Justine Shine

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Chiquita Mcnicholas

unread,
Aug 5, 2024, 2:32:07 PM8/5/24
to remamocons
Squashblossoms are one of my absolute favorite summer ingredients, and of course, that makes them the star of this Squash Blossom Tart with ricotta and lemon parsley oil. This tart is simple to make, but an utter show-stopper when you add the gorgeous squash blossoms on top. And I love how it gives squash blossoms another way to shine other than deep frying them! They are such a gorgeous ingredient, so I always try to give them as many ways as possible to shine.

And make the crust first! I recommend making the crust, then chilling it. From there, lightly flour a work surface and roll out the pie crust into a large rectangle. You want it to be about 1/2 cm thick and at least 13 inches long and 9 inches wide.

When you have reached your desired size, lightly flour the top and transfer the dough to a parchment-lined baking sheet. Let the dough chill in the fridge while you prepare the other ingredients.


In a small blender, add the parsley, mint, olive oil, 2 garlic cloves and the juice from the whole zested lemon. Drizzle in 1/4 cup of ice water and season with a generous pinch of salt. Blend this until you form a smooth (but thick) green parsley oil. Season with more salt, if needed. Set aside.


In a small bowl, add the ricotta, 3 cloves of minced or grated garlic, and the zest from one lemon. Add salt and pepper to taste. Stir to combine, taste and season and stir again. Set this aside. This will be the main base for the squash blossom galette.




Evenly layer the squash blossoms on top of the ricotta and parsley oil. You want them touching, but not covering each other. Drizzle these with a touch of olive oil and sprinkle with a pinch of salt and a few cracks of black pepper.

Fold up the sides of the tart, as if nestling in the squash blossoms. Chill this in the fridge while the oven reaches its needed temperature.


Gun metal ankle boots with a square toe and a chunky block heel.

Side zip closure.

Crafted from vegan vinyl featuring a glossy metallic shine. Black rubber platform sole for extra comfort.

European sizing, true to size.


She was the daughter of William P. Miller and Inez F. Miller, both deceased. She is survived by William P. Miller, Jr. (Marian), Whippany, N.J., Ellen M. Sigler, Cornelius, N.C.,Paul P. Miller (Nancy), Palm Bay, Fl, Alina C. Selva, Melbourne, Fl. And numerous nieces and nephews.


Justine resided in Florida for 21 years, formerly of Belleville, N.J. She attended the Caldwell School System and Caldwell College in N.J.

Justine was an active member of Ascension Catholic Church and belonged to the Ladies Ancient Order of Hibernians and the Ascension Council of Catholic Women. She was a past president of ACCW and enjoyed leading the Handmade Articles group and chairing the Card party every January. She was ACCW Woman of the Year in 2013. She retired from Verizon after 34 years of service where she was a Software

Engineer. She also worked for Divine Mercy Radio since its inception to the present as an Administrative Assistant.

Always self-motivated to serve the poor, Justine collected and distributed clothes, furniture and needed items to the poor in inner city New Jersey and rural West Virginia.


She always had a smile and kind word for everyone she met and was very loved by everybody.

The family wishes to extend sincere thanks to Dr. John Bomalaski and his staff and Health First Hospice for the wonderful care.

Justine was a light in our world and will continue to shine forever. May she rest in peace.


Justine Nolan and the DTP are training human rights defenders in the Pacific to develop advocacy strategies to deal with companies in the region and achieve better terms and conditions for local workers, better protect community and Indigenous rights, and sustain business activity.


Justine Nolan and the Diplomacy Training Program (DTP) are training human rights defenders in the Pacific to develop advocacy strategies to deal with companies in the region and achieve better terms and conditions for local workers, better protect community and Indigenous rights, and sustain business activity.


Pacific Island countries are undergoing rapid development. Some corporations in the region are engaging in exploitative practices to the detriment of locals and their environment in areas such as mining, forestry, tourism and land ownership. Keen to attract business investment, local governments are hesitant to regulate corporate behaviour and are not adequately consulting Indigenous peoples.


The UN has indicated support for the private sector in its Sustainable Development Goals (8: Decent Work and Economic Growth) yet it also aims to protect the rights of workers and Indigenous peoples. How can these goals coexist in The Pacific? The area of human rights and business is underdeveloped in the Pacific region. The UNHCR regional office is starting to pay more attention, recognising that local NGOs do not have the requisite resources or training.


Justine is also researching modern slavey in Australia and advising on related legislation the Federal Government is set to introduce in 2018. She is examining what can be done to effect meaningful change to protect people from indentured work and unjust working conditions.


In the Pacific, Justine and the DTP are looking to enable local organisations and workers to negotiate with foreign companies doing business in the region to achieve better terms and conditions for locals and their land. The training will shine a spotlight on the issues, connect regional organisations, and encourage these organisations to spread information among the community. Locals and Indigenous peoples are set to receive more just and equitable outcomes, and company activity will be more sustainable for the population and environment.


Justine Nolan is an Associate Professor and Associate Dean (Academic) at UNSW, and a Visiting Professorial Scholar at NYU's Stern Center for Business and Human Rights. Prior to joining UNSW in 2004, she worked as the Director of the Business and Human Rights program at the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights (now Human Rights First) in the USA. She co-authored The International Law of Human Rights (OUP, 2011), and more recently, Business and Human Rights: From Principles to Practice (Routledge, 2016), and she is an editor of the Australian Journal of Human Rights, Business and Human Rights Journal and the Human Rights Defender.


UNSW is located on the unceded territory of the Bidjigal (Kensington campus), Gadigal (City and Paddington Campuses) and Ngunnawal peoples (UNSW Canberra) who are the Traditional Owners of the lands where each campus of UNSW is situated.


The Big Bang theory requires equal amounts of matter and antimatter to have been created at the beginning of time, but there is little antimatter in the universe now. What happened to all the antimatter is a question scientists from the ALPHA Collaboration, including the ALPHA-Canada group, have spent years trying to find clues to answer. The spectroscopic measurement brings that search one step closer and is considered a major breakthrough.


The scientists created and trapped antihydrogen atoms in a cryogenically cooled and vacuum-tight cylindrical chamber using a system of magnetic fields. Learning to produce and trap antihydrogen was a huge feat that took six years to do as matter and antimatter annihilate upon contact. Once they were able to trap the antihydrogen atoms, it took another six years to learn how to shine laser light on them at various frequencies to see what would happen.


Antihydrogen atoms absorb light only at specific frequencies. Precisely measuring the distribution of those absorbed frequencies (spectroscopy), paints a unique fingerprint of the atom. The researchers found that at a specific frequency the antimatter atoms behaved the same as hydrogen atoms meaning they both absorbed light at the same frequency.

3a8082e126
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages