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| Articles about Triangles |
| Fritata Triangles | | 2007-09-28 05:59:00 | | Ingredients2 eggs1 Tbsp. flour1/4 cup milk1 garlic clove, mincedPinch of salt1 cup Parmesan or Romano cheese, gratedCombine all ingredients and mix well. Pour into a greased 9-inch cake pan and bake for 15 minutes at 350 degrees. Cut into triangles and serve with crackers or toast points. These little goodies are quick and easy to make. They are sort of like mini omelets that are great with crackers or the toast points. You could even add a little bacon bits, olives or some other ingredient to jazz up the flavor.Tips : Low fat milk will work in this recipe and you can get by with egg substitute. There are only two eggs in the entire mix, however, so it is really not that bad. Besides we keep reading that eggs are not that bad for you after all. According to the "experts", the cholesterol in eggs is not the real bad kind and you can get away with one or two eggs a day without any real problems. Of course, as usually happens, the pundits are just a likely to change this advice as their s... | | By: Cooking is Easy | | |
| | Mixed Mushroom & Goat Cheese Phyllo Triangles | | 2007-09-25 18:43:00 | | MIXED MUSHROOM & GOAT CHEESE Ingredients8 oz mushrooms (I used an equal mix of Shiitake, Cremini, and Chanterelle)2 tbsp unsalted butter1 small onion, finely chopped2 cloves garlic, minced1 tbsp finely chopped fresh sage2 tbsp finely chopped fresh rosemary2 tbsp finely chopped chives1 tsp finely ground long pepper¼ tsp fleur de sel6 oz goat cheeseMethod1. Cut the mushroom caps in half and then into ¼ inch slices (throw the stems in the green bin). 2. Heat the butter in a skillet over medium heat. Just as it begins to brown add the onions and garlic. When they get soft (around 4 minutes) add the fresh sage, rosemary, and long pepper. Stir and give these aromatics time to meet and mingle, just a couple of minutes. Stir in the mushrooms and let them get all wilted (5-6 minutes), they’ll reduce in size and but get concentrated in flavour, especially with those herbs.3. Crumble the goat cheese in a medium bowl and pour the mushroom mix on top. Stir together so that the cheese melts. When fully combined allow to cool. MIXED MUSHROOM & GOAT CHEESE PHYLLO TRIANGLESIngredients1 stick unsalted butter6 sheets phyllo doughMixed Mushroom & Goat Cheese filling (recipe above)Method1. Put a small pot over low heat and melt the unsalted butter. Remove any butter solids that rise to the surface.2. Brush the top of 1 sheet of phyllo with the melted butter and top it with a second sheet. Cut this double thick sheet lengthwise into four equal strips. Repeat with the remaining 4 phyllo sheets.3. Put a heaping teaspoon of the filling on the end of one of the phyllo strips. Fold the phyllo edge over the filling to form a triangle, then continue to fold back and forth until the whole strip is used. Repeat with the remaining strips.4. Preheat the oven to 400°C (200°F / Gas mark 6). Bake for 10 minutes or until nicely golden. Serve right away.N.B. - The uncooked triangles can be kept in your freezer for up to 2 weeks. If you have done them in advance bake them from frozen at... | | By: Diary of a Feeder | | |
| | Taking on “Testing Triangles - A classic excercise” | | 2007-03-24 00:16:46 | | Solving puzzles, sudokus & the analytical problems is one of my hobby. This set of puzzles always helps me with some brain food which mandatory to stay tuned in the current trends.
I was going through this Testing Triangles post from Elisabeth Hendrickson from Quality Tree Software. The triangle program is very much popular to the world of testers and many of the books and blogs have already covered the same.
Elisabeth posted this as a testing puzzle and asks the people to uncover the bugs in her program. The beauty of this Triangle program is that whole code is available for the tester since it’s written using JavaScript.
I couldn’t stop my self exploring the program and discovering some issues with Testing Triangles and logging them into comments sections while in hurry too.
I thought for a while on this program in the evening and felt that there are many similarities for this even though it’s very very small when compared to the real world applications w... | | By: Venkat's Blog on Software Testing | | |
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