Pancakes and Sausage on a Stick

Jimmy Dean Chocolate Chip Pancakes & Sausage on a Stick

Not new, but worth mentioning. God bless America.

Junk Food Blog:

The Jimmy Dean brand of breakfast food won my nod of approval when I found this lovely new entry.

Pancakes & Sausage on a Stick Chocolate Chip pretty much takes what my wife often eats at IHOP and puts it all on a hand-held form factor, allowing junk-foodies like us to revel in frozen food fanatacism.

Better yet, these are microwaveable, so just nukem and pukem.

(Thanks for the tip, Miles B. and Mike W.)

Related:

John and My Brother with French Fry-Encrusted Corndogs

God bless Korea. The infamous Korean french fry-encrusted corn dogs, which Mech and John E. and I encountered this time last year in Seoul.

Fatty foods on a stick. They’re the lingua franca of the junk food world…

German Food in Bangkok

Bei Otto German Restaurant in Bangkok

That’s the subject of my latest Gridskipper dispatch.

Categories
Misc.

Big AirAsia Sale

AirAsia

I’m not normally one to point out travel bargains, but this one appears to be significant — and it’s ending soon.

Travelzoo:

Book within the next 3 days and be treated to the cheapest flight you’ll ever find – period! AirAsia is giving away 1,000,000 FREE seats to over 70 routes within Asia. Just pay the air taxes. Travel is valid from April 1-Oct. 27, including the popular summer months!

Founded in 2002, AirAsia is a low fare, no frills carrier. Their fleet of Boeing 737’s and Airbus 320’s covers exotic destinations in Malaysia, Thailand, Singapore, Indonesia, and more. In 2003 & 2004, AirAsia was named Asia Pacific Low Cost Airline of the Year by the Centre for Asia Pacific Aviation (CAPA).

For more information and to book:
# Click here to go directly to AirAsia’s site.
# Click the “1,000,000 Free Seats” banner to reveal the available routes.
# Use the flight search tool on the left to choose your desired cities and dates.
# Fares are displayed in local currency. Here’s a handy online currency converter to help translate your final cost.
# Seats are limited, so this WILL sell out quickly. You must book by Friday, Jan. 19.

Thanks for the tip, Mom and Claire VDL.

Categories
Misc.

How Much is a Rai?

The rai is a unit of land measurement here in Thailand. You’ll see references to land the size of so-and-so rai, etc. But exactly how much area, I was wondering yesterday, is one rai?

In researching the answer to that question, I stumbled upon this:

rai: a traditional unit of land area in Thailand. The rai is now considered to equal exactly 1600 square meters, which is 0.16 hectare or approximately 0.3954 acre. The rai is divided into 4 ngan. The unit is called the hai in northern Thailand and the lai in Laos. The word means “field,” that is, an upland field rather than a rice paddy.

The rest of the site — How Many? A Dictionary of Units of Measurement — is really worth checking out. It’s maintained by a guy named Russ Rowlett, who’s a math prof at UNC-Chapel Hill.

I especially like this:

What countries besides the U.S. have not adopted the metric system?
Many U.S. teachers think the answer is “Liberia and Burma” (make that Myanmar). Let’s give Liberia and Myanmar a break! All countries have adopted the metric system, including the U.S., and most countries (but not the U.S.) have taken steps to eliminate most uses of traditional measurements. However, in nearly all countries people still use traditional units sometimes, at least in colloquial expressions. Becoming metric is not a one-time event that has either happened or not. It is a process that happens over time. Every country is somewhere in this process of going metric, some much further along than others.

And:

Americans probably use a greater variety of units of measurement than anyone else in the world. Caught in a slow-moving transition from customary to metric units, we employ a fascinating and sometimes frustrating mixture of units in talking about the same things. We measure the length of a race in meters, but the length of the long jump event in feet and inches. We speak of an engine’s power in horsepower and its displacement in liters. In the same dispatch, we describe a hurricane’s wind speed in knots and its central pressure in millibars.

Furthermore, our English customary units do not form a consistent system. Reflecting their diverse roots in Celtic, Roman, Saxon, and Norse cultures, they are often confusing and contradictory. There are two systems for land measurement (one based on the yard and the other on the rod) and a third system for distances at sea. There are two systems (avoirdupois and troy) for small weights and two more (based on the long and short tons) for large weights. Americans use two systems for volumes (one for dry commodities and one for liquids) and the British use a third (British Imperial Measure).

Some other interesting units of land measurement include: the tatami (yes, like the mat — thanks for the heads up, Mech and K!), the olk, and the soendre.

Vespa Rickshaw

Vespa Rickshaw

Introducing the Vespa Rickshaw, available from a shop in Bali. Via.

Becks Pursues His American Dream

David Beckham Chia-Pet Doll

Soccernet:

David Beckham will leave Real Madrid at the end of the season and join side Los Angeles Galaxy on a £128m five-year deal – which works out at a mere half-a-million pounds a week. The former England captain will leave Real in June and begin his new career in MLS in August.

The “mere half-a-million pounds a week” refers to the fact that his current contract with the Spanish side pays him much, much more than that. [Edit: Whoops, I think perhaps the Soccernet folks were being sarcastic and silly, as usual, and I fell for the “mere.” This new contract for Becks is actually quite lucrative even compared to other big-name soccer deals, though the Galaxy will retain his image rights.]

While I’ve been critical of the MLS in the past, overall this deal is great for soccer in the US.

It’ll raise the profile of the league globally, and I think other high-quality players — Dutch midfielder Edgar Davids is one early candidate — will eventually cross the pond, as well. Crucially, Becks is arriving in LA with several years left before he’s a has-been; too often, ex-world class players come to America in their twilight years simply to collect a decent wage and have an easy go of it until they retire. That’s not quite the case with Beckham. His days of playing for the England national side may be over, but he’s expressed an interest in building up a good team in Cali.

But perhaps most important is this: What effect will Mr. Spice’s move to the US have on the David Beckham Chia Pet Bobble Head Doll industry that has sprung up — sorry — in Asia?

(Thanks to reader Katie C for sending along this link.)

A Street Food Expedition

Yesterday I had the pleasure of undertaking a fantastic culinary adventure with my pal — and fellow Thailand blogger — Austin B, author of the excellent RealThai blog.

Austin is a gifted photog, a foodie’s foodie, and an old Siam hand. He’s got a great write-up of some of the delicacies we sampled on Langsuan soi 6, which is just around the corner from my house:

Today was something of an informal Bangkok Bloggers Summit. I trekked all the way to the Lang Suan area to meet with Newley Purnell of www.newley.com fame. Newley has been blogging since 2001, an era when, I believe, the word blog had yet to be coined. What did they call it back then, Newley? Online Diarying? Internet Loggery? Pointless Frivolity?

Newley lives just minutes away from Lang Suan Soi 6, a tiny alley that, come lunchtime, is a virtual magnet for hungry Thai office staff of every stripe. We decided the partake in the madness and dove directly into the heart of the soi. More or less halfway down we came across a raan khao kaeng, rice and curry shop, that serves up some very interesting looking nosh, and our fate was sealed.

Pictured above is an image Austin snapped of some tasty nam phrik kapi with deep-fried mackerel we tucked into; be sure to check out his post for even more great photos. I felt honored to break bread with Austin, as he has an amazingly vast knowledge of Thai vittles. (And, as Austin points out, we ate at the very curry shop where I was famously laughed at by a gaggle of Thai women back in August.)

More of Austin’s photography can be seen on his portfolio site and his Flickr page.

Categories
Misc.

Apple’s iPhone

Apple has unveiled the iPhone. More info from Apple here. Here’s how the iPhone stacks up against other smartphones. The price will be $499-599, which, yes, is steep — but perhaps not so bad when you consider it’s not only a phone, bus also a 2 MP camera, an MP3 player, a Web browsing device, and, as Richard Wanderman observes, essentially a computer.

Retronyms and 2007 Anniversaries

Two entertaining New York Times articles of note:

1. William Safire on retronyms. This one goes out to my brother M, who scoffs when people talk about “digital cameras.” (Digital cameras are much more prevalent than film cameras these says, so the former should now simply be referred to as “cameras,” he argues.) Thanks to A for the link.

2. “Looking Forward to Looking Back,” Bruce Handy’s humorous take on upcoming anniversaries in 2007. Thanks to A for this link, as well.

Categories
Misc.

Freelancing Overseas

I occasionally get emails from folks who’d like more information about living abroad and working as a freelancer. Here’re three good resources:

Freelancing Overseas: Casting Off the Parachute: “Notes, tips and insights for journalists who are thinking about freelancing overseas, from one writer who has been there,” by Vanessa Gezari on Poynter Online.

“I Want to Travel the World While Telecommuting. Any Tips on How to Make This Possible?” A Q&A with Rolf Potts on World Hum.

“A Year Abroad (or 3) as a Career Move,” a New York Times story from Hillary Chura.