Hello everyone welcome to my Channel ProvalaRicetta.it
if you have not done so yet, subscribe to the channel
and activate the bell so as to always be the first to see and comment on the next videos
stay until the end of the video to know what I will prepare in the next video
and now let's start making the lemon chiffon cake
the basic recipe, the white one, it takes:
6 egg yolks
8 egg whites
300 g of sugar
285 grams of flour
120 g of corn oil
a pinch of salt I'll take later
190 g of water
1 sachet of baking powder
1 bag of Cremona Tartaro
let's start sifting flour and baking powder
we mix everything
let's make a hole in the middle of the flour and add in this order
the oil
the yolks
sugar
the water
now let them stand aside
let's go to whisk the egg whites and as soon as they become frothy and white, add the Cremor Tartar
add a tablespoon of vanilla extract or a bit of lemon peel
mix with a whisk until sell it smooth
let's add the egg whites that are firmly in place a little at a time
always from bottom to top to not take them apart
for comfort me in the bowl
take the Chiffon pan and without it butter it, pour the dough
we level,
we bake at 150 degrees 160 maximum for 50 minutes
then we complain at 160-170 and finish cooking later
here we are again our chiffon
you see beautiful high
now we put it on the tray and turn it over
we leave it like this and wait for it to cool off, see you later
So, at the moment I'm in a hurry because my husband has to take her to the meeting
so I'm pulling it away
but you have to let it cool so it will stay high while it cools
some icing sugar
leave it in the state until it is cold and then you help her out of the mold
Did you like a recipe?
See you next time
keep following me
a thumb up
see you next time
Hello to all
Thanks to Easter Riotolo for the photo
Very good you came very well, beautiful <3
The recipe up and down in theinfoBox
For more infomation >> Lemon Chiffon Cake - Duration: 4:21.-------------------------------------------
B.I.G's Heedo And Gunmin Thank VIXX's Ravi For His Help On Their Upcoming Unit Album - Duration: 1:23.
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Naike Rivelli contro Barbara D'Urso: "In certe trasmissioni meglio non apparire" | K.N.B.T - Duration: 2:55.
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TRAILER |JULIETTE Martinů - National Theatre Prague - Duration: 2:35.
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Isola dei Famosi, Craig Warwick: l'accusa choc di omofobia a Franco Terlizzi | M.C.G.S - Duration: 4:43.
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"The Unit" Reveals Final Groups' Names And Leaders(News) - Duration: 2:33.
"The Unit" Reveals Final Groups' Names And Leaders
KBSs The Unit has announced the leaders and names for Unit B and Unit G!. Ahead of this weeks special episode, the idol rebooting program asked fans to submit ideas and vote on the final group names.
The choices for the final male group name included UNIT B, Unison, UNB, B.ONE, Uni.K, and My Turn, and the six choices for the female group name included UNIT G, Unity, U.N.G, G.ONE, Uni.on, The Shine, and UNI. Soompi. Display. News. English.
300x250. Mobile. English. 300x250. ATF. On the February 24 broadcast, the name of the male project group was announced as UNB and the female project groups as UNI.
The members also gathered to choose one leader for each group. Yang Jiwon, Yoonjo, Euijin, and Woohee appealed to their fellow members to try and earn their votes.
Members said, Woohee has low endurance, so we often saw her lying on the floor, and poked fun at her frowning.
She replied, I will exercise and look in the mirror to fix my frowning, and showed determination. In the end, Woohee was chosen as the leader of UNI.T.
Male members took Feeldogs experience as the current leader of BIGSTAR into consideration and chose him as the leader of UNB.
The final members also visited the city of Pohang to volunteer, wash dishes, and give out food to the victims of the earthquake. It was previously reported that The Unit finalists donated PyeongChang Olympics parkas to the earthquake victims.
UNB and UNI.T will hold fan meetings on March 3 at Blue Square iMarket Hall. Watch the latest episode of The Unit now!.
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Volkswagen up! 1.0 60PK 5-DRS Airco Move Up! - Duration: 1:00.
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Volkswagen up! 1.0 60PK 5-DRS Airco Move Up! - Duration: 0:59.
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Uomini e Donne: 'Mi avete rotto le scatole' l'ira di Tina Cipollari | M.C.G.S - Duration: 7:00.
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달콤 쌉싸름한 룰루 스킨 인게임 처키냐?|K-News - Duration: 3:36.
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Cosmetics Coloring Book for Kids | Learn Colors with Makeup Set for Girls - Duration: 7:17.
PURPLE
PURPLE
PINK
YELLOW
BLUE
RED
GREEN
YELLOW
BLUE
ORANGE
RED
PINK
PINK
GREEN
GREEN
BLUE
BLUE
YELLOW
RED
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Julia Wieniawa rezygnuje z nauki?! Co za nagła zmiana planów! - Duration: 3:38.
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차돌박이 새겨진 '남신'마른 백인 남성 우상|TKRTV - Duration: 5:49.
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Eli Roth's Death Wish - Get A...
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Sonic Cómic: El cangrejo traicionero/ArcoirisPaola - Duration: 1:18.
allright! I got a new challenge for myself: complete this level with 100 rings!
Great, there is more ahaed! I just need to go through this bridge and...
(the stupid bridge fell down XD)
Like, 30 tries later...
Yes! I finaly got that part right!
a couple of tries more...
Okay, that took a lot more time than I expected, but at leats I can finish this level with the 100 rings...
Carefull! a gigant energy force is aproaching!
>:V
based on a real story... A girl only wanted to play Sonic Forces... Cruse Eggman's robotic crabs! >:v
Comic made by: ArcoirisPaola
thanks for watching
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Kataleya : Le making of du clip "J'en Peux Plus" - Duration: 3:52.
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M5 Captioned Video - J. Pierce - Duration: 0:38.
Hi everyone.
Anytime a video is being added to a course, it's always a great idea to offer captioning, for a couple of reasons...
First of all, if there are students in the course that have a hearing disability,
it's always beneficial for them, not only to be able to watch the video, but to able to read what is being said.
Also, if a professor has an accent of any sort, or an impediment that could keep them from being understood clearly,
it's very beneficial to have the captioning so the students can have a very clear understanding of what is trying to be conveyed.
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I'm 17, Have a Car and Drift It. How? - Duration: 10:07.
Yes it's true, i'm 17, don't have my driver license,
have a drift car,
And already went to 10 drift events
So the car is in the garage
and, voila
In this video i'll show you how we did it with my parents
At a financial level, the impact it has on your life,
and how my parents accepted to let me drift and helped me
We're heading to the car, in the shadows
Apart if i do that
Madame is here
and here we go
So voila, let's start this
Firstly, the most important
Well it's at a financial level
mainly holding people to drift
At this level, we're a bit at ease
I'm not a rich person, my parents are not rich
But we're not on the poverty line, that's what i mean
It's still something asking a budget
as we put around 10k€ for a year, so the car, trailer, events, and stuff
hotels aren't cheap
and yes, i'll do a video later that will get into that subject much more in details
like, what can you have with your budget, how can you reduce it,
prevent you from my mistakes, lol
and voila, a video about that will come later,
but asks a lot of work so will ask months before coming out,
hard times
Voila, now that it's clearer about this
I'd like to tell you what's the impact of drifting on my life
so how drifting influences my last school year
hi, there's already a lot of work
so yeah, it has nothing to see with college
i think i have a lot of free time compared to college
compared to like, an engineering student
because for them it'll be harder to have time
So if you're an engineering student, well i'm sorry
But it's still doable
It really is a question of organization and what point at you're motivated
to start drifting
So let's give a look at the next point which is training
which is important to my eyes
I'm not talking about real life training, but training on simulators
On video games
So please don't say Forza, thanks
Oh crap, i might get rewared in the comments for that
pray for me
So that point, training on simulators
Personnaly i'm training on Assetto Corsa
which is for me the most realistic simulator
in fact, you don't only need the game, and that's the problem generally
You also need a wheel
A steering wheel that would as good to emulate real life
I'd say the very minimum in terms of steering wheel is the Logitech G25 or G27
So
Just to say, i'm not sponsored but
voila, i'm trying to help
So in minimum, G25 or G27
or if you have more budget, you can go for thrustmaster
t300 or t500
All these names, i understand that if you're not used to it it might be Chinese
Voila
I have a t500 and i trained during 1300 hours
before starting in real life
See that there's a lot of efforts already
You understand that it can impact of your free time, especially in the last school year
where you already have a lot of homeworks and class
So yes, hum
On that point you need to organize yourself in your life
So having a good level, it's important
just training is even more important
if you don't wanna crash your car at your first event, that's what i mean
I'd personally say that you can't grow
in terms of simulator drifting, with a wheel
Well, Assetto Corsa, there also are other realistic games
like rfactor, or even live for speed, not bad
It'll be good enough
But what i mean is that, for me
you'd need a minimum of 10 hours of training per week, on sims with a wheel
to really gain a level, feel the thing better, and adapt faster to real life
But with that, if you have a car
that it's broken
well you'll need to repair it
In terms of free time, well i'm not a mechanic
So either it's easy things, that still take a lot of time
i'm not really good at it
or i simply send the car to a mechanic, who'll to the job for me
Another question of budget
Trying to do it, if you have the abilities, the motivation,
And voila, otherwise you need to pay
And personally i have no knowledge about that, and don't wanna break my car so
my budget is having hard times
and pastas are becoming the good times
right, Jeremy (switchriders)
And add to that some of your weekends
because drift events are not in the week, but in the weekend
So for that, in a general case
It's either an entire day, but is generally far away
so you have to go the day before, to sleep and be ready the next day
or, it's an entire weekend
where, well it's even more training and fun
voila
So in terms of price, one more time
It won't be in that video, it'll be in another one later
To really explain to you in details how it works
what's the budget but like, for ALL
and yeah
Now let's get to the third point, which is well, the most sensible one for young people watching
It's the parents
Like, how to convince your parents to buy yourself a car
to start drifting, which is a bit dangerous
Hum, well it's fairly simple
You need
To work like a bastard
Voila
So yeah, personally my parents accepted
thanks to first, when i was a child i was loving cars
Which is probably the case for 90% of you, voila
I started training on simulators at 15
and accumulated 1300 hours of game time, in a year
yes, it's a lot
From there my parents saw that i was really serious about that
more and more serious
And that's how they started to give me attention about drifting
because i was doing ONLY that
Before i was on CS GO, you see
And from the time i started rediscovering my passion which is drifting
Well, i gave it all i had
That's how it works for me
You really need to work, stay motivated, and eventually the parents will start understanding that
it's really what you want
Because that budget can't be taken with lightness
It's something significant
And that's why i understand parents when they say:
"it's a bit risky, what you're doing"
There's one of you that said
He's 23, and has no budget to take a 10k€ car
That's why i'm doing this series mostly
To help the ones of you that are struggling
with how to start drifting, you're a bit lost
and i understand as i was too
But i had the chance to have parents that supported me and
to have that accumulation of lucky events, voila
Okay, let's get to the last point
That point most of the people don't know
That point which shows a driving license is not necessary on track
It's that, on tracks, you don't need your driver license
but only to drive on tracks
It's for the roads that you need it
This is divided in two subcategories
which are events registration and insurances
events registration, well you can't register by saying
"hi i won't take any responsibility"
You need someone that will take the responsibility
and this is the role of parents
so to register, what we're doing is
we register with my name, so hi it's me
and with the name of my legal responsible
so two papers but,
it's not two times expensier
it's one time, you write it twice-
you got it
Now the second point which is insurances, well
it doesn't really change anything in the end
the basic insurance on track is the "PL"
which is the "public liability"
it allows to cover people around you in case of damage
but not the ones for yourself
neither the ones for the cars, yes, let's be clear
to give you an order of ideas, a PL insurance for us is around 120€
Voila
I love it
Look at this rear, dammit
It's where you realize it's fabulous
So voila, i wanted to do this video to help people
to show them that it's possible
if you're really committing
if the parents have at least a little budget
and if they believe in you
So voila, this video is the first of a series
Which will help you a bit on starting drifting, the budget and stuff
It'll come in weeks or months
It depends on the time it takes to do the videos
Because it's like, monstrous
So, by waiting, i won't let you down
Some videos will come very fast
for her, so voila
I'll let you discover it next week
On this, the power belongs to all
Bye
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Intro Skyz Glitcher - Duration: 0:12.
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« J'ai du mal à croire que l'homme que j'ai aimé puisse renier son sang et son histoire »,... - Duration: 2:17.
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Cosmetics Coloring Book for Kids | Learn Colors with Makeup Set for Girls - Duration: 7:17.
PURPLE
PURPLE
PINK
YELLOW
BLUE
RED
GREEN
YELLOW
BLUE
ORANGE
RED
PINK
PINK
GREEN
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BLUE
BLUE
YELLOW
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PURPLE
ORANGE
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YELLOW
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Geek Squad Same Day Scre...
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달콤 쌉싸름한 룰루 스킨 인게임 처키냐?|K-News - Duration: 3:36.
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The Very Black History Of Punk Music - Duration: 11:03.
When you're black, you're punk rock all the time.
[mashup of your favorite punk songs]
And that is the sound of punk.
Short, fast riffs. Lyrics pushing back against the mainstream mundane.
The original don't-give-a-f*ck attitude. And a no-rules-allowed genre for self-identifying
misfits that emerged at a time where music was becoming maybe a little too clean.
But punks – or at least as I saw it, growing up – rarely looked like anything other than these guys.
Hey guys, I'm Sana.
This is AJ+ and today we're gonna explore the very black history – and present – of punk music.
Now, there was a decent amount of women who led the movement:
Patti Smith, Joan Jett, Debbie Harry and Siouxsie Sioux.
And they all got major recognition.
But black or Latino or any other shade of punk? Not really.
That doesn't sound weird if you've been taught the history of punk
as something that emerged from the working-class angst of young, white
English men. Think the Sex Pistols and The Clash.
But it is weird when you dig a bit deeper into the history
of punk and find that black and brown punks actually pioneered the movement.
Now, the most popular black American punk band is probably Bad Brains.
[awesome hardcore]
But first, I wanna talk about Death, the guys who helped pioneer punk without even trying or knowing.
['Keep on Knocking' by Death playing]
Death was the three Hackney brothers from Detroit.
Their music is what's been called proto-punk – punk before we knew punk was punk.
['Politicians in My Eyes' playing]
Now, Death broke all the rules
They were three black men playing what was considered white people's music
at a time when black Americans were known for playing things like Motown and R&B.
We felt natural doing it while we were
in our own quarters, but playing it out means that you
had to answer so many questions.
Yeah, we totally spoke to Death.
Now, the Hackney brothers did start off by playing R&B.
In fact, their band was originally called Rock Fire Funk Express.
But by 1973, they started playing rock and roll.
Well, we were just playing hard-driving rock and roll, man.
We were just really trying to be like the groups of the day that we loved,
like the MC5 and Alice Cooper and all those great rock-and-roll bands of the '70s.
We really just kind of springboarded off of the sound that they was laying down,
but we were just doing it harder, faster and louder.
Despite their raw sound and unique, intimidating name –
which, by the way, was totally ahead of its time –
they didn't last long as a band.
They just didn't get the distribution that they needed, with some record labels
worried about how to market their name and their sound.
And so Death kind of disbanded, but the brothers continued making music.
And it was only 30 years later, in 2008, that Death was rediscovered and thrown onto people's radar.
Now, even though Death didn't go mainstream,
their music was known underground and by the most diehard punk fans.
Meaning, they had influence.
There really was no scene or community or culture to embrace them.
And suddenly, kind of in retrospect, people have realized
realized like, wow, these guys were making punk rock
rock out of their own inner creative compulsions in Detroit.
Now, while Death is a pioneering band in punk history,
they actually don't necessarily see what they were doing at the time as punk –
– in fact, just plain old rock and roll.
We've never really considered ourselves a punk band.
I mean, back then, if you called somebody a punk, you know, you got into a fight.
We were playing what we conceived as hard-drive and Detroit rock and roll, man.
It's also important to note, as writer and musician Greg Tate told me,
the difference in how white and black musicians in the same genre were marketed,
and how that had an impact on who got the credit and who got the fame.
The American music business is made up of gatekeepers on the corporate side, on the radio side.
They very much subscribe to the Jim Crow notions of racial separation and segregation
which defined American culture throughout most of the 20th century.
It meant that black artists, historically, for most of the 20th century, couldn't make
as much money playing their own music, didn't have access to the same audiences, the same opportunities.
Now, in the '70s there was another black punk band that really changed the scene:
Bad Brains, considered one of the most influential punk bands ever.
[Bad Brains being awesome]
The group formed in 1976 in Washington, DC, getting its name from a Ramones song.
The punk band dominated in the '80s with their mix of reggae and a very aggressive punk sound
known as hardcore.
[Really aggressive punk sound]
In fact, they – along with Minor Threat and Black Flag – are considered
the pioneers of hardcore, which is a genre of punk which is, well, pretty damn fast.
And DC was hardcore's mecca, and also one of the most long-term influential punk scenes.
And there were also other black punk bands like Pure Hell, Fishbone
and the UK's X-Ray Spex, whose lead vocalist was a woman.
It's worth noting that these bands weren't segregated to some "black punk" category –
they influenced other bands, and vice versa.
Take reggae, for example. Numerous white punk bands used reggae
in their music in the UK throughout the '70s, inspired by black punk bands' use of it.
In my conversation with Tate, he mentioned how this idea that rock or punk as an all-white-boys' club
didn't really exist in the UK.
Black and brown punks were heavily influencing the scene.
Under the Thatcher government, there was a lot of disenfranchisement of white working class
youth, who were non-racist or anti-racist.
They kind of found their voice and their militancy through the political actions and the music
of their black and South Asian-born classmates and neighbors.
And just like their British counterparts, American punks also were really influenced by politics,
whether U.S. wars in Cambodia and Vietnam in the '70s, or, well, Ronald Reagan's
whole presidency throughout the '80s.
But punk – especially black punk – isn't a thing of the past. It's still a live, budding cultural movement today.
I realized that, like, not only is rock and roll something
that is native to people like myself and to Honeychild, but it's almost like my birthright.
That's Honeychild Coleman and Sacha Jenkins of the
punk band trio The 1865 --
and yes, their name is referencing exactly what you think it's referencing.
The "1865" references America in 1865, when the Emancipation Proclamation
brought a lot of promise of change for black Americans – except the racists had other plans.
Soon after, organizations like the Ku Klux Klan, and other groups who weren't really fans
of people like myself and this young lady, got together and kind of made it their business
to get in our business and make it hard for us to live in America.
And so you look at the climate of where we are now –
I don't want to necessarily be so literal, but it feels like the same kinds of sentiments.
The 1865 makes music that looks at 1865 America from the lens of a runaway slave,
a white Southern soldier, a slave owner who felt no guilt.
The trio is part of a still growing and very visible black presence in the punk scene,
something that was highlighted in the 2003 documentary "Afropunk."
The documentary really explored trials and good times faced by black youth
who were an intimate part of a cultural scene that has always been seen as white by outsiders.
The film ended up inspiring a bigger cultural movement, including a festival, started in 2005, by the same name.
The Afropunk festival, which was started in Brooklyn and now is international, basically is
about celebrating black artists, black creatives and black fans in the alternative scene.
Honeychild Coleman, Sacha Jenkins and Shawna Shawnté, who runs a black–brown punk festival
in Oakland, all say there's nothing more punk than being black in America.
I'm not saying black people created punk rock. I'm saying we are punk rock, without even trying.
The foundations of what people do that creates punk culture, say, going on tour, booking your
your own tour through an underground network, that's what black musicians had to do
because we weren't allowed to play in clubs.
When we have been pushed to the margins
but we create in those margins,
it doesn't get more punk than that.
I knew that it was my legacy, and I never believed anyone
who told me I was trying to be white because I loved rock and I loved guitars.
But even though they all agree that there's nothing more punk than being black, they
also raise the point of how different the experience is of being either white or black in the punk scene.
When you're black, you're punk rock all the time, you're a target all the time.
And I can't change the color of my skin.
There is a level of privilege that goes with, "I'm going to put a safety pin through my
nose and paint my hair, dye my hair green for three years, and then I'm going to clean
up and put on a suit and get a corporate job." We don't really have that luxury.
You also get cred for having punk years. But in my experience, working in the corporate world,
I can't let everybody know what I do outside of work because it could cost me my job.
And for Shawna, it remains super important to keep creating spaces that empower people on the margins.
I think it's important to see people who look like you making music and art.
It can feel very isolating and depressing, as a young person, when people are trying to
box you into one sort of identity and tell you how you have to be, based on your ethnicity or your class.
Punk is complicated, even though it's just simple, raw music.
As a movement, it has this incredibly rich history that, like the people in it, is hard to box.
And if the black history of punk music tells us anything,
it's how instrumental black musicians have been in the creation of an American pop culture.
Life-changing interview.
[Bemusedly strums guitar]
And then Sacha smashes the guitar through the door!
Right.
Hey guys! So we actually filmed this piece at 924 Gilman, which is the CBGB of the West Coast
And if you don't know what CBGB is, you should definitely look that up.
Let us what are some of the punk bands that you grew up listening to and don't forget to
like, share and subscribe and keep it punk.
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