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You know how it was with Moses, when he saw two men fighting, one an Egyptian, and another an Israelite, he killed the Egyptian; but, when he saw two Hebrews fighting, Now, saith he, I will go and reconcile them, for they are brethren; why so, but because he was a good man, and gracious? So also it is with a gracious heart; when he sees the Scripture fighting with an Egyptian, an heathen author, or apocryphal, he comes and kills the heathen…but when he sees two Scriptures at variance (in view, though in truth not), Oh, saith he, these are brethren, and they may be reconciled, I will labour all I can to reconcile them; but when a man shall take every advantage of seeming difference in Scripture, to say, Do ye see what contradictions there are in this book, and not labour to reconcile them; what doth this argue, but that the corruption of a man’s nature, is boiled up to an unknown malice against the word of the Lord.
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I have a friend who was sent to plant a church in a hostile city, in a neighborhood dominated by sexual perversion. While making the rounds, introducing himself to pastors already serving in the city one pastor warned him that so many others had sought to minister to that demographic, but, the pastor reasoned, they just weren’t reachable. My friend, though he had served in the special forces, and could well be Chuck Norris’s younger brother, broke down in tears. He explained to the pastor, “If the gospel has no power to save them, it has no power to save me.”
R.C. Sproul Jr.

Hot and Sour Soup/kim Malo 1

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Meats, Eggs Chinese Chinese, Soups & ste, Mushrooms 1 Servings

INGREDIENTS

1/4 ts Salt
1/8 ts Sugar
1 pn White pepper
1/2 ts Dry sherry
1/2 ts Toasted sesame oil
1/4 lb Pork; shredded
3 tb Cider vinegar
2 tb Soy sauce
1 tb Toasted sesame oil
1 tb Chili oil
1/2 ts Freshly ground black pepper
2 tb Cornstarch
4 c Chicken stock
1 tb Finely chopped fresh ginger
1/2 c Matchstick sized shreds bamboo shoots
1/4 c Dried lily buds; *see note
3 lg Chinese dried black mushrooms; *see note
2 lg Tree ears; *see note
1 lg Egg; lightly beaten

INSTRUCTIONS

MARINADE
SEASONING LIQUID
SOUP
NOTES: lily buds: soaked in cold water for 20 minutes, then squeezed dry
and any hard parts cut off black mushrooms: stems snapped off, caps soaked
for 30 minutes in hot water, then squeezed dry and thinly sliced tree ears:
soaked in hot water for 20 minutes, knobby parts cut off, and sliced into a
thin julienne JoAnn note: I am guessing on the amount of pork because it
was missing in the original recipe. I think chicken could be used also.
Combine marinade ingredients in a bowl, add pork and toss to coat. Set
aside while preparing other ingredients.
Combine seasoning liquid ingredients in a separate small bowl and set
aside.
Bring stock to a boil in a medium saucepan. Reduce heat to simmer. Add pork
and ginger, stirring with chopsticks to separate pork shreds. Cook 2
minutes. Add remaining ingredients, except seasoning liquid and egg. Bring
to a boil. Re-stir seasoning liquid and pour into the soup. Stir until
thickened, then remove from the heat. The soup should not be allowed to
boil once the vinegar has been added. Slowly pour beaten egg into soup in a
thin stream, stirring gently with a chopstick to form 'egg flowers'. Taste
and adjust seasoning, if necessary, with additional vinegar, pepper, or
chili oil.
Notes: This version does not have the traditional sesame oil and sliced
scallion garnishes. I prefer it with them, so sprinkle 1-2 sliced scallions
and 1-2 Tsp toasted sesame oil (for the entire recipe, not per serving)
over the top before serving. One hint, even in using others' recipes. I've
found that the small amount of sugar suggested in these recipes, used as a
seasoning rather than a sweetner, makes a real difference -seems to
highlight the sour from the vinegar and the heat from the pepper.
NOTES : From: A Taste of Chinatown, America's Native Chinese Cuisine by
Joie Warner
Posted to EAT-L Digest  by JoAnn <joannr@PCLINK.COM> on Apr 14, 1998

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