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Though I have a body that had languished under great weaknesses for many years, and my diseases have been such as require as much exercise as almost any in the world, and I have found exercise the principal means of my preservation till now, and, therefore, have as great reason to plead for it as any man that I know, yet I have found that the foresaid proportion hath been blessed to my preservation, though I know that much more had been like to have tended to my greater health. Indeed, I do not know one minister in a hundred that needs so much exercise as myself. Yea, I know abundance of ministers, that scarce ever use any exercise at all, though I commend them not in this. I doubt not but it is our duty to use so much exercise as is necessary for the preservation of our health, so far as our work requires; otherwise, we should, for one day’s work, lose the opportunity of many. But this may be done, and yet the work that we are engaged in, be done too.
Richard Baxter

We begin with receiving and then rightly understanding Scripture in our minds. But before we apply the Bible, it must first engage our hearts. Without the mind, biblical application is based on flimsy and deceptive emotions. Yet without the heart, biblical application is based only rote duty and obligation. It’s never hearts informing our minds, but rather minds informing our hearts. Then when we obey, it’s a correct application of Scripture that comes from the affections – loving God with all of our hearts.
Randy Smith

Mughlai Lamb Biryani

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Meats, Grains, Dairy, Vegetables, Eggs Mughlai Lamb 1 Servings

INGREDIENTS

400 g Long grain rice
3 tb Salt
1 ts Saffron threads
30 ml Warm milk
3 Medium onions (peeled)
4 Cloves garlic (peeled)
3/4 Cube of fresh ginger peeled and coarsely c
4 tb Blanched, slivered almonds
150 ml Water
50 ml Water
200 ml Vegetable oil
3 tb Golden raisins
1 1/2 lb Boned lamb meat (from the shoulder) cut in
225 ml Plain yoghurt
6 Whole cloves
1/2 ts Whole black peppercorns
1/2 ts Whole cardamom seeds
1 ts Whole cumin seeds
2 1/2 Stick of cinnamon
1/8 Of a nutmeg
1/4 ts Cayenne pepper
2 tb Unsalted butter cut into 8 pieces
3 Hard boiled eggs peeled and at room temper

INSTRUCTIONS

Recipe by: Brett Jones halcyon!ds!bj@seattleu.edu 1. Wash the rice in
several changes of water. Drain it and put it in a lar
2.  Put the saffron threads in a small, heavy frying pan set over a medium
3.  Cut two of the onions in half lengthwise, and then cut the halves into
4.  Heat 6 tablespoons of the oil in a 25 cm non stick frying pan over a me
5.  Put the raisins into the same oil. Remove them as soon as they turn plu
6.  Now put the meat cubes, a few at a time, into the same hot oil and brow
7.  Add another 7 tablespoons oil to the frying pan and turn the heat to me
8.  While the meat is cooking, put the cloves, peppercorns, cardamom seeds,
9.  When the meat has cooked for 30 minutes, add all the spices from the sp
10.  Spread out the meat and sauce in the bottom of a heavy casserole. Cove
11.  Preheat oven to low-moderate, 150 °C .
12.  Bring 3 l of water to a rolling boil in a large pot. Add 1  1/2 tables
13.  Work fast now. Put the rice on top of the meat, piling it up in the sh
14.  Remove from the oven. If left in a warm place, this rice will stay hot
15.  Just before you get ready to serve, quarter the eggs lengthwise. Mix t
Author's Notes:
Here is my favorite recipe from Madhur Jaffrey's "Indian Cooking":
You can substitute beef or chicken easily. This has got to be my absolu
Difficulty    : moderate, but a lot of work. Precision
: measure ingredients.

A Message from our Provider:

“To ignore our Creator is the height of selfishness”

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