My name is Jerry...I like to sleep.
YoungBoyJ
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Name: Jerry
Gender: Male


Interests: hmm...sleeping. i also like to eat, but not as much as i used to, play pool, procrastinate, god, running i suppose, cleaning, insomnia, females, naps, youtube, fantasy sports, bad movies, jello, icecream, deepdish pizza, chipotle and Quiznos
Expertise: sleeping.
Occupation: Retired
Industry: waste management engineer


Message: message me


Member Since: 12/1/2004

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Monday, October 08, 2007

sleep and other musings

wow i have not written in Xanga in like a half a year so in my nocturnal state i have decided to discuss sleep. and whoever reading this can tell it is quite early/late. surprisingly in college my sleep schedule is much more dysfunctional than ever and for no reason i can't go to sleep its almost seven and i am thinking of getting some breakfast when i should be sleeping. i find it sad that i am not addicted to facebook, but see facebook as a daily ritual almost like brushing my teeth. if i wake up late there is always a lingering thought that i should check facebook, like i thought i that i have to wash my hair or keep my teeth clean, i have check my comments or group invitations. ehh o well. video gamers out there is Halo 3 that good? i mean its a fun game and the graphics are better but does it warrent my roommate to spend 8 hours a day playing it, cause i don't see what i am missing. world series pick: redsox in 6 over the rockies. good morning everyone!


Sunday, April 08, 2007

Easter

Today is Easter sunday and i got baptized. I am so happy that i got baptized on Easter because through good friday and just the biuld up to Easter it really showed me what  god did for us and why easter is so important for Christians. For me this was the first year i actively went to good friday service and truly understood what Easter meant. I thank everyone that came to wcac today and for all my friends and family, even the ones that didn't come or that are far away i just want to say to i love you all and god bless.


Thursday, March 22, 2007

why do some people leave their shoes on when their in the house? i know this does not generally apply to asian people, but what person in their right mind would do that. Outisde is dirty, inside is cleaner, not cleaner but cleaner and when you come in with dirty shoes or lets say a trip to a lavatory and track ur urine and feces laced shoes into the house that is gross. Since most asian people read this i don't think this applicalbe, however either way it is a very stupid practice. and if people want to wear shoes, wear slippers or have indoor shoes.


Sunday, February 11, 2007

Epicureans fly to Bangkok for $25K meal

BANGKOK, Thailand - It was an evening of utter decadence — a 10-course gourmet dinner concocted by world-renowned chefs at $25,000 a head.

Many of those who attended Saturday night's culinary extravaganza in Bangkok hailed it as the meal of a lifetime. But it's no easy task to eat plate after plate of Beluga caviar, Perigord truffles, Kobe beef, Brittany lobster — each paired with a rare and robust vintage wine.

"It's really amazing," said one diner, Sophiane Foster, a wealthy Cambodian who lives in Malaysia, as she eyed the dinner's eighth course — a "pigeon en croute with cepes mushrooms." "But I can't finish it. Your senses can only appreciate so much."

High-rolling food lovers flew in from the United States, Europe, the Middle East and other parts of Asia for the 40-seat dinner organized by the Lebua luxury hotel in Bangkok, grandly titled "Epicurean Masters of the World."

Cooked by six three-star Michelin chefs — four from France and one each from Germany and Italy — the menu featured complicated creations like "tartar of Kobe beef with Imperial Beluga caviar and Belon oysters" and "mousseline of 'pattes rouges' crayfish with morel mushroom infusion."

Among the talented chefs, some said they found it challenging to give diners their money's worth.

Antoine Westermann of Le Buerhiesel, a top-class restaurant in Strasbourg, France, said he shaved 3 1/2 ounces of Perigord truffles — worth about $350 — onto each plate of his "coquille Saint-Jacques and truffles."

"For $25,000, what do you expect?" he said.

As guests entered the dinner, held at the hotel's rooftop restaurant on the 65th floor overlooking Bangkok, attendants bowed and scattered rose petals at their feet. Men wore tuxedos and women were dripping in diamonds. The guests included Fortune 500 executives, a casino owner from Macau and a Taiwanese hotel owner, said Deepak Ohri, Lebua's managing director. He declined to reveal their identities.

"It's surreal. The whole thing is surreal," said Alain Soliveres, the celebrated chef of the Taillevent restaurant in Paris.

Soliveres prepared two of his signature dishes, including the first course: a "creme brulee of foie gras" that was washed down with a 1990 Cristal champagne — a bubbly that sells for more than $500 a bottle, but still stood out as one of the cheapest wines on the menu.

"To have brought together all of these three-star Michelin chefs, and to serve these wines for so many people is just an incredible feat," Soliveres said.

Chefs submitted their grocery lists to organizers beforehand and the ingredients were flown in fresh: black truffles, foie gras, oysters and live Brittany lobsters from France; caviar from Switzerland; white truffles from Italy.

Diners also sipped their way through legendary vintage wines, like a 1985 Romanee Conti, a 1959 Chateau Mouton Rothschild, a 1967 Chateau d'Yquem and a 1961 Chateau Palmer. The latter is considered "one of the greatest single wines of the 20th century," said Alun Griffiths of Berry Bros. & Rudd, the British wine merchants that procured and shipped about six bottles of each wine for the dinner.

The wine alone cost more than $200,000, Griffiths said. "Just to have one of these would be a great treat. To have 10 of them in one evening is the sort of thing that people would kill for."

Wine lovers regularly organize exorbitantly expensive tastings in New York, London and Tokyo, but such events are not as common in Thailand, where it would take the average schoolteacher five years to earn $25,000.

On the street, where much of Bangkok's best food is served, the dinner generated talk of over-the-top excess.

"That is a waste of money," said Rungrat Ketpinyo, 44, who sells Phad Thai noodles for 75 cents a plate from a street cart outside the hotel. "I don't care how luxurious this meal is. It's ridiculous."

Organizers say the event was designed to promote Thai tourism and that most of the profits will go to two charities — Medecins Sans Frontieres and the Chaipattana Foundation, a rural development program set up by the king of Thailand.

The guest list included 15 paying customers and 25 invited guests. Organizers scrambled to fill the seats at the last minute after 10 Japanese invitees canceled their reservation, citing safety concerns after the New Year's Eve bombings in Bangkok that killed three people.

Some chefs confessed they were astonished by the $25,000 price tag.

"It's crazy," Westermann said. "After this, nothing can shock me."

But Marc Meneau, the chef of L'Esperance restaurant in Vezelay, France, called it a "culinary work of art."

"It's no more shocking than buying a painting that costs $2 million," he said.

 

would u pay 25K for one meal? even i don't think so even if i could afford it


Saturday, February 03, 2007

GO BEARS!!



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