Daily... and since 2013... Weekly (hopefully) photos of Miami, Florida, USA. However, be amply warned!!! Sometimes, I tell the truth, other times, I may not. Sometimes, I am joking, other times, I may be serious. It may be hard for you to tell... So if I offend you, I am joking or not telling you the truth. But my photos are all real because I do not doctor them.
Monday, June 30, 2008
Baby Ribs
Sunday, June 29, 2008
Done Deal!
Saturday, June 28, 2008
Whatever Lola Wants
Friday, June 27, 2008
Cut Cut...
Thursday, June 26, 2008
Checkout Stations
Part of the American flag you see is the hint that the US is gearing up to celebrate its July 4th Independence day soon. I may climb up on the roof of my house, fighting the mosquitoes, to take photos of the fireworks on July 4th, but then again, I may not just because you can't tell if they are Miami's fireworks.
Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Carica Papaya (bis)
Tuesday, June 24, 2008
Canes Country
I was at a Miami auto tag agency today for a transaction that cannot be done on line, and I am glad I was because I did not realize that the State of Florida has so many kinds of specialty license plate for the consumers to choose from. All automobiles in Florida need to carry a license plate (only in the rear of the cars.) For an extra fee, the owners can select from a large choice of specialty plates. You name it, they have it, from protecting the whales to breast cancer awareness and of course all the sport teams and many other organizations are represented. This is a nice way to generate extra revenue. Me? I want to remind you that while in Miami, you are in HURRICANES country, and all the cars I ever owned here have the Miami Hurricanes special plate. You can see an example of it on the left upper shelf, and a small sample of the other plates on all the three walls of this office.
Monday, June 23, 2008
University Centre
Sunday, June 22, 2008
Concrete Jungle
Saturday, June 21, 2008
The End
Friday, June 20, 2008
Summer Camp
Thursday, June 19, 2008
Big Bad Red
Wednesday, June 18, 2008
Staghorn in storm
Tuesday, June 17, 2008
Gibi
Monday, June 16, 2008
Le Brie
How do the French make their cheese, you may ask? Ask no more...
Starting from milk, after deaerating, it is sampled and pumped to silos. Raw milk is pasteurized and concentrated to triple its total solid content, then blended with whole milk and cream before being pasteurized again. Cheese milk from the pasteurizer flows directly to maturation (preincubation) tanks. When the acidity in a tank reaches the proper level, which takes 0.5 to two hours, the milk is pumped to the cheese vats. Fermentation in the vats is carefully monitored and when the pH reaches a certain level, an operator manually cuts it into 1.5-in cubes. This is when some particulates like bacon, onion and/or herbs are added for variety. When the specified final pH is reached, a vat is pushed to a dumper where 20-30% of the whey is removed from the top of the vat by vacuum, then the remaining curds and whey are dumped to a parallel conveyor.
The next morning, the cheese are lowered into brine tanks, where product remains for up to two hours then stored overnight at a slight angle to drain the brine, drying the cheese. Cheese remains in the curing room for seven to ten days. The packaged cheese is stored in a 37 degrees Fahreinheit cooler prior to shipment to the distribution center and to your home.
Yummy... Should I look up village Camembert's cheese or le Fromage?
Sunday, June 15, 2008
Marjory Stoneman Douglas Drive
A short report was written by Richard Yager in Miami's Community Newspapers that is repeated verbatim in quotes below...
"For years, motorists have been reminded they were traveling “Marjory Stoneman Douglas Drive,” detailed by yellow lettering against the drab brown background of metal signs planted in swale areas of the 12.5-milelong SW 72nd Street (Sunset Drive) that begins at Cocoplum Circle in Coral Gables and goes west to 167th Avenue.
Now, a stone marker proclaims SW 72nd Street (Sunset Drive) as a “Historic Road,” a more permanent way to honor Miami- Dade’s prominent environmental author. Located on a grassy island, the lightly toned, 6- by 10-foot concrete marker with raised black lettering faces westbound traffic at a Palmetto Expressway (SR 826) northbound entry ramp to memorialize her conservation efforts.
The marker dedication took place during the anniversary month of Ms. Douglas’ birth (April 1890 in Minneapolis, MN), and nearly 10 years following her death on May 14, 1998, after a lifetime of conservation efforts, most permanently championed in her landmark environmental book, The Everglades: Rivers of Grass, published in 1947."
Here it is in a photo taken today. The stone marker reads:
"SW 72 St.
Sunset Drive
Marjory Stoneman Douglas Drive
Historic Road"