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Showing posts with label Foods. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Foods. Show all posts

Awesome and Creative Wedding Cake Toppers

Video Gamer
Invitations, floral arrangements, passed appetizers; a wedding is an event filled with opportunities to flaunt your taste and style. Our favorite part of the party is, of course, the cake, and these days the cake topper is becoming yet another way to personalize the whole affair. From the geeky to the cheeky, these nine cake toppers are exactly what weddings should be about: having fun and celebrating the love (and quirks) a couple shares.
 Lovebirds
Lovebirds
Handmade nuzzling lovebirds from Etsy seller CountrySquirrelsRUs show everybody your love for one another--or your Twitter addiction.

Robot Couple
Robot Couple
A robot couple cake topper is the perfect accent to any steampunk wedding. Bonus points if anyone in the wedding party is wearing vintage aviator goggles.

Bert and Ernie
Bert and Ernie
This cute Bert and Ernie cake topper from artist Mike Leavitt is perfect for your gay friends who spent the first two years of their relationship pretending to be just roommates.

  Personalized Lego Mini Figures
Personalized Lego Mini Figures
Personalized Lego mini figures seem sweet until you accidentally step on them on the way to the bathroom at night. 

  Star Wars Couple
Star Wars Couple
If you're going to emulate any "Star Wars" couple on your wedding cake, better Han Solo and Leia than Luke and Leia. 

  Video Gamer
Video Gamer
If you can't drag your husband-to-be away from the video games, you might as well make the best of it on your wedding day. At least you get points for good humor. 

  Sock Monkey
Sock Monkey
A handmade sock monkey cake topper is not only super cute, but it will be a good addition to the toy chest when kids enter the picture.

10 Must-Try Most Exotic Fruits

Traveling to an exotic destination is not just about swimming in the turquoise waters or sunbathing. You also have to taste some of the cuisine and sample some of the exotic fruits of the place. For those hot summers when you need something refreshing, we have collected 10 tropical fruits you absolutely must try.

1. Rambutan
Native to Malay Archipelago, Southeast Asia
Coming from an evergreen tree, the Rambutan fruit resembles the Lychees, have a leathery red skin and are covered with spines. Rambutan is a popular garden fruit tree and one of the most famous in Southeast Asia. The fruit is sweet and juicy, being commonly found in jams or available canned.
Rambutan

2. Jackfruit
Native to southwestern India, Bangladesh, Philippines and Sri Lanka
Jackfruit is a common fruit for Asia and Australia and considered as one of the largest tree borne fruit in the world. The juicy pulp around the seeds have a taste similar to pineapple, but milder. Apart from canned jackfruit, it is also available as sweet chips. The wood of the tree is used for making various musical instruments, while the fruit is a common ingredient for many Asian dishes.
Jackfruit

3. Passion Fruit
Native to South America, grown in India, New Zealand, Brazil, etc
The passion fruit has a soft, juicy interior full of seeds, being commonly found in juices to boost their flavors. There are two types of passion fruit: the golden one (maracuyá), similar to a grapefruit and the dark purple passion fruit (gulupa), comparable in terms of size with a lemon. However, the latter ones have been reported as being mildly poisonous.
Passion fruit

4. Lychee
Native to southern China, found in India, Taiwan
Coming from an evergreen tree, the lychee or litchi are small white flesh fruits, covered in a red rind, rich in vitamin C and with a grape-like texture. The fruit has started making its appearance in markets worldwide, refrigerated or canned with its taste intact.
Lychee

5. Star fruit
Native to Indonesia, India and Sri Lanka
The star fruit comes from the carambola, a species of tree with pink flowers grown even in the US. The golden-yellow fruit is crunchy, sweet, with a taste of pineapples, apples and kiwis combined. There are two kinds of star fruits – acidulate and sweet, both rich in vitamin C. The fruit is particularly juice, some even making wine out of it.
Star fruit

6. Mangosteen
Native to the Sunda Islands and the Moluccas.
The mangosteen is another evergreen tree that produces oddly shaped fruits. The fruits are purple, creamy, described as citrus with a hint of peach. It is rich in antioxidants, some scientists even suggesting it can lower risk against certain human diseases, such as cancer. There are even legends about Queen Victoria offering a reward to the one that brings her the fruit.
Mangosteen

7. Kumquat
Native to China
The kumquats or cumquats are small edible fruits resembling oranges that grow in a tree related to the Citrus. As with most of the fruits in the Citrus family, the kumquats are eaten raw. They are often used in marmalade and jelly but also in alcoholic drinks such as liquor. The Taiwanese add it to their teas, while others boil it and use it as a remedy for sore throats.
Kumquat

8. Durian
Native to Brunei, Malaysia and Indonesia
Also known as the “King of Fruits,” Durian has a very particular odor, a unique taste and is covered by a hard husk. Having a disagreeable smell, compared to skunk spray or sewage, the fruit is forbidden in hotels and public transportations in Southeast Asia. Still, the whole experience is worth it, considering the absolutely divine taste of the Durian.
Durian

9. Dragon Fruit
Native to Mexico and Central and South America
Dragon fruit, strawberry pear or pitaya is a fruit of several cactus species with a sweet delicate taste and creamy pulp. The most common dragon fruit is the red pitaya, but other varieties include the Costa Rica pataya and the yellow pataya. Juice or wine can be obtained from the fruit, while the flowers can be eaten or used for tea.
Dragon Fruit

10. African cucumber
Native to Kalahari Desert, Africa
The African cucumber, horned melon or melano is a fruit that can be best described as melon with horns. It originated in the Kalahari Desert and is now present in California and New Zealand. The dark green pulp reminds one of bananas, limes, passion fruit and cucumber. It is often used for decorating food but also in smoothies and sundaes.
African cucumber

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