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All is shadow here below! The world is a shadow; and it passes away! The creature is a shadow; and the loveliest and the fondest may be the first to die! Health is a shadow; fading, and in a moment gone! Wealth is a shadow; today upon the summit of affluence, tomorrow at its base, plunged into poverty and dependence! Human friendships and creature affections are but shadows; sweet and pleasant while they last, but, with a worm feeding at the root of all created good, the sheltering gourd soon withers, exposing us to the sun's burning heat by day, and to the frost's cold chill by night! Oh, yes! “Passing Away” is indelibly inscribed upon everything here below! Yet how slow are we to realize the solemn lesson: “What shadows we are, and what shadows we pursue!” Unconverted reader, what is your life but a vapor that passes away?and what are its pursuits but shadows; unreal, unsatisfying, evanescent? Your rank, your wealth, your honors, your pleasures, are but phantoms which appear but for a little while, and then are lost in the deeper shadow of the grave, and the still deeper and longer shadow of eternity! Oh, turn from these dreams and hallucinations, and, as a rational, accountable, immortal being, on your way to judgment, fix your mind upon your solemn, endless future! You are going to die! And, oh, when that dread hour comes, so real and appalling, how will your past life appear?
Octavius Winslow

Burmese Tempeh

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Vegetables, Grains Burmese Vegetable 4 Servings

INGREDIENTS

1 Finely chopped large onion
1 (1-inch) stick grated or chopped fresh ginger
Chopped green chiles
1/4 ts Turmeric; about (up to)
3 Cloves chopped garlic
1 pk Tempeh; crumbled
Red chile flakes to taste
1 tb Soy sauce; about (adjust to taste)
1/2 c Ground peanuts or cashews (but not peanut butter!)
1/2 c Whole or chopped peanuts or cashews (optional)
1 lg Chopped tomato -or- (up to)
3 Tomatoes from a can of whole peeled tomatoes; and some of their juice

INSTRUCTIONS

Jonathan Kandell, Tucson Arizona  <jkandell@ccit.arizona.edu>
This is a variation of a recipe given to me by Leigh Panlilio, who plays in
a Balinese gamelon orchestra, in addition to playing in punk bands.
Saute 1 finely chopped large onion together with a one-inch stick of grated
or chopped fresh ginger, some chopped green chile, and a large pinch (about
1/4 t) of turmeric.  Stir constantly so nothing burns.
When the onion is starting to brown, add 2 to 3 cloves chopped garlic, and
saute carefully for a minute, being very careful it doesn't burn.
Add 1 package tempeh, crumbled; red chile flakes to taste; and about 1 T
soy sauce (adjust to taste.) Fry a minute.
Add 1/2 C ground peanuts or cashews.  (But not peanut butter!) Optionally,
use 1/2 C whole or chopped peanuts or cashews.  Fry a couple minutes.
Add 1 large chopped tomato (or 2 or 3 tomatoes from a can of whole peeled
tomatoes, and some of their juice). Fry a couple minutes more. Serve over
rice.
CHILE-HEADS ARCHIVES
From the Chile-Heads recipe list.  Downloaded from Glen's MM Recipe
Archive, http://www.erols.com/hosey.

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