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"ferment" Definitions
  1. a state of political or social excitement and activity, often with a lack of order
"ferment" Synonyms
brew undergo fermentation cause to ferment subject to fermentation prepare by fermentation bubble fizz foam froth effervesce churn boil seethe simmer rise cause to effervesce lather spume aerate sparkle to become foamy lather up gurgle cream burble provoke instigate incite foment excite kindle cause raise arouse abet prompt pick rouse generate inflame engender enkindle beget agitate leaven dilate inflate make rise cause to rise puff up lighten work expand swell smolder(US) be angry bristle burn erupt explode fester glow glower consume fulminate fume smoke steam stir intensify escalate magnify amplify deepen heighten strengthen augment reinforce widen compound extend aggravate exacerbate redouble broaden intensate go sour spoil sour turn curdle go bad go off acidify taint thicken clot congeal crumble decompose molder(US) decay become sour make rancid break down rot disturb upset bother perturb worry discompose distress unsettle disquiet trouble ruffle alarm disconcert rattle dismay unnerve bug fluster enlarge bloat bulge fill out grow puff out swell up balloon distend fatten plump grow larger well up yeast leavening barm enzyme bacteria bacterium mould(UK) mold(US) mother of vinegar fermentation agent raising agent baking powder leavening agent fungus fermenter rising agent turmoil unrest fever frenzy excitement furore(UK) stew tumult turbulence agitation brouhaha disruption hubbub uproar fuss storm bustle commotion vehemency ferocity vehemence fervency violence severity wildness forcefulness strength intenseness fury power pitch depth extreme fierceness energy keenness vigor(US) vigour(UK) ebullience liveliness vitality animation vivacity zest enthusiasm pep zip zing exuberance brio effervescence buoyancy cheerfulness gaiety vivaciousness jollity cheeriness rage anger indignation ire wrath spleen choler outrage annoyance irritation resentment furor(US) pique displeasure angriness exasperation lividness wrathfulness lividity vexation bubbles bubbliness fizziness aeration bubbling carbonation foaming frothiness gassiness fermentation frothing head ebullition foaminess More

462 Sentences With "ferment"

How to use ferment in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "ferment" and check conjugation/comparative form for "ferment". Mastering all the usages of "ferment" from sentence examples published by news publications.

There is academic ferment against it — not majority, but academic ferment against it.
It contains more than 93% naturally fermented ingredients — including bifida ferment lysate — and 28% saccharomyces ferment to plump and moisturize skin.
But a bigger driver is confessional ferment amongst Dutch Protestants.
Wolfson dove headlong into the social ferment of the 1960s.
Nationalism is on the rise, political ideas are causing ferment.
Leave the kombucha to ferment, tracking its progress each day.
They fall into a tank and ferment for 24 hours.
Society is in a time of renewed ferment about gender.
Meanwhile, some radical Islamist groups ferment hatred against LGBT groups.
The sum total gives off a feeling of occultist ferment.
The batch we would eat soonest would remain on our kitchen floor to ferment to a ripe, crunchy brightness; the other three jars would go in the fridge until it was their turn to ferment.
Then I leave the pot in a warm place to ferment.
But those buds, when you ferment them, they are so amazing.
For the next few days and nights, the ferment barely subsides.
With all of the meat properly encased, it's time to ferment.
The base liquid, tepache, takes a few days to naturally ferment.
The grapes ferment at their own pace, with their own yeast.
Brad can ferment popcorn and ginger beer to his heart's content.
The years around 1917 were a great period of radical ferment.
IN DECEMBER 2017 the Democratic Republic of Congo was in ferment.
Let the mixture ferment in the hot sun for two months.
Moore's rise was explicitly tied to religious ferment; Trump's was not.
The yeast ferment the sugars and produce more carbon dioxide and alcohol.
They're ingredients you use to ferment kimchi in an onggi (clay pot).
So, we don't ferment it, we age it at a high temperature.
It takes an average of between seven and 10 days to ferment.
Pretending otherwise is to allow bigger problems to ferment for the future.
Cover and leave to ferment for a week at room temperature. 2.
If you'd like to ferment longer, simply recap the bottle you tasted.
Cities generate most of the world's economic activity, innovation, and cultural ferment.
Unlike the brewery over the road, which smells ferment-y in a hoppy kind of way, the Botalla cheese cellars smell ferment-y in a burped-up-baby-milk kind of way—round and ever so slightly sickly somehow.
"I see no reason it won't simply ferment in that environment," said Simpson.
That does not mean it allows secession to ferment unabated in Hong Kong.
So what are some of the more outlandish things you've tried to ferment?
They combined Earthsong's at-home water kefir ferment with Moses's winemaking fermentation knowledge.
If such ferment can explode in Britain, the eurozone looks like a tinderbox.
The grapes would ferment with their natural yeast, and nothing would be added.
Once it starts to ferment, store in the refrigerator to use as needed.
When this happens, the starch will ferment instead of being converted to glucose.
This election, despite all the gender ferment, turned out to be little different.
They analyzed Bacillus subtilis natto bacteria, often used in Japanese cooking to ferment soybeans.
A small ball lock keg is used during brewing and to ferment the beer.
Once you have your links you are going to want to ferment your sausages.
But the populist ferment refashioning the global order has made previously unthinkable roles possible.
Now, that entrepreneurial ferment, except for in a few megacities, isn't happening as rapidly.
These are the proofer boxes where the croissants are left to ferment before getting baked.
You grow grapes; you consolidate their juice; you ferment it; you wait; you drink it.
To generate enough carbon dioxide to make bubbles, winemakers actually need to ferment champagne twice.
I ferment my own locally grown mustard greens to use instead of the traditional capers.
The Next launch is the latest sign of ferment in the Brazilian financial technology market.
"I work, I'm on call," he told me in the midst of this creative ferment.
Given all this ferment, should we expect each state to have its own foreign policy?
But she also started to follow Chicago's contemporary art scene, which was in creative ferment.
I might've been off a day or two in letting it ferment, letting it carbonate.
Cover with cheesecloth and allow to naturally ferment from anywhere between 1-4 days 2.
Many required time to ferment or, lacking time, a little blue-capped bottle of Eno.
Consider the ninth-century ferment of the Tang-dynasty Chinese capital Chang'an (present-day Xi'an).
Innovations in fracking and drilling have also created ferment in the oil and gas industry.
The United Nations have said that you have helped ferment the mass killing of people. Right.
"People look the other way and it starts to ferment until there's a scandal," she said.
The yeast would use the wort's sugars and ferment them to provide ethanol and carbon dioxide.
This is then mixed with water and left to ferment, sometimes as long as two weeks.
After the bagels are rolled and shaped, they ferment in the refrigerator for another 20 hours.
Start with traditional Napa cabbage kimchi, or ferment something else entirely, using this universal kimchi paste.
He had come of age during a time of intense racial ferment in his adopted state.
Cho does ferment some of his kimchi for over a month, and reserves it for cooking.
He remembered how to ferment rice wine and how to use it to make healing tinctures.
This ferment of ideas is a key that enables America to have a distinct competitive advantage.
Both contain wheat, but they have no additives or preservatives and ferment longer than supermarket brands.
The ferment for low-carbon energy, felt up and down the coast, reaches beyond power grids.
When the maggots hatch, they eat the cheese and introduce enzymes that help it to ferment.
The centerpiece is "Poemetrie" (1968) whose urine-soaked pages continue to yellow and ferment over time.
But it was also a great demonstration of how quickly a rumor can ferment into poison.
Finally, yeast is sprinkled in and the mixture kept in a temperature-controlled room to ferment.
"To make dried noodles, you'd ferment the dough for a few days to preserve it—but here, you can't smell the ferment as they're fresh," Moore says as another woman spoons Tango-coloured turmeric into a stew of water and rice flour before boiling it all.
SINCE the dawn of civilisation, people have used yeast to leaven bread, ferment wine and brew beer.
He's one of the last local manufacturers still using wooden barrels to ferment and age his product.
The Reagan revolution was fuelled by years of intellectual ferment and more or less scripted by Heritage.
People are bothered that the markets are so unbothered by the political fuss and ferment in Washington.
Place them back in your dark, undisturbed area to ferment for another 1 to 2 weeks. 6.
From a governing perspective, well ... just ask former Speaker John Boehner: There's ferment in the GOP base.
Remarkably, the record-breaking grapes won't be locked up behind glass to naturally ferment into wine, either.
They also probably buried them underground to ferment, which is still practiced in Georgia to this day.
Critics of Mr. Cummings said his campaign was less about encouraging intellectual ferment than enforcing doctrinal orthodoxy.
And Pakistan's unpredictable militaristic politics, ever keeping an already conflicted Kashmir in ferment, helps the fire burn.
Once a week, the newlyweds fed their starter with flour and milk, and let it ferment overnight.
When we arrived in the village, the general air of ferment indicated that the situation was unsettled.
Remember, beer is originally a tea infusion that you cool, sweeten up, and then let ferment with yeasts.
The bunches on top crush those on the bottom, producing juice that starts to ferment, emitting carbon dioxide.
"Before the Mayflower" established Mr. Bennett as a leading scholarly voice during the racial ferment of the 1960s.
The method uses the rabbit-gut bacteria to ferment the waste gas from factories, which then generates ethanol.
His era at Cambridge was one of great cultural ferment, and he joined in the flourishing theatrical activity.
Meanwhile Rome, and specifically the men around Pope Francis, seem to both misunderstand and fear this new ferment.
He came of age amid the political ferment of the 13s, as Arab kings fell to army coups.
After it's cooked, they add mother yeast, which causes the sugar to ferment, which turns it into vinegar.
The students, like all of us, want to know whether yeast can survive to ferment beer on the Moon.
This kit allows your husband to ferment up to a gallon of the stuff, either non-alcoholic or boozy.
As a visual and sonic document of London's early 90s rave culture and artistic ferment, Underworld's Dubnobasswithmyheadman remains matchless.
The couple would raise pigs and chickens for sacrifice and ferment sweet wine from the husks of dry rice.
When you're at home, you're not at Noma— I don't ferment at all—I do that enough at work.
Sanrio and Italy's Torti Winery partnered to ferment grapes into a few wines that perfectly capture Hello Kitty's aura.
They may be simply introduced through "backslopping"—using a bit of a previous ferment to start the next batch.
They'd do that in large containers, so the milk would naturally ferment and sour, and then they'd churn it.
Who would think that a tragedy like a spilled mug of coffee could ferment an abstract piece of art?
But the genesis was arguably the intellectual ferment of the University of Chicago's famed economics department six decades ago.
Ms. Barhany adds a sift of wheat flour for suppleness and lets the batter ferment a week or more.
"If you ferment the meat and the weather goes wrong, then you get maggots in it," he noted, cheerfully.
The batter required a trip to an Indian grocery for ingredients, then 24 hours to soak, grind and ferment.
The period before publication is a skittish time, particularly when readers' expectations have had nearly two decades to ferment.
Ferment these oral ingredients in the cask of time and the result is the hideous common name, naked broomrape.
The country's postwar climate, economic revival, and cultural ferment during the 19793s significantly influenced Ghirri's development as an artist.
Simply add the ingredients, wait for it all to ferment, pop it in the fridge to settle and enjoy.
It's as though he left these songs out overnight to ferment into something even funkier and worse for you.
After that, it is left in a low-temperature room to naturally ferment for around five to eight months.
To test the Pizzaiolo, Ms. Stockton made a dozen homemade dough balls and let them ferment for two days.
The real fun thing to play with is all the varying strains of yeast and bacteria available to ferment beers.
There's a whole world of things to pick, forage, and ferment, and she hasn't had enough opportunities for it recently.
She developed a formula in which she uses a mix of yeast and bacteria to ferment green tea with sugar.
In this time of political and cultural ferment, Scotland was the realm of an enigmatic people known as the Picts.
MORE than 7,000 years ago, people living in the Middle East discovered that they could ferment grapes to make wine.
So now we bag all the elderflower in sugar syrup and ferment it, but obviously under much more controlled circumstances.
Despite these flaws, Mr. Sellars sees Pound's work and the broader artistic ferment of early-20th-century modernism as transformative.
It is a lovely, wonderful thing to ferment food, but for speed and turnover, vinegar is the way to go.
"The cashew cheese, for instance, take three days to ferment to achieve that tangy, fully-rounded palette," Ms. Sendlbeck said.
When the city exploded, The News lacked black reporters with deep ties to the community to adequately explain the ferment.
Miso is made by fermenting soybeans, but I wanted to see what happens when you ferment nuts, seeds, and other legumes.
Instead of water, the flour for these breads is mixed with yogurt, then left outside for a whole day to ferment.
Look, you can just walk into this kitchen: There's a container, there's salt, open a fridge, there's something I can ferment.
The provenance of the other 49% of the sugar used to ferment and distill the beverage is entirely the producer's call.
It comes together when it comes together, and sometimes it can take a few years to ferment while others just happen.
Despite his fascination with Nietzsche, it was the city's cultural ferment, not a dalliance with fascism, that induced him to stay.
Tea, sugar, and water are left to ferment with SCOBY, an acronym, that stands for symbiotic culture of bacteria and yeast.
I like to think that playing aggressive, fast music encouraged the yeast to ferment in an equally fast and furious way.
Scoops with serrated teeth tend to create a rougher edge, and those little shredded pieces start to ferment and spoil first.
At first glance, Boulder seemed dreamily pleasant, as clean and orderly as a Swiss resort, but not exactly in bohemian ferment.
For instance: While we are still in a period of ferment, ESG factors have entered the mainstream of the investment calculus.
Scientists understand that cancer cells support their rapid reproduction by rewiring their metabolisms to take glucose, ferment it and produce lactate.
Yet cancer cells "grow much more rapidly than normal cells, and yeast actually grows the fastest when they ferment," he noted.
Still, we might salt blueberries and let them ferment for five days, and be very happy to spoon them over yogurt.
Normally, beer is made by mixing a grain (like barley) with water, adding hops and yeast and leaving it to ferment.
The grapes are infused without preservatives and encouraged to ferment in their readied juices, making for a bolder, more unique flavor.
Television talk shows, once a ferment of raucous debate, have become so predictably pro-government that many Egyptians are tuning out.
She splashes on the Neogen Real Ferment Micro Essence ($38), which has humectants and fermented ingredients to lock in hydration. 5.
Pupatella is mixing a natural levain, or starter, into its dough and letting it ferment longer, almost three days in total.
They boil day-old croissants into sugar syrup, whip leftover milk from coffee shops into whey, and ferment discarded pineapple skins.
Once you need more, add a couple tablespoons to water and plain cooked rice, and ferment it to keep it going. 2.
This ferment was part of a generational revolution that swept Europe at the end of the 19th century, from Berlin to London.
Kenji does a quicker ferment on his hornet liquor, and his stock of hornets is donated from a university professor in Ibaraki.
And in both Europe and America the left is a broad, fluid coalition, as movements with a ferment of ideas usually are.
This is achieved by keeping the closed distillation system at low temperatures, and by distilling the ferment to a lower alcohol level.
Make sure you have at least 2 inches of space at the top to allow room for it to bubble and ferment.
The fermentation process is a lacto-fermentation, so the longer you let it ferment, the more acidic your sriracha will become. 3.
But whatever happens from here, one may assume that populist ferment is unlikely to exhaust its vast reservoir of grievances anytime soon.
But the alternative, according to Mr. Fraser, is that Brexit collapses under the weight of its own contradictions, leaving Britain in ferment.
Kokoschka, born in 21907, worked in the same period of feverish creative ferment as Gerstl and was, in some ways, more radical.
Everyone knew the victim as the man who made wine by letting bread, fruit and jelly ferment in a black trash bag.
Mr. Miller found himself "absolutely intoxicated by the United States," as he put it, and "swept away by the intellectual ferment" there.
Opening with Marx: "Great social revolutions are impossible without the feminine ferment," the narrative hits the ground running in pithy, breathless paragraphs.
Vertical-transportation enthusiasts often remind us that elevators enable height, and therefore density, and therefore energy efficiency and cultural ferment—urbanity itself.
When Wang found her lemon ferment overly rich in mold spores, she decided to use a batch she'd cured at home instead.
With other artistic pairs, like Pissarro and Cézanne or Picasso and Braque, competitiveness ignited and acrimony at times soured the creative ferment.
If they produce some intellectual ferment they have also cloistered our liberal intelligentsia and actually weakened liberalism politically by concentrating its votes.
Transfer the dough to a plastic tub coated with nonstick spray and leave to ferment at room temperature for 1 hour. 2.
The process has resurfaced on YouTube with influencers and bloggers seeping rice water for up to three days to ferment it at home.
I tell them, 'Listen, you want a cheese, you need to be patient—you have to ferment it, age it, wait for it.
Whatever satisfaction you feel will ferment in the pit of your stomach, while the Logan Roys of the world just order another plate.
The pulp originally coats the cocoa beans and helps ferment them, but it was often just thrown out after the beans were harvested.
Even more strikingly, it plans to move from an area of financial ferment—mobile payments—into the sterile old business of retail banking.
Evonik will run a bioreactor to ferment those gases into industrial alcohols butanol and hexanol for possible use in plastics and dietary supplements.
It is believed that when nomadic shepherds and travelers journeyed with raw milk carried in leather, the milk would accidentally ferment over time.
As they do, they should keep their eyes on three key factors that will help determine the success or failure of today's ferment.
She has calibrated her own ponzu, too, letting it ferment for 30 days to round out the salt and soften the citrus sting.
China needs to carry out measures to make up for this deficiency, in order to avoid this issue continuing to grow and ferment.
At that point, it's considered honey — it won't ferment, because the water content is so low and the sugar content is so high.
That led to a period of populist ferment hostile to fat cats, including mass strikes and ultimately the New Deal of the 1930s.
Next, pour the wort (unfermented beer liquid) in the glass fermenter and add the yeast, and leave it to ferment for two weeks.
In July, he released his major-label debut Para Mí, a woozy, playful ferment of psychedelic pop on which "Keeping Tabs" is featured.
Dr Nelson believes that immobilising the yeast cells in the hydrogel somehow stops them both ageing and reproducing, without affecting their ability to ferment.
Add the yeast and ferment the wort at 66°F (19°C) for about 2 weeks or when you reach your final gravity. 7.
Chicha, a drink from the Andes that's made by chewing up corn and leaving it to ferment, has been around for about 7,000 years.
TIM HAMMONDLondon * Arnold Toynbee once said that nationalism is "a sour ferment of the new wine of democracy in the old bottles of tribalism".
There is no question that we are living in a time of ferment, a time of political and social change at home and abroad.
Tunedal says he let the Shower Beer ferment for longer so it could develop a taste that would be perfect for the showering experience.
The NPC's unruffled, unaltered façade is an unconvincing distraction from the ferment affecting a society in the grip of wrenching economic and social change.
Brewing takes two hours with Pico Model C, and then your creation will need to ferment and carbonate for about seven to 10 days.
On its seventh album, "Sleep Well Beast," its new songs have more rhythmic ferment and melodic crosscurrents; they translate emotional complexity into musical counterpoint.
Jori Jayne Emde, who runs Lady Jayne's Alchemy in Chatham, N.Y., lets her vinegars ferment slowly, over many months, in an open-air barn.
"How creative can you get?" said DeWayne Schaaf, above, who uses yeasts from places like Spain, Wisconsin and Norway to ferment his eclectic beers.
Adjusting to life with higher density is the price you pay to enjoy the social dynamism, intellectual ferment, and economic innovation that cities produce.
Amid this ferment, a leading Iraqi cleric, Abdel Majid al-Khoei, was killed in the Shiite holy city of Najaf, shocking millions of followers.
Psychic TV has been led by the wildly prolific Genesis P-Orridge since the group was formed in the post-punk ferment of 1981.
Barreto is fascinated by kimchi, and you will be too after comparing the difference between his 30-day ferment and one aged 100 days.
People are still buying the stuff, even if it does taste like if you swabbed Willy Wonka's wallpaper, then left it out to ferment.
"We use savoy cabbage, which is more attractive, let it ferment only for two weeks, and add some horseradish and dill," Mr. Vongerichten said.
The starter — the yeast concoction that gives the bread its signature sour taste — when made from scratch, takes at least a week to ferment.
Cluizel works with the farmers directly to ferment the beans before taking them off to France or New Jersey for roasting and chocolate making.
Our new friend warned me to be careful when drinking pulque, because it would continue to ferment in my stomach, long after I'd stopped drinking.
The American version of the Grand Tour novel, of characters wandering abroad, had a promising start, especially where it coincided with the ferment of modernism.
While a few might take a cut of the sales, most aim to just show the work and create ferment among artists and potential buyers.
Mixing sugar, tea, and yeast — and giving them quality time to mingle and ferment — is essential to producing the good microbes that make kombucha special.
Some strains of yeast used to ferment red yeast rice contain trace amounts of the compound monacolin K, according to the National Institutes of Health.
For example, the condiment garum, a Roman fish sauce that was commonly added to meals, was prepared by leaving it to ferment in the sun.
But his candidacy has stoked this ferment — even if the GOP maintains control of Congress in November, it's going to be a rocky two years.
Two-thirds of those gases are directly emitted by ruminants: animals like cows, buffalo and sheep that use bacteria in their stomachs to ferment food.
Conceptual art in the United States, as practiced by the likes of, say, Sol LeWitt and Adrian Piper, emerged from the ferment of the 1960s.
Interior Minister Olga Sanchez has tempered assertions that the popular ferment, including a massive march planned on International Women's Day this Sunday, has ulterior motives.
Moving from Boston to New York in the late 203s, he became associated with the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center, a hotbed of sonic ferment.
After the yogurt is set for its 11-hour ferment cycle, I stay up too late catching up on The Handmaid's Tale and Working Moms.
"It's more typical in late winter, early spring when berries that have been on branches ferment due to the yeast that's on them," she said.
Only members of religious minorities - Christians, Jews and Zoroastrians - are allowed to brew, distil, ferment and drink liquor discreetly in the privacy of their homes.
Both the women's liberation movement and the gay rights movement in France grew out of the 600 upheaval and the intellectual ferment of the time.
Douthat also reveals himself to be an untraditional Catholic traditionalist, complaining about the lack of "ferment and experimentation" in the religious sphere since the '70s.
The show, "A Third Gender: Beautiful Youths in Japanese Prints," arrives at a time of ferment about gender roles in the United States and abroad.
This foaming formula uses the bifida ferment lysate strain — along with lactic acid, turmeric root, and antioxidant-rich blueberries — to refresh and rebalance skin without stripping.
A loose culture of entrepreneurs and cypherpunks came together in what felt like a special moment of experimental ferment, and the Breitmans looked on with interest.
Those go into boxes and are left to ferment for who knows how long until I might be able to see them in a clearer light.
They would bury whole fish or tight rolls of walrus meat and fat into the ground and let it age and ferment for months, before eating.
Let that ferment for 24 hours or so before letting it rise in a bread tin and baking in a hot oven for about 40 minutes.
Things are heating up in southern California, where tension between the makers of the iconic Sriracha chili sauce and the city of Irwindale continues to ferment.
Most hot sauces have to ferment before they're ready to use, but this one—which uses more tomatoes than peppers—is ready to use right away.
Orlando and his team find daily inspiration in discarded vegetable stems, leftover coffee grinds, day-old bread, and things that bubble and ferment into the night.
As Widmaier explains, you get some corn, ferment it with the engineered yeast and then let them expel a protein identical to that of spider silk.
To make them, we use glucose derived from corn, mix it with other ingredients and let it ferment, similar to how beer and bread are made.
C. community (queer and trans black and indigenous people of color); and a track of sessions called Ferment focusing on the potential to reimagine food systems.
In 2015, part of the undergraduate faculty voted "no confidence" in his leadership, though much of the ferment had to do with lack of salary increases.
You're meant to add a dab of bagoong, a paste of seafood (in this case, shrimp) that's been rubbed in salt, smashed and left to ferment.
He recently noticed that there was growing ferment on Twitter about the new restaurant at Montreal's government-owned casino and asked me to look into it.
It begins outside the United States, with an unkind ferment of older stereotypes: the non-Christian other, the money-lending Shylock, the petty bourgeois European nebbish.
Kombucha is made by letting black tea and sugar ferment with the help of a starter culture, creating a mushroom-like bacterial clump that sits on top.
Also called "skin-contact whites," orange wines ferment with the skin of the white grapes, giving it a different taste as well as a slightly deeper hue.
After this, it is essentially ready to use, but you can inoculate it with a mold so that it can ferment and develop even more complex flavors.
Unfortunately for everyone with a functional olfactory system, the factory never resumed production—but all of those vats of seafood sauce were left behind to eternally ferment.
It's a fermented drink rather than a cooked tea, and the bacteria that ferment the drink produce a lot of this cellulose material as a side product.
With all the creative ferment of the 1960s, Lennon's complaint that they "felt like extras in their own movies" carries over to Mr Norman's book as well.
In the twenties, Vanity Fair , the glossy magazine that rose with Dorothy Parker and Robert Benchley, put fizz and tannins in the social ferment of New York.
The building was demolished in 1998, replaced with Frank Gehry's Stata Center, one of the first campus structures that tries to recreate Building 20's creative ferment.
In remembrance, kosher law mandates that Jews avoid any grain that has come into contact with water and been allowed to ferment and rise — "chametz" in Hebrew.
At White Labs Kitchen & Tap in Asheville, the kitchen uses the company's liquid yeast to ferment sourdough bread and pizza dough, and kveik is a current favorite.
Your bread will gain in character if the dough is given time to absorb ingredients and ferment a bit; the dough will be easier to handle, too.
The sweetness might have come from using a brewer's yeast to ferment the grain, which produces lighter, more floral notes than a traditional distiller's yeast, he said.
Once I'd chewed all of my rice and added the yeast, I loosely covered it and moved it to my fridge for two weeks to ferment, stirring daily.
In episode 3, he came face-to-face with alcoholism when he treated a patient with gut fermentation, a condition that causes sugar to ferment in the stomach.
The four-in-one treatment utilizes rooibos-tea extract and kefir ferment to soothe and brighten skin, along with aloe vera and coconut water to balance and hydrate.
To heal one's body, the physical club can be the worst place to force yourself to ferment in, and by nature these spaces center the able and healthy.
So much moisture is developed in the process that it drips down into the bottom box, so we aerate it with a fish pump so it doesn't ferment.
To produce the neurotoxin, Seiichi Endo collected soil from the Ishikari River and allowed the bacteria to ferment in large containers at a compound run by the group.
The only risk, Trout explains, would be if the SCOBY failed to ferment at all for some reason, something that would be evident immediately by appearance or taste.
That's because "good" bacteria can ferment nutrients just as much as the "bad" bacteria -- which means the "good guys" can produce plenty of gas in the GI tract.
"I take a glob of it," he said of his starter, "and throw it in the dough," then he allows it to ferment for a day before baking.
As for how to carry probiotics into space, Reid proposes creating some kind of dehydrated, bacteria-laden sachet, which could ferment milk into a sort of space yogurt.
Place a clean kitchen towel over your container and secure it with kitchen twine; move it to a dark, undisturbed area for 23 to 2 weeks to ferment.
Even though the show's chronological organization illuminates Cézanne's formal developments, it is difficult to discern in the initial portraits the ferment of modernity that Cézanne is known for.
On Tuesday, Mr. Harder returned through "very dangerous smoke and haze" with a rented truck to rescue grapes that had been waiting in bins and barrels to ferment.
As Perkins makes clear, the issue of educational parity competed with other strains of social ferment, including Vietnam War protests, the civil rights movement and the sexual revolution.
Place a clean kitchen towel over the bowl and set the bowl aside to ferment for 503 hours, turning the dough halfway through the fermentation with wet hands.
MILAN — Amid the boom and revolution of Milan in 803, artists, writers and eccentrics of all stripes fueled their creative ferment with drinks at the legendary Bar Jamaica.
The method uses the rabbit-gut bacteria to ferment waste gas from factories — the exhaust you can see billowing out of their smoke stacks — which then generates ethanol.
By the time radiocarbon dating had come of age, in the postcolonial ferment of the 503s, archaeology was already primed to relinquish its emphasis on narratives of migration.
Although his youth was overshadowed by the war with Japan, he lived in a period of intellectual freedom and ferment and spent his days largely alone reading voraciously.
The Economist: Are there any lessons from the interwar year's ideological ferment that gave rise to fascism that we can apply to prevent intolerant views from taking over today?
"The vibrations of a sound wave stress out the yeast, which will cause it to ferment differently, which creates different aromatics, which then creates different flavor profiles," he described.
Winemakers break the skins, create a skin-and-juice mush which they leave to ferment for ten to 20 days to get the colour, and then press it out.
But this gathering of artwork is also a fascinating reminder of the underground ferment that characterized progressive culture in this country from the very beginning of the 22009th century.
This time Hammond brought home apples instead of stories, stuffing the pockets of his cargo shorts during each visit, eventually gathering enough to ferment a three-gallon test batch.
And while she's not part of the feminist ferment in Mormonism, and I doubt she'd call herself a feminist, she is strong in a way that feminists can admire.
The practice dates back thousands of years, when winemakers in the Caucasus, a region located at the border of Europe and Asia, would ferment wine in buried clay jars.
With Berlin in ferment, Kaiser Wilhelm II had gone to Western Front military headquarters in the Belgian resort town of Spa (which is where the word "spa" comes from).
With the expertise of his cofounder John Walker, the Athletic team set about developing a custom process to ferment their beer without crossing the 0.5% alcohol-by-volume threshold.
On two occasions, in 1990 and 1998, Mr. Bonneau produced a fourth wine, Cuvée Spéciale, from barrels that were destined to become Célestins but that refused to ferment completely.
And yes, this will pool from songs released mainly in the last decade, as this gives the minimum amount of time for nostalgia to ferment into uncritical adoration. Cool?
This is due to the higher fibre content of a vegan diet and the simultaneous increase in carbohydrates that ferment in the gut and can cause irritable bowel syndrome.
There are slice joints that ferment their dough for a day, some that let it bubble away for two days and a few that go in for three days.
The case was argued against a backdrop of campus racial ferment after high-profile shootings of African-American men in communities such as Ferguson, Mo., Charleston, S.C. and Baltimore.
But its acidic nature, traditionally achieved using Acetobacter bacteria to ferment it, means other bacteria struggle to grow in it, and so it can last a very long time.
The march on Washington that took place after the inauguration, combined with the ferment in the town halls, suggests there is a lot of anger and frustration to harness. Sen.
The parliamentary defeat of Theresa May's Brexit plan and President Donald Trump's continued U.S. government shutdown have underscored the political ferment that will infect Western democracies for years to come.
"It's really hard to come into a ferment halfway, be with it for five minutes, and diagnose if it's alive or not," he says, surveying the floating raft of microbes.
The jar is then sealed and left to ferment for a few years, to allow the poison to dilute and become something that won't (immediately) send you to the hospital.
"Facebook groups are where unsavory narratives ferment and are spread, often with directions about how to achieve maximum impact," noted Nina Jankowicz, global fellow at the Wilson Center, via email.
"I personally believe humans have known how to ferment honeys since they left Africa," Ken Schramm, the mead-maker who wrote the definitive modern guide on honey wine, told Gizmodo.
I take a moment to notice that particular green-apple taste and the hint of cinnamon aroma that comes from the particular barrels used to ferment and age the wine.
Imagine what Twitter might be like if it had been designed from the start by people who had experienced harassment: would it be such a ferment of fakes and bile?
The revolt created new ferment in Hama, a city that has remained under government control throughout the civil war, but endured a deadly round of uprising and repression in 1982.
Here, the leftovers begin to ferment (thanks to your beneficial gut bacteria), a process that further breaks down the food but produces methane and nitrogen gas at the same time.
Its ferment begins with an application for admission to the New York School of Design for Women, which was part of the Cooper Institute, as Cooper Union was initially called.
Which is why in many instances the interests that Pinker dismisses as irrational hugger-mugger, everything from astrology to spiritualism, have tended to strengthen during periods of real scientific ferment.
It was there, at 18, that he was thrown into the ferment of ideas released by Deng's liberalizations, when ideas of rule of law and democratic accountability began to circulate.
Maybe the next Chinese NBA star just needed to ferment in his own juices for a while, and he'll be back and thirsty for glory, a pickle to be proud of.
Chandra's father, now retired, was a corporate nine-to-five executive at a chemical company who happily subsidized all the creative ferment, including Chandra's journey to America to study creative writing.
Cover this with a tea towel and leave for four to five days to ferment, then transfer the beetroot to a jar, cover in the brine, and place in your fridge.
Adding to the ferment, Russia has backed Venezuela by refinancing some of its debts, thanks largely to Igor Sechin, boss of Rosneft, an oil giant, which has lent $5bn to PDVSA.
Ruminants, animals that ferment food in one stomach before digesting it in another (called chewing their cud), never lazed on their sides, since they need to position their digestive tracts properly.
Ian Schuster: The yeast itself imparts really different flavors depending on the temperature you ferment it at, and the type and amount of barley, wheat, and other sugars you give it.
Beginning in the 1960s, Republicans seized on turmoil over civil rights, cultural ferment and the Vietnam War to draw conservative whites in the South and elsewhere into a national majority coalition.
You can use good grains and good yeast and have it ferment in three hours, but it won't be as good for your body as something that has been long-fermented.
It's a story of young love and secret family entanglements, with a bit of the era's social ferment in the background, competently brought to the screen by Mr. Miyazaki's son Goro.
His longing for bagoong, a paste of seafood salted and left to ferment until it exudes a fathomless funk, grew so great that his worried family in Manila dispatched a jar.
Italy's loan recovery industry is in ferment with players looking to bulk up in the face of slowing disposals by banks after years of massive bad loan sales and regulatory changes.
But in this case, out of nothing there emerges such a heaving ferment of aspiration, energy, tenacity and audacity that you're left reeling by the scope and vitality of it all.
Or that dough, which takes 24-plus hours to ferment and proof, but yields a yeasty never-fail crust that will be the only one you'll need from this point forward.
Jumping ahead a few decades to the ferment of 1960s counterculture, Outliers and American Vanguard Art traces the entanglement of schooled and unschooled artists at a time of momentous cultural upheaval.
It's easy enough to smuggle apples out of the chow hall, smash them up in a trash bag, mix in a little sugar, and let it ferment for three or five days.
You might be thinking, surely science has by now come up with a way to "cure" the ailment that has plagued humans since the first person to ferment a bunch of grapes?
Its consequences will grow only greater the longer we are distracted by our own domestic political ferment and fail to respond with a seriousness and strategy that is equal to the challenge.
Novozymes' enzymes and yeast are used in bioethanol production to break down and ferment sugar in crops such as corn, but massive floods knocked out roughly 13 percent of U.S. ethanol capacity.
It uses lactobionic acid, a chemical exfoliator that works like AHAs and BHAs but with less irritation, along with radish root ferment, turmeric, pearl, and henna to moisturize and provide antioxidant benefits.
In the short term, sentiment over shrinking stocks continues to ferment "but the medium- and long-term oversupply trend has not yet been broken" for zinc, Jinrui Futures wrote in a note.
A look at very long-term data on p/e multiples shows generally lower valuations in the late 19th century, perhaps in part reflecting the impact of another age of industrial ferment.
"As often is the case when authorities intercede in a case that has touched a nerve about people's welfare, a raging debate has continued to ferment," the newspaper wrote in a commentary.
That fungal ferment which looks like the mixed dregs of multiple cultures may yet mutate into something new and interesting and important itself; and the truly lonely planet is still out there.
The bottom grapes are crushed by the weight of those on top and begin to ferment, but the uncrushed grapes in the airless environment also begin a different sort of intracellular fermentation.
Almost comically large, yet perfectly crispy and whisper-thin at the edges, the slightly sour ferment of the dosa perfectly complements the sambar (lentil stew) and spicy chutneys that frequently accompany it.
The workers that tend vines, ferment wine, build homes and feed tourists in world-famous Napa and Sonoma counties are heavily Latino; Latinos count for more than a quarter of Sonoma's population.
Drawing on their ideas during rising ferment among the young, Mr. Hoffman felt liberated and was able to "unleash his personality" and lead "the theatrics ring of the New Left," Dr. Abzug said.
The younger Syrian men have swiped olives from farmers' trees and stuffed them into cheap plastic bottles tacked to the sides of their tents to ferment olive oil infused with cut-up lemons.
The formula in the 53th century medical text, called "Bald's Leechbook," involves mixing garlic, onion, wine, and cow bile in a brass vessel before letting the mixture sit for nine days to ferment.
Trump has already seized on the ideological ferment in the Democratic primary, portraying the most progressive contenders as out of control radicals emblematic of a party that is charging fast to the left.
Given that yeasts have a long history of being used to ferment food and drink, archaeologists have argued for years that early craftsmen may have selectively bred yeast strains without even realising it.
Even though Troublemakers is partly set in the Bay Area in the '60s and '70s—a hub of activism and protest—her entrepreneurs appear largely insulated from the period's social and political ferment.
Mr. Swarbrick and Fairport Convention were prime movers in trad-rock, which connected the 22006s ferment of folk-rock and psychedelia to a deep British heritage of storytelling ballads and nimble dance tunes.
But thanks to in-class use of social media, the class also became a creative ferment of improvised dance, trust experiments and inquiries into the modern nature of the self and the crowd.
Ethanol is made by using enzymes to break down and ferment sugars in organic materials, such as corn, but second generation ethanol, made from more stubborn cellulose using new processes, could raise production.
Fermented botanicals contain micro-organisms that release enzymes that ferment and break down molecules into the raw material, resulting in the creation of new substances that benefit the skin, explains dermatology professor Cho.
It is an incoherent film, even as racist evangelism goes, but it is instructive in this way: These are Bannon's purest impulses and juvenile hypotheses wrung into a bucket and left to ferment.
The naturally present lactic acid bacteria in the cabbage will begin to ferment and break down the vegetables at room temperature for anywhere from three days to a week, depending on the temperature.
For the fiftieth anniversary of the often mythologized events, Metrograph and French Institute Alliance Française present programs that reveal the documentary fervor and artistic imagination that arose from the ferment of the time.
He died Judy Blame, rechristened and reimagined in his own image, a magpie jewelry designer, fashion stylist and art director, who emerged from the creative ferment of London's 1980s club scene, on Feb.
From October through January, the factory works overtime to handle a non-stop parade of newly harvested olives, processing them at the peak of their flavor before they have a chance to ferment.
It is allowed to ferment long enough to produce a flat, spongy bread that, at its best, is deeply tangy and lightly bouncy, adding a pleasant sour note to every bite of food.
It's a common amino acid naturally found in foods like tomatoes and cheese, which people then figured out how to extract and ferment -- a process similar to how we make yogurt and wine.
Zamyatin's bleak vision was forged in the ferment after the Russian revolution; but, with its prophetic reflections on climate change and surveillance culture, it is as relevant today as it was a century ago.
What is difficult to determine—the question that lies at the heart of Book Five—is the correlation between modern Norway and the kind of social and economic ferment that led to Hitler's rise.
Yeast or bacteria are engineered to ferment some plant substances and output products that mimic or even replicate the proteins that make a plant-based recipe taste, smell, look or feel more like meat.
The yeasts of a Hawaiian coffee bean could, for example, be used to ferment beans being grown in Uganda; or the yeasts from Haitian cacao beans could be used with cacao grown in Ghana.
Constantly on the move, forming and re-forming in myriad permutations, embracing "subversive" pursuits like homosexuality and drugs, the Beats generated a slipstream of cultural ferment that pulled much of America along despite itself.
Iowa State University professor and self-professed "wine connoisseur" Daniel Attinger has developed what he calls a "micro winery" which can continuously ferment and produce wine at the rate of one milliliter per hour.
Mr. Yi does not add anything other than natural yeasts to ferment his ciders: no blueberries, no hops and certainly no sugar, the tools that he says many cidermakers use to alter flavor profiles.
Like the legendary SK-II Essence ($179), its star ingredient is a sake ferment, which is rich in dark spot-reducing kojic acid, but it also has moisture-boosting ceramides and the brightener arbutin.
The ferment is a reaction both to the Trump administration and to legislative decisions of older generations who won't bear the full brunt of their decisions on issues like climate change and student debt.
Kosher isn't about being blessed; it's about being watched and being handled only by Sabbath observers from ferment to corkscrew — a rule that was an attempt to protect against wine being used for idolatry.
Even if you're doing a long ferment, and it goes for a full day and then you bake it … including prep and folding and cleanup, you're talking about 20 minutes out of your day.
Mr. Zhao's children said that his time as premier and Communist Party general secretary in the 1980s was an era of bold change and intellectual ferment that drew a withering contrast with China today.
"These findings led us to test whether yeast colonizing in the bladder could ferment sugar to produce ethanol," the clinicians wrote in a case study, which was published in the Annals of Internal Medicine.
Sanders still has the advantage of energy and ardor; young people are overwhelmingly on his side, and his campaign will be carried along by the same sort of ebullient cultural ferment as Barack Obama's.
But it is hard to overstate the change in the political mood from last year, when Parliament was in ferment and analysts were unable to predict when — or even whether — Brexit would take place.
Aside from sowing domestic ferment in Austria, a Freedom Party-led government would press to lift the sanctions imposed on Moscow for its 2014 seizure of Crimea and meddling in war-torn eastern Ukraine.
Mr. Storey remembered Princess Margaret's coming backstage after a performance of "In Celebration," a tale of emotional ferment in mining country, telling him that she had left behind a friend sitting alone and weeping.
At a time of great political ferment in the Middle East, the plunging oil prices have gutted the export revenue that drove economic growth in Saudi Arabia and other Persian Gulf countries in recent years.
"Instead of letting carbon emissions come out of a steel mill, we capture them, we put them in our bio reactor and ferment -- just like making beer -- to make ethanol," said LanzaTech CEO Jennifer Holmgren.
"We don't require water to water corn crops, we don't require fertilizer which has to be made from natural gas, we don't require trucks or harvesters to carry the corn and ferment it," he added.
The Minnesota town hall also crystallized the ideological ferment in the Democratic Party which some centrist candidates fear could be marching too far left on issues like health care and walking into a GOP trap.
You mix it with water to create this batter, let it ferment for about three days, and then we use the mitad, which is a flat pan, it's about 500 degrees, to make the injera.
One night, a young man shook his head at what I'd chosen and reached in for a bin of mishti doi, milk boiled and thickened, stained orange by caramelized sugar and left to ferment overnight.
But that also made the monarchy vulnerable to charges of despotism and wastefulness, precisely at a time when the public was becoming more outspoken, emboldened in part by the ferment of revolution in other countries.
Novozymes' enzymes and yeast are used in bioethanol production to break down and ferment sugar in crops such as corn, but the massive floods knocked out roughly 13 percent of the United States' ethanol capacity.
MoMA, the Met, the Whitney and other top museums are vital and essential repositories of American culture, but their dominance by the 0.01 percent makes them highly vulnerable at a time of such social ferment.
Double cleansing, innovative ingredients like birch juice and rice ferment, the phenomenon of glass skin: The beauty buys I once deemed irreplaceable were slowly but surely being replaced by Korean superstar products in my bathroom cabinet.
But not too easy: The combination of activated charcoal and a proprietary ferment (think kombucha or kefir) that balances the microbiome focuses on eliminating the source of the smell, as opposed to just covering it up.
From harvesting and cutting out the core of the blue agave plant (which looks like something from Super Mario Bros.) to baking it and extracting the juice and letting it ferment, it's a delicious-looking process.
The word "winemaker" isn't totally right here, actually—in natural winemaking, it's the vineyards that make the wine, and people merely move the juice into vessels, like the qvevri, that allow it to ferment and mature.
During my visit the museum offered a chardonnay, a red blend, a traditional Melnik red, and a fruity, sweet variety which hadn't been allowed to ferment completely, leaving a certain amount of sugar in the drink.
There was just enough internet to boost economic productivity (the Facebook-Amazon era has not had a similar effect), just enough to encourage subcultural ferment, just enough to challenge cultural gatekeepers and give lonely teenagers succor.
It is simply, grandly, eggplant treated like fish, cooked with paojiao — chiles pickled but still bright — and doubanjiang, a paste of broad beans left to ferment for months, then dosed with chiles and fermented some more.
Shredded Brussels sprouts and honeycrisp apples are by turns refreshing and racy; shiitake mushrooms and shredded collards left to ferment for 140 days yield a kimchi that takes on the texture of meat — crossed with fire.
From 1967 to 85033, public ferment over starvation, malnutrition and hunger in the world's wealthiest country pressured the federal government to remove restrictions that essentially barred the poorest families in certain counties from obtaining food stamps.
Fermented pickles take much longer, on the other hand, since they rely on the behavior of lactic acid bacteria, which includes hundreds of bacterial species that lacto-ferment by turning the vegetables' natural sugars into lactic acid.
But thanks to its past success it is no longer the ferment it once was, and it is unlikely it will ever again dominate the technology world in quite the way it has over the past decades.
By learning more about how to ferment beer in space, the students could help figure out how bread and other yeast-rich foods might be made in space, as humans push further out into the solar system.
NEW YORK — Pancho Villa, rebel chieftain, who has kept Northern Mexico in a ferment for the last five years, is making his last stand in the Sierra Madre mountains, seventy-five miles south of the American border.
While other producers turned to steel tanks in which to ferment their wines, and small oak barrels for aging, Mr. Bonneau retained his concrete fermentation vats and a seemingly random assortment of old barrels in various sizes.
There, an enterprising chef decided that the traditional way of preserving fish and rice — in which they were arranged in layers, pressed under weights and left to ferment — took too long and sapped flavor from the fish.
This ferment has overturned the male dominance of our primary professional organization, the American Philosophical Association, with women (who make up about one-fourth of the members) holding over half of the seats on its governing board.
With a bit of luck, genuine ferment and debate among Democratic candidates and officeholders over the right direction on issues like trade and immigration might result in at least one party oriented around a set of ideas.
The Beaux-Arts posters, on display through May 20, give a sense of the ferment of idealism, rebellion and rejection of the status quo that permeated French society and marked the second half of the 20th century.
"It took a Trump, of all people, to allow for a certain level of intellectual ferment to take place," said Ben Boychuk, the managing editor of American Greatness, a new political journal based here in Southern California.
Rather, most brewers use bugs of the smaller sort—microorganisms like yeast and bacteria present in the air, as well as on fruits and vegetables that ferment and acidify everything from beer and wine to bread and cheese.
This happened at a moment of considerable cultural ferment around remixes, fair use, mashups, and related concepts, and people around the country responded by creating their own "Lisztomania" videos that featured themselves reenacting scenes from John Hughes movies.
I make my smoothie and see that my kombucha is ready to be "harvested," so I pour it out, bottle it in fermentation bottles with raspberries and ginger, and make a new batch to ferment for next week.
Starting from the beginning of its life when it's just a little bean to the energy it takes to create, sprout, and ferment to make the soy sauce out of it is what soy sauce is all about.
Alongside a zero-tolerance policy for blocking humanitarian supplies, the administration must signal the importance it places on ending the war—and should draw on the current congressional ferment to underscore that Saudi Arabia's current approach is untenable.
Capturing the ferment was a 2008 book, "Grand New Party: How Republicans Can Win the Working Class and Save the American Dream," by Mr. Salam and Ross Douthat, who is now a columnist for The New York Times.
That means that right now we have to work very hard during this part of the year to preserve and to can and to pickle and ferment, so that we have supplies for the rest of the year.
Janusz Glowacki, a Polish playwright, novelist and screenwriter who mined the ferment of Communism and its collapse in his country to create darkly humorous works about totalitarianism and the émigré experience, died on Saturday while vacationing in Egypt.
Another senior administration official, speaking anonymously to describe dynamics in the White House, said that without any major policy rollouts or staffing announcements ready for last week, the Comey backlash was able to ferment into a full-blown storm.
With ingredients such as aloe vera to moisturize, radish root ferment filtrate to protect against bacteria, and lime essential oil, which Touchland says helps prevent signs of aging, this hand sanitizer not only disinfects but also has moisturizing properties.
This era was one of religious ferment, led by the so-called Observants (also known as the Zealots), who advocated a return to the strict observance of the rules of religious orders and their vows of austerity and poverty.
May's Conservative Party has been in ferment since she secured cabinet agreement at Chequers, her country residence, early this month for a plan that aimed to keep some close economic ties to the European Union, Britain's largest trading partner.
A starter was added to one batch and not to the other, and after the filling was packed into sausage casings and hung up to ferment, the researchers checked in on the microbes three, seven, and 40 days later.
The organization the Joneses helped found amid that ferment, the Black United Front, adopted the radicalized language of the Black Panthers and similar groups and in the ensuing decades took on housing and employment discrimination, police brutality and more.
Europe has been in a state of political ferment since the 2008 financial crisis, which created divisions between north and south, rich and poor, and generated resentments that exploded in a populist backlash after the migration crisis in 2015.
There is a tradition of vinegar production in China's northeast, for instance, where parents harvest rice to make wine that they ferment at the bottom of a cold lake from the day their daughter is born until she marries.
"I think that cohort of artists and writers and the ferment of that time is something she's connected as a parallel to that of New York," Edward Koren, the New Yorker cartoonist, and a friend of Ms. Kalman, said.
Strolling amid the steep walls and angular slate roofs always transports me back to a bygone era — a storied past that vibrates beneath the ferment of the chic international crowds, designer boutiques, neo-bistrots, kosher delis and L.G.B.T. clubs.
"It's relatively simple" to put together, he says, and it even worked with his busy schedule: He could prep a batch in an hour and a half, leave it to ferment for two months and come back to try the results.
He rode the crest of the musical ferment of the time, so out went Perry Como and lush-stringed Mantovani, the sort of thing the army high-ups liked, and in came the Supremes, the Righteous Brothers and the Beatles.
Trump borrowed some of that approach for his 2016 campaign but in office has governed as a fairly orthodox economic conservative, thus demonstrating the demand for populism on the right without really providing the supply and creating conditions for further ferment.
It was a time of intellectual ferment, of grappling both with the Holocaust and with the heady Zionistic success in establishing a Jewish homeland in Israel after almost 2,000 years, and Rabbi Borowitz's ideas may have been kindled in that climate.
But back in the reawakened Dogpatch neighborhood in southern San Francisco, Endless West is the one firm that is trying to make alcoholic beverages far differently — by not using a grape, a barrel, or yeast to ferment its simulated products.
When you exhale into the AIRE, the device monitors your FODMAP (Fermentable Oligo-, Di-, Mono-saccharides and Polyols) levels, which are a certain type of carbohydrates found in many foods that can easily ferment and turn into gas in your gut.
The ferment since the referendum, by contrast, raised improbable visions of at least a partial return to those times, with Little England hemmed in by frontiers with Scotland and Ireland, its citizens, once friends and partners, now resentful and hostile.
In exploring the artistic ferment of Paris between the wars, that book turned the spotlight away from Picasso and his circle and onto the lesser-known coterie of Jewish expatriates from the Russian empire, artists like Marc Chagall and Sonia Delaunay.
She's also rolling out Seshin, a Korean body scrub with crushed black sesame seeds, rice bran oil and a radish root ferment peptide (the beauty equivalent of kimchi) that performs the job of Kim's notoriously hard-scrubbing grandmother, minus the tears.
They were emerging from the ferment of the Haskalah, the Jewish Enlightenment, in which thinkers like Moses Mendelssohn searched for ways that Jews, freshly emancipated in Western Europe, could embrace the new secular gods of rationality and progress and nation.
While most Oulipian theory emphasizes the paradoxically liberating effect, for artist and audience alike, of artistic constraint, Rasheed's installations appear agonizingly straitjacketed — "ferment-/ ed black power/ fuss in// a ma/ son jar," reads one twisting and self-interrupting language scrap.
Each of these plot strands tries to tie together all of show's big issues — race, drugs, family, the radical ferment of the '60s — and the effort is as exhausting for the audience as it must have been for the writers.
HAVANA (Reuters) - Cubans use them to fish, ferment wine, fix punctures or tie up hair; latex condoms have become the ultimate multipurpose tool on the Communist-run island where shortages of basic goods have forced locals to become masters of invention.
In the ordinary production of red wine, grapes (with or without their stems) are crushed and put in some sort of vat, where the juice eventually begins to ferment as yeast transforms the grape sugar into alcohol and carbon dioxide.
Students took matters into their own hands — and, in line with this period of cultural ferment — were equally active in the beginnings of what would become the New York Studio School on West 763th Street, in the original home of the Whitney Museum.
Born to a mother who was a member of the Black Panther Party and raised in Brooklyn in an environment of political ferment and police scrutiny, Malkia was fighting against the surveillance of activists and people of color before anyone knew my name.
Gitonga is one among a growing number farmers in Meru County who are cultivating maize to produce silage – maize stalks and immature ears that are chopped up and then compressed for at least three weeks in an airless container to ferment without rotting.
When the agave makes its way to the gut, microbiota—all the trillions of fun little bacteria that live in your gross stomach—ferment the agave, which is then better able to transport other minerals in the digestive system throughout the body.
That Britain is even contemplating an exit speaks to the ferment shaping politics in much of the world, as people grapple with the effects of globalization, automation and immigration — forces that present opportunities and pressures alike, changing the look and feel of communities.
The Yoshida Brewery, in Ishikawa Prefecture, has been making sake for more than 140 years, using artisanal means — that is, touch, taste, sight and smell, instead of just machines — to steam, sift and ferment the rice into a premium sake brand, Tedorigawa.
These include InSite, a phalanx of installations scattered around San Diego and Tijuana over the years, and the museum's 2007 "Strange New World: Art and Design From Tijuana," a sweeping view of that city's creative ferment, featuring the work of 41 artists.
The UK needs strong support from its NATO and EU partners, not only to shield itself from a Russian counter-response but also to demonstrate, clearly, that the West remains united, strong, and resolute despite the ferment of the past two years.
Rewind Few movies are as redolent of their times as "Funeral Parade of Roses," a 1969 exemplar of Japanese countercultural ferment that, retrieved from history's dustbin and digitally restored to its original black-and-white glory, opens on Friday at the Quad.
Salsa's emergence was catalyzed by new migration — primarily the surge of Puerto Ricans to New York in the 1950s — and by the ferment of the 1960s, as well as by the cross-cultural encounters with neighbors that New York City makes inevitable.
But Mr Vinen, a historian at King's College London, notes that France's May 1968 was actually part of a political and social ferment that affected most of the West for much of the 1960s and into the 1970s—the period he calls "the Long '68".
Frog's Leap depends on naturally occurring yeast to ferment its red grapes, Mr. Williams said, but manufactured yeast can be purchased that is said to either mask the smoke taint — if it exists — with fruity flavors or curtail the release of the smoky flavors.
But in my opinion, in order to improve these all of these qualities, I'm gunning for what could be called the last frontier in food sourcing—where bakers mill their flour, ferment naturally, and include the whole seed that has carried us as a species through time.
Once they isolate a yeast strain in the lab, and identify its DNA, Schmidt uses wort to ferment the bacteria and expand the volume so there is enough yeast to add to the beer which he ages in old chardonnay barrels stacked around around Baghaven's cavernous warehouse.
BERLIN — The devastating attack in Nice, carried out by a Tunisian man living in France, came at a moment of political ferment in Europe and seems likely to give even more fuel to anti-immigrant, anti-Muslim movements that are challenging established parties across the region.
When you walk into my meat plant—which I hope you come visit one day—you'll see that we smoke all of our meat, we hand-grade our spices, we build our own recipes, we hand-butcher our animals, we ferment naturally—all under one roof.
The crackdown ended the period of relatively free intellectual ferment that had characterized the 1980s and ushered in a new era defined by an implicit contract between the Chinese Communist Party and the people: stay silent on politics, and the party will deliver economic prosperity in return.
Christian colleges are fertile ground for political ferment because they include students of all sexual and racial identities, enrolled in theology classes, attending chapel together and grappling with traditional interpretations of scripture rather than cordoning off its claims, as a secular education might encourage them to do.
Each indigo dyer has his own recipe for adding lime, ash, lye from wood and wheat husks to the sukumo (or composted indigo plant), which must be kept warm and stirred for a couple weeks in order to ferment and become dye in a process called aitate.
On social media, the Atlanta Falcons were not just the N.F.C. champions, they were stand-ins for anti-Trump ferment, coming from a staunchly Democratic city and facing a Patriots team whose owner, head coach and starting quarterback are all friends with the president, to varying degrees.
First, the raw cacao beans are sifted and sorted by hand, to remove dust, silt, bean fragments, shell pieces, damaged beans, beans that are stuck together, germinated beans that didn't ferment soon enough after harvest, flat beans, beans that are too small, and leaves and twigs.
But it took 32 years to get from one scene to the other, so a look back to the Ferraro campaign can tell a lot about how the country has changed, and how it has not, through these decades of cultural ferment over the roles of the sexes.
Ms. Michelson was a New Yorker who steeped herself in the intellectual ferment of Paris in the 21980s and early '21971s before returning to teach at New York University and write erudite articles for Artforum and, beginning in 1976, for October, which she founded with Rosalind E. Krauss.
"Radicalism in the Wilderness," a precise and sturdy exhibition on view at Japan Society, looks deeply into three bold positions rooted far from the lights of late 2333s Tokyo, and explores how putting one's distance from the capital and its art institutions could be its own productive ferment.
To ferment most beers, brewers tend a culture of microbes and add it to each batch: typically a "pure culture" of brewer's yeast, or in the case of many farmhouse and sour beers, like Jester King's core offerings, a mix that includes yeast and bacteria isolated from the wild.
Chiapas is a particularly apt locale because the state's complex social ferment had its origins in the earliest years of the colonial era, when a Dominican missionary, Bartolomé de las Casas, denounced the brutality of the Spanish conquerors, who divided up the land and enslaved the Indians living on it.
Talking about Calder's role as an American in Paris, he goes on at length about Henry James, though James's kind of transplantation—fixed, and longing for the ancient and implanted permanence of Europe—couldn't have been more unlike that of the Calder generation, who saw in Paris ferment and fizz.
Finally, activists emerging from the social ferment of the 1960s to engage party politics via insurgent campaigns and, eventually, the transformative procedural reforms of the Commission on Party Structure and Delegate Selection (known more commonly as the McGovern-Fraser Commission) promulgated a vision of parties as fully permeable vessels for movement politics.
READ: New York fight night for Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders Indeed, a potential shift in the party's position on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has long been brewing, with signs of ferment bubbling to the surface in recent years amid the rancorous relationship between President Barack Obama and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
"We were intrigued by CAA because they're in the middle of the ferment that's going on in this industry, but they've been brokers instead of principals, and we think they have plenty of opportunities to be principals," David Bonderman, the co-head of TPG Capital is quoted as saying in The Hollywood Reporter.
This salt-preserved fruit, after about five days, is mixed with a powerful sludge of spices that include turmeric and crushed fenugreek and cumin seeds, staining the pickle with color and deepening its flavor — a hot, sour, salty tang that amplifies as the pickle continues to ferment for a few more days.
Rueda is ultimately driven by the same contrasting imperatives that drove Cerdà: to capture, for all citizens, the benefits of rural living (quiet, clean air and water, green and garden spaces, tight-knit community) alongside the benefits of urban living (efficient distribution of people and goods, mixing of diverse communities, economic and intellectual ferment).
For American film, especially, it was a decade of creative upheaval and ferment; when leading men weren't just in the traditional good-looking guy mode, such as Burt Reynolds and Clint Eastwood, but also regular-looking guys with strong-if-quirky personalities, such as Jack Nicholson, Dustin Hoffman and a bespectacled polymath named Woody Allen.
This myth, common in France, was famously highlighted by Simone de Beauvoir in The Second Sex, in a section where she also cites other myths associated with menstruating women, including that if one were to touch meat, it would spoil and if one were to attempt to make cider, it would fail to ferment.
Unlike the construction of railroads or steel mills in the 19th century, where the keys to this efficiency were the ready availability of capital, inexpensive labor, the adaption of the assembly line manufacturing process, and the supply of raw materials, today the key ingredient is the free flow and ferment of ideas within a society.
His career has followed the twisted path of Chinese liberal reformist hopes over four decades, from the optimistic ferment of the 1980s to the reversals that have accelerated into an avalanche under Mr. Xi. "Recent developments in China have delivered a big wake-up call to Chinese liberals that nothing will come easily," he said.
But it did eventually: what David Chase did with "The Sopranos" and David Simon with "The Wire," and before them figures like the just-passed Steven Bochco and Matt Groening and yes, Roseanne Barr, was all an extension and an echo of the era-defining pop cultural ferment that began in the 1960s and took off in 1970s.
And vocal parts for a climactic number sung by the lead actors Vondie Curtis Hall and Ato Blankson-Wood — who play a father-and-son musical team riven both by the era's political ferment and the arrival of a blues-besotted white British music producer (David Cale) — were conjured aloud, mouth to ear, on the spot.
There are vegan options at Scarr's, too, and flour for the dough is milled in-house, a practice both ancient and au courant—as is using natural leavening and allowing the dough to ferment, which they do at Upside and Norm's (admirable choices that, in this case, make the crust a bit too one-dimensionally tangy).
But the Silver Factory wouldn't have been the hallowed salon it was had Warhol, in 1959, not run into a handsome, brooding waiter named William Linich Jr., a refugee from the middle-class straits of Poughkeepsie, N.Y., who had moved to the city and plunged into its ferment as the Beat years gave way to the counterculture.
So when my partner and I decided to ferment hot sauce, we sprung for a fancy pH tester so we would know for sure if we'd gotten our stuff to a safe level of acidity to kill off all the bacteria to be able to give it to our friends and not worry we'd give them food poisoning.
It was a period of intellectual ferment at the seminary, and Dr. Cannon was very much a part of that, bringing an academic's rigor to the questions she had first asked herself as a child and finding that much of what was heard in churches, including from black male ministers, marginalized the experience and wisdom of black women.
Denizen Bushwick, a new rental development in Bushwick, Brooklyn, will have not only a wood shop and a darkroom, but labs for laser cutting, metalworking, printing and video production — all located in a vast subterranean co-working space that includes glass-fronted private studios so tenants can peek in on neighbors in the throes of artistic ferment.
Coming of age when the age was Aquarius, she recalls sitting around in her suburban-like bedroom painting, smoking pot and listening to Joni Mitchell as she dreamed about the creative ferment of Laurel Canyon, the Valhalla of Los Angeles rock where Ms. Mitchell, along with the likes of Cass Elliott (Mama Cass) and Neil Young, lived.
The lebkuchen made with more than a dozen spices and aged for months before being baked, the strudel dough rolled by hand until supple and translucent enough to read a newspaper through, and the pillow-sized sourdoughs that took days to ferment, were as intricate and impractical as meat-and-potatoes staples like Königsberger Klopse (veal meatballs in cream sauce) were utilitarian.
"My blood was in a ferment within me, my heart was full of longing, sweetly and foolishly; I was all expectancy and wonder; I was tremulous and waiting; my fancy fluttered and circled about the same images like martins round a bell-tower at dawn; I dreamed and was sad and sometimes cried," reads one passage in the translation by Isaiah Berlin.
And it added an intriguing new angle to the nation's ferment over voting rules and options when Mr. Poliquin, the candidate who was the first choice of more voters, lost the race to Mr. Golden, who won on the basis of being the second or third choice of voters who initially chose two independent candidates who together got 20163 percent of the vote.
According to the American market research firm Datassential, Korean ingredients like kimchi, which is traditionally buried underground and left to ferment for months, now appear on 5.5 percent of menus in the United States, a jump of 59 percent in the past five years — particularly noteworthy since Americans of Korean descent constitute less than two-thirds of a percent of the total population.
And while automation has slightly reduced the need for as much hands-on labor, there's no way to accelerate production, which consists of grinding malted barley into grist, cooking it in scorching water, adding yeast to ferment the mixture into a beer, distilling it to concentrate the alcohol and letting it rest in oak casks for up to several decades.
Perhaps due to his rather early Bernhardt success with the swirling floral images, it is curious to note that although he was surrounded by the ferment of a budding Post-Impressionist Modernism, and was a close friend and studio partner of Paul Gauguin, Mucha remained indifferent to the avant-garde developments and debates of the time, instead retrenched in his Japan-influenced hieratic designs and quasi-Byzantine decorative backgrounds.
Since January 20, Trump has accused Obama of: surveilling him at Trump Tower; ignoring evidence of Russian election meddling; allowing a nuclear threat to ferment in North Korea; approving embarrassing international agreements in the Paris climate accord and the Iran nuclear deal; masterminding a failed health care law; over-regulating the energy sector and killing coal jobs; micromanaging the battle against ISIS; and standing by as Syria's dictator used chemical weapons on civilians.
Since Atla ambled up to the corner of Lafayette and Great Jones Streets this spring, all the people who run to every new opening in town have been telling me they want to eat chilaquiles for breakfast there; they want the chicken enchiladas for lunch; they want to hide from the afternoon sun with a tall glass of iced tepache, a tingling, off-dry agua fresca Atla makes by letting sugar ferment with pineapple rinds.
It was at once refreshing and radical, part of a sophisticated menu featuring a custard of kaanga wai, corn scraped from cobs left to ferment for weeks in a running stream — a dish often feared by those unfamiliar with its frank funk — and titi, a seabird whose flesh tastes of the krill it eats, preserved in an ancient Maori preparation akin to French confit, the bird stuffed inside a tube of kelp, swaddled in its own rendered fat.
It could constitute everything from writing recipes for the restaurant—which is part of my job as well—to doing R&D, which is like, "Oh, there's this cool ingredient and this is what it tastes like raw, maybe we should do a lacto-ferment, maybe we should juice it and try the vinegar;" to reading a research paper and being like, "there's a long term project we really want to get on and what would it take to get that;" to just keeping up with production.
" Christopher Brown on Rule of Capture: "The US has lost a war with China—not a long drawn-out war, a pretty quick conflict that's mostly been orbital—but one that has resulted in the humiliation of a country that previously was kind of a dominant imperial power, and is subjected to treaty accords and austerity programs and things like that, the kind of circumstance that both opens up the window of the politically possible, but also provides a fertile ground for the ferment of ultranationalism.

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