Monthly Archives: May 2018

NC Aiyappa engaged with actress Anu Poovamma

He was also a part of the prestigious Indian Premier League.

NC Aiyappa.(Photo Source: Facebook)
NC Aiyappa.(Photo Source: Facebook)

Cricketer Narvanda Chetticha Aiyappa recently got engaged to Anu Poovamma, an actress in the Kannada film industry. The engagement ceremony took place at the Kodava Samaja in Vasantha Pura, Bangalore. As per reports in International Business Times (IB Times), the event was a low-key affair as friends and family were witnesses to the auspicious occasion.

Their marriage date hasn’t been fixed yet, but it has been learnt that they will pledge one’s troth in Virajpet next year. The Kannada-heroine has starred in movies like Kathachitra, Karvva, Life Super and Pani Puri. She is presently playing a negative character in Muddu Lakshmi, a television daily soap. Aiyappa’s career has been illustrious as well.

Aiyappa’s career
He made his first-class debut back in 2001/02 for Karnataka. The 38-year old player represented his state in 32 first-class matches in which he has picked up 116 wickets with best figures of 5/63. He also has seven four-wicket hauls and a couple of more five-wicket haul. The cricketer made his last appearance in white-clothing cricket in Karnataka’s match against Haryana back in 2012.

He also played 26 games in his List A career in which he notched 32 wickets and made his last appearance back in 2008. The medium pace-bowler also participated in the 2016 edition of the Karnataka Premier League. He played three matches for the Rockstars in which he managed only a couple of wickets at an economy of 11 runs per over.

He was also a part of the prestigious Indian Premier League (IPL). He was a part of the Royal Challengers Bangalore (RCB) and the Kochi Tuskers Kerala’s (KTK) squad.

Apart from the cricket pitch, Aiyappa also featured in the Kannada Big Boss season 3 hosted by Kiccha Sudeep. During the show, he was speculated to have been in a relationship with Pooja Gandhi, another renowned actress in the Kannada movie fraternity.

source: http://www.crictracker.com / CricTracker / Home> Cricket News / by Sabyasachi / May 18th, 2018

A better way of detecting bogus coffee beans

These coffee beans look good, but they may not be what they seem(Credit: racorn/Depositphotos)
These coffee beans look good, but they may not be what they seem(Credit: racorn/Depositphotos)

If you’ve seen even one advertisement for premium coffee, then you’ve probably heard someone going on about “100 percent pure Arabica beans” … but does the coffee really only contain Arabicas? A new method makes it quicker, cheaper and easier to find out.

Arabica beans are generally considered to be better tasting than cheaper Robusta beans, which trade at as little as half the price. Combined with the fact that Robustas are higher-yielding and easier to grow, this makes it tempting for some companies to surreptitiously cut their Arabica-based coffee with a bit of Robusta.

Traditionally, the only way of checking the purity of Arabica coffee involves testing samples for the presence of a chemical known as 16-O-methylcafestol (16-OMC) – it has long been thought that the compound is present in Robusta beans, but not in Arabica. Unfortunately, samples need to be sent off to a lab for analysis, and processing of those samples takes approximately three days.

Now, however, researchers from Britain’s Quadram Institute have discovered that a Pulsar benchtop NMR (nuclear magnetic resonance) spectrometer made by Oxford Instruments can do the same thing on-site in just 30 minutes. The device uses radio waves and magnetic fields to obtain information about the molecular composition of a sample, and can reportedly be easily operated by non-specialists. It’s previously been utilized to detect horse meat in ground beef.

SpectrometerKF17may2018

In lab tests, it was used to analyze 60 samples of supposedly 100-percent Arabica coffees gathered from 11 different coffee-growing countries and regions around the world. While 90 percent of those samples were deemed to be pure, the rest had high enough 16-OMC levels to indicate fraud.

The spectrometer can detect Robusta concentrations as low as 1 percent in blended coffees. In fact, it turned out to be sensitive enough to reveal that even Arabica beans do contain small amounts of 16-OMC. Therefore, the testing procedure had to be adapted to allow for a threshold amount of the chemical, which will be detected regardless of whether or not Robusta is present.

A paper on the research was recently published in the journal Food Chemistry.

Sources: Quadram Institute, Oxford Instruments

source: http://www.newatlas.com / NewAtlas.com / Home> Science / by Ben Coxworth / May 17th, 2018

A collection of poems that touch horizons

C.P. Surendran
C.P. Surendran

Well-known poet C.P. Surendran’s latest book, Available Light: New and Collected Poems, evokes a sense of disdain with a tinge of optimism in its readers. The book includes poems from earlier collections in addition to brand new creations.

Talking about the book C.P. says, “The past is often as unpredictable as the future. What happened is that I had a kind of a feeling that evolved into a theme as I wrote a few tenuously interconnected poems. I don’t usually write objective poetry. That essentially means that I don’t write a poem about a thing, say, a chair, or the weather or a tree. Therefore, very often a theme in a poem or a sequence of poems is likely to turn out to be your sensibility. In Available Light that sensibility is the dark and its absence, which is light.”

The book opens with a tribute to the renowned Malayalam poet Vijay Nambisan, who passed away in August 2017. Remembering the poet, C.P. says, “There are many literary institutions in India — most of them existing for committee members and employees and a few well connected writers. If one of these institutions had shown some appreciation when he was alive, Vijay might have died a little happier. He was a fine poet.”

Speaking about why he chose poetry to express his thoughts, C.P. shares, “I am in the process of writing a novel, Saving Memory From Stalin. And I can tell you honestly it is much more difficult to write fiction than poetry. In the kind of poetry I write the logic is image-driven and associative. I am not too much dependent on the device of the narrative in my poems. To me, a condition of prose is proselytising. Prose needs to convince, and convert you to the writer’s faith. Poetry doesn’t ask you to convert.”

While some poems from the book are about the incidents that happened in the country recently, like the horrific incident in Dadri when Mohammad Akhlaq was killed by a few Hindu fanatics, a few others take the reader through the time of the World War II. Poems under the title David, Don’t Be Sad, That Was a Dream describes the gruesomeness of genocide and heinousness against the Jews and ends with the poem Available Light, which is addressed to Ilse Koch, wife of the commandant of the Buchenwald concentration camp.

“To me what happened before, during and after World War II defines what it is to be, and not to be, human,” C.P. shares, adding, “The David sequence was precipitated by a dream. Its imagery is perhaps period-specific. But I imagine loose connections with contemporary political reality of India could be read into the David poems,” the poet concludes.

source: http://www.deccanchronicle.com / Deccan Chronicle / Home> Lifestyle> Books and Art / by Namrata Srivastava, Deccan Chronicle / May 17th, 2018

The Coffee Freak: How One Man Finds (and Sells) the World’s Best Coffee Beans

Coffee maven Joseph Brodsky with his prized trees in Panama  / Travis Horn
Coffee maven Joseph Brodsky with his prized trees in Panama / Travis Horn

FROM OUR HILLTOP vantage point in northern Panama, Costa Rica is visible to the west and Volcán Barú, Panama’s tallest mountain, to the east. A canopy of rain forest stretches to the horizon, and it feels as if we’re walking through untamed wilderness. The only hint otherwise is a gang of coffee pickers in rubber boots, huddled together and sifting through the day’s harvest. “You can’t know this place until you know the forest,” says the farm’s founder, Joseph Brodsky, gesturing at the view before us. “This is where the flavor comes from.”

Brodsky is giving me a tour of his 450-acre coffee plantation, and the next stop is the Rio Colorado, which marks the property’s eastern border. Getting there requires descending more than 900 feet via a series of switchbacks. Brodsky, 44, carries his weight, all 142 pounds of it, in his toes, bounding over knee-high vegetation with an agility that comes from a lifetime playing soccer. Upon reaching the river, he announces that it’s chigger season, removes his shirt and pants, and jumps into the water to rinse off the noxious mites. Stripped to his boxers, he props himself up into a headstand on a flat rock just above the rapids. After 90 seconds upside down, watching the water churn around him, he lowers his feet and sits up.

“What an amazing way to view the river!” he says.

Brodsky, center, and workers survey the farm before the day’s work begins / Travis Horn
Brodsky, center, and workers survey the farm before the day’s work begins / Travis Horn

If the coffee world has an Elon Musk, it’s Brodsky. His big idea is to transform coffee beans from a basic commodity, like orange juice, into a savored luxury, like fine wine. His bluster is matched only by his ambition. The name of his company, Ninety Plus, is a reference to the Specialty Coffee Association’s 100-point scale. No one has been awarded a grade better than 97. Ninety Plus has hit that mark three times and will put out only beans that rate above 90. A pound of Ninety Plus coffee retails for an average of $48, but at an auction last year, a lot sold wholesale for a record $2,269 per pound to a roaster in Asia. At the time, basic beans were going for a dollar a pound.

“Joseph has developed a completely unique product,” says renowned roaster George Howell, who has earned a lifetime achievement award from the SCA. “With my first taste, there was this floral note that I’d never had before. I don’t even have to drink the coffee to enjoy it. I could just smell the aromatics for hours.”

NOT LONG AGO, coffee came in regular and decaf—and that was about it. Then Starbucks came along and upended the business, creating slick coffee shops with dark-roasted espresso and elaborate milk drinks. Soon a long list of specialty roasters followed suit, and consumers got used to shelling out $5 for a Venti Americano. But to this day, except in diehard circles, you rarely know more about the beans than what country they come from. Brodsky’s big vision is to turn that idea on its head, creating high-end coffees that are distinguished, and ordered at the cafe by the name of the farm on which the beans were grown, as wine is distinguished by vineyard.

“The big coffee brands that people know are roasters, like Nescafé or Starbucks,” he says. “But nobody can name a coffee producer. We can be that brand.”

Coffee has been a passion of Brodsky’s since he was a kid growing up in Madison, Wisconsin. He and his older brother—now the owner of JBC Coffee Roasters in Madison—would often roast beans in a popcorn popper for fun. Years later, when Brodsky was attending Evergreen State College, he read a book called Coffee Basics, which described a bean from Ethiopia with blueberry and lemon flavors. Intrigued, he sought out the coffee, tasted it, and suddenly knew what he wanted to do with his life. In 2000, at 26 years old, Brodsky left school to open Novo Coffee in Denver with the help of his dad and another brother. Their goal was to focus on roasting and selling those Ethiopian beans. But consistency was a problem. “I’d have to sort through 200 coffees to find maybe one that I liked,” says Brodsky.

After traveling to Ethiopia to judge a coffee competition in 2005, Brodsky decided to stay until he had a better grasp on why the beans were so variable. The move wound up being semi-permanent. Brodsky quickly discovered that farmers had no incentive to improve their products because everything was being sold for the same price, often mixed together.

“In wine, there’s a feedback loop between taste, research, and development,” he says. “Coffee didn’t have that. Most growers today still don’t know the taste of their beans.”

So Brodsky partnered with local farmers to develop beans and, for the next four years, bounced between the U.S. and Ethiopia tasting each harvest. When the coffee was good, he’d have the farmer duplicate the procedures that created it. One bean that always stood out was called “gesha,” an heirloom varietal that many farmers ignored due to its low yield. But gesha is delicious and intensely fruity, and Brodsky began growing more of it, eventually selling the beans under the name Ninety Plus.

As he was experimenting in Ethiopia, other farmers began planting gesha in Panama, and in 2009, Brodsky signed a $1.6 million loan on a cattle ranch there, just 15 miles from the border with Costa Rica. His first step was to plant thousands of castor plants and palo blanco trees, which produce no sellable crop but provide ample shade and nourish the soil. Then he sprinkled in the geshas, spacing them far apart so they wouldn’t have to compete for nutrients. It generally takes five years for coffee trees to mature, so to keep his cash-strapped farm afloat, Brodsky continued working with Ethiopian farmers while trying to woo investors.

Travis Horn
Travis Horn

“I had rejections from the biggest players in the industry,” he says. “They’d visit the farm, fall in love, but then be too scared to invest.”

Finally, in 2014, Ninety Plus Gesha Estates sold its first beans. That same year, during the World Brewers Cup, an annual event to determine who can create the best cup of joe, master brewer Stefanos Domatiotis won using Brodsky’s beans. It was the first in a series of four straight wins, an unheard-of distinction.

During my visit to the farm in December, Domatiotis, a tall Greek from Athens, was on hand to inspect the early harvest. When he caught me eyeing some samples, he offered up a cup by asking, “Washed or natural?”

“Natural,” I said.

Travis Horn
Travis Horn

Where washed processing relies on water to rinse the cherry away from the bean (technically the seed of the fruit), natural processing allows the cherry to dry up and ferment on the bean and pass along wild flavors. Traditionally, natural processing has been used only on cheap coffee or beans grown in areas where water is scarce. But Brodsky showed that by following strict rules and controlling the environment, he could use natural fermentation to enhance the flavor—just one of his many innovations. In one of the farm’s wilder experiments, Brodsky and a visiting barista submerged beans in a 50-degree river and turned them twice daily for 10 days. “It smelled like champagne,” says Brodsky. It was probably the world’s first cold-fermented coffee, and it went on to win the 2015 Japan Barista Championship.

After brewing, Domatiotis served me a coffee that tasted like a velvety rich version of Earl Grey tea sweetened with some kind of berry. It was easily the best cup I’ve ever had.

“Too carbonic,” Domatiotis said.

“Yep,” Brodsky agreed. “With a better roast we can improve this by 15 to 30 percent.”

Travis Horn
Travis Horn

Later, Brodsky and Domatiotis began sampling the first 35 coffees harvested this season. They rattled off flavors with the cadence of auctioneers: miso, banana and carob, black pepper, avocado oil, and dulce de leche. Their ability to isolate individual flavors felt as if they were identifying cuts of steak by the sound of the sizzle. One aroma was characterized as “red pepper, but it wants to be savory and fruity at once.”

I simply nodded, stole a couple of sips, and asked, “Is ‘fucking good’ a useful descriptor?”

ON THE HEELS OF NINETY PLUS, natural-processed coffees are becoming increasingly common, and some producers, such as Colombia’s La Palma & El Tucán and the Australia-based Project Origin, are also experimenting with fermentation.

Brodsky inspects one of his gesha trees, hidden under the rain forest canopy / Travis Horn
Brodsky inspects one of his gesha trees, hidden under the rain forest canopy / Travis Horn

“We live in a time when people are indulging in better-quality beverages,” says Thomas Perez, CEO of Brooklyn’s Extraction Lab, which sells Ninety Plus for $18 a cup. “And the more you learn about coffee—just like with wine or beer or whatever you like—the more it becomes about quality over quantity.”

Currently most Ninety Plus beans are sold in Asia, where a high-end tea trade has made people more receptive to shelling out for delicate flavors. Over the next few years, Brodsky plans to push hard into the U.S. and launch a new brand, Baru Gesha, for beans that are just a few points shy of the Ninety Plus name. That’ll keep the flagship product strong while providing a better entry price for curious drinkers. “We’re still infants,” Brodsky says. “When people compliment my coffee, I say, ‘Thank you, but next year will be better.’ We’re already seen as the best in the world, but we haven’t done shit yet.”

Buy Brodsky’s Beans
Most Ninety Plus coffee is sold to roasters in Asia, but here’s where to find it in the U.S.

Eccentricity Coffee, Cleveland
The large selection of Ninety Plus beans are held in cold storage and roasted to order, with prices ranging from $27 to $100 for a 12 ounce bag. eccentricitycoffee.com

Bar Nine, Culver City, California
Buy beans by the bag or through the Bar Nine home-subscription program. barnine.us

JBC Coffee, Madison, Wisconsin
The founder, Michael Johnson, is Brodsky’s half-brother and a licensed Q Grader-essentially a sommelier of coffee. jbccoffeeroasters.com

source: http://www.mensjournal.com / Men’s Journal / Home> The Coffee Freak / by Clint Carter

Bride Votes Moments Before Her Marriage

BrideKF15may2018

Madikeri:

The polling booth staff and other voters at polling booth 131 located at Kandanakolli School were surprised to see a woman gorgeously dressed in a bridal attire entering the booth to vote along with her mother yesterday.

The woman was Smitha of Kandanakolli village whose marriage was arranged with Praveen of Moovathoklu village at Gowda Samaja in Madikeri to be solemnised yesterday only.

Not heeding to the advice of her family members and relatives, Smitha was said to be firm on exercising her franchise first before entering wedlock. Her determination won and Smitha after voting went to the Kalyana Mantap and participated in the marriage rituals.

Smitha felt happy that she had broken the tradition for a worthy cause to exercise a democratic right.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> News / May 12th, 2018

Obituary – Paleyanda Jyothi Karumbaiah

JyotiKarumbaiahKF15may2018

Paleyanda Jyothi Karumbaiah (Kodimaniyanda), wife of Paleyanda K. Karumbaiah, passed away last night in city. She was 76.

She leaves behind her husband, a daughter, two sons, three grandchildren and a host of relatives and friends.

The body was kept at Brigade Tranquil, Church Street, in Yadavagiri here and was cremated at Chirashantidhama in Gokulam, according to family sources.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> Obituary / May 15th, 2018

Mini hydel project in Kodagu gets green signal

A mini hydel project across River Kumaradhara which was constructed and commissioned in 2014 in pristine forest lands of Kodagu district has now got the green signal.

Bengaluru :

A mini hydel project across River Kumaradhara which was constructed and commissioned in 2014 in pristine forest lands of Kodagu district has now got the green signal. The Regional Empowered Committee (REC), south zone, Ministry of Environment and Forests, has cleared the project but questioned the state government’s decision to allot forest land for non-forestry purposes and further directed them to furnish a report.

The Kodagu Hydel Projects Pvt Ltd was sanctioned in pristine semi-evergreen and evergreen forest land in the Pushpagiri hill ranges of Kumaralli village, Madikeri division for implementing the 3 MW capacity Beedalli Mini Hydel Project. After the project took off in 2014, the DCF, Madikeri division issued notices to the company to submit the proposal for diversion of forest land under Forest (Conservation) Act, (FCA),1980 and to stop work till the necessary approval is obtained. Further, the CCF, Kodagu division reported that though the company was granted two acres, it was occupying more than 2.35 acres excluding the road, building and transmission lines.

Meanwhile, the company filed a writ petition in the Karnataka High Court and the court noted that the then DC, Kodagu district in 2007, had granted two acres of land in Survey No. 1/9 of Kumaralli village in Somwarpet taluk for establishing this hydel project. So, on the directions of the HC, the company submitted a proposal under FCA, 1980. Further, the state government was directed to process the application and send it to the central government as the company had already spent `13 crore on the project.

Joint Inspection Report

The report submitted by the joint inspection team clearly says the state government had violated all rules while allotting the land. Further, as per the DSS analysis done, the proposed area is inviolate as it violates hydrological rules. The area proposed for diversion comes under 250 metre buffer area of river Kumaradhara, a major water body in Kodagu.

Added to this, the findings of DCF (Central) states that the proposed forest area falls under Eco-Class 1 (dense forest). The area where the power house is built and official buildings are constructed had thick riverine vegetation and now some remnants are left in the field. Many known and rare species are found here.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> States> Karnataka / by Meera Bhardwaj, Express News Service / May 12th, 2018

Understanding the science called artisan coffee

ArtisanCoffeeKF11may2018

The science of Artisan coffee involves controlling and roasting the green beans and depends on the roasters visual and tasting sensibility.

Be it food or a cup of coffee – one doesn’t compromise on their quality. The third wave coffee movement brings to you– hand-picked coffee, also known as artisan coffee.

What sets it apart from regular coffee is that the artisan coffee growers carefully select the seeds, mill and dry the coffee beans. It is then converted into powder or grainy form by the roaster.

The science of Artisan coffee involves controlling and roasting the green beans and depends on the roasters visual and tasting sensibility.

Under this method, coffee growers roast their own seeds and keep it sealed and sell it. The Artisan coffee is popularly called the ‘handcrafted’ coffee that smells exactly the way it does when it is picked from the shrubs.

Coffee plantation owners are literally taking the ownership of milling process and investing in state-of-the-art micro mills that allows them to design their coffee and separate them into micro lots with different characteristics.

This step enhances the attributes of terroir and adds a signature flavour to your cup of coffee. So, the next time you want to pick out some this delicious coffee, see where the product was grown and roasted.

Artisan coffee makers have also replaced the customary practice of middlemen selling to customers, thereby decreasing adulteration.

source: http://www.telanganatoday.com / Telangana Today / Home / by Fatima Hasan, Telangana Today / May 08th, 2018

How Rohan Bopanna uses social media to drive the blues away

More often than not, Bengaluru-based tennis star Rohan Bopanna is on tour. And every time he returns, he finds his city has changed. So much so that he often drives around just to get a hang of how much.

The landscape behind him may be changing, but Bopanna’s focus remains centred–defending his French Open mixed-doubles title.

Amid all the training and practice though, Bopanna finds his stress buster in the form of social media. At a time when social media and privacy concerns are at the forefront, he bats for the former.

With an active and often updated online presence, the tennis ace says that it is his way of blowing off some steam. “I love posting on social media. Many times my managers tell me that they will do it for me instead, but I like doing it myself. I don’t stress about it so much, and instead use it to destress,” he says.

source: http://www.economictimes.indiatimes.com / The Economic Times / Home / by Maleeva Rebello, ET Bureau / May 11th, 2018

Rashmika bags her third film in Telugu, which stars Nagarjuna

RashmikaKF11may2018

Looks like Karnataka’s Most Desirable Woman of 2017 is not just a hot property in Sandalwood, but in Tollywood too. Following her debut in Telugu with Naga Shaurya and then signing a film with Vijay Deverakonda, Rashmika Mandanna has now bagged her third film in Telugu and it’s with none other than Nagarjuna and Nani.

While the grapevine had it that she had been approached for the project, up until now there was no confirmed news about the same.

Now sources confirm that not only has has Rashmika already shot for a few days for the same in Hyderabad. “Some major scenes were filmed in the metro and Rashmika was part of the shoot. She plays Nani’s love interest in the film. And since it’s a multi-starrer, Rashmika will also share screen space with Nagarjuna,” adds our source.

Directed by Sriram Aditya, the untitled film is touted to be a mass entertainer. Rashmika in the meanwhile is also busy with Darshan-starrer Yajamana in Kannada.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> News> Entertainment> Kannada> Movies> News / by Madhu Daithota / May 07th, 2018