts. Couples in false relationships have one party, who truly cares about the other party, who has no moral or ethical obligations to their mate. Psychological and physical abuse is fairly commonplace. Someone always gets hurt when these relationships end. True love is unlike any other form of love. Couples truly in love appreciate every moment they are together, even when they are apart. They are comfortable knowing every detail of each other’s lives. Their relationships are so strong, a psychic bond is formed. Similar to the bond between mother and child. For example, it is not uncommon for a couple to be in two different stores and purchase the same item, or be in different sections of the same store and come back with the same item in their hands. True love is when a couple accepts one another, regardless of how they change. They feel so comfortable talking to one another, that they can hold a serious conversation during the most private moments. They are so comfortable with their relationship, they can change in front of one another without a second thought. True love is knowing this is the person you are going to be with until the day you die. You can easily picture taking care of your mate, when they are at their worst or best. They naturally recognize when something is bothering their mate. Children blessed enough to have parents truly in love, enjoy their parents playful proddings. They get a chance to see what it takes to make relationships work. Without a good working understanding, children are at a distinct disadvantage in their future relationships. It is imperative for children to see parents sharing their affection with the entire family, which will only further enhance their chances of having successful relationships. It is important to note, every relationship requires a lot of work. Couples experiencing true love have less work to do, however there are still areas they have to work at. Puppy love can grow, but requires a lot of work and patience. False love will never work, because one person does not feel the same as the other. People truly in love will find a way to make things work, even when times are at their hardest. Without that determination, there is no chance of success.8 guests, 0 members Max visitors today: 14 at 12:12 am GMT-4 This month: 23 at 03-07-2010 12:14 am GMT-4 This year: 173 at 02-02-2010 09:59 pm GMT-4 All time: 173 at 02-02-2010 09:59 pm GMT-4 © 2008-2010 KrishnaIsGreat.com All Rights Reserved | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||































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