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#italian

2 posts2 participants0 posts today

quick #italian lesson. (i'm learning how to talk about travel.)

the Italian word for german is *tedesco.*

that's weird to me.
where the heck is that from?

my unit on using plurals was good but sort of maddening.

my sister, an AP Spanish teacher, rolls her eyes when i told her i was learning Italian on duolingo. yeah, i know it's not the perfect pedagogical tool. but it's working....ish.

[no one talk to me in Italian yet. I'll panic and run screaming.]

#NowWatching “Uncle Was a Vampire” (1959) or “Tempi duri per i vampiri” (original title) on Blu-Ray

From “The Eurocrypt of Christopher Lee Collection 2” box set (Severin)

Get it: amzn.to/3El4HkO

A baron down on his luck sells his family castle to pay off his mounting debt. After the castle is turned into a hotel, he's hired as a bellboy. But all is not lost, as he discovers he has a rich uncle; unfortunately, he's a vampire

This #cartoon was published in 1893 in Puck magazine

5 #GildedAge #American fatcats sneer at a recent poor #immigrant. Behind each fatcat is a shadow of their poor immigrant ancestor

Today many #Irish #Americans, #German Americans, #Italian Americans etc sneer at poor immigrants the same

Giving the hate their ancestors received

At one time anti-#Catholic hate in this country was off the charts: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-Cat

Same shit, different era

🤦

alamy.com/stock-photo-immigrat

Something to chuckle about:

Chemists investigated the phase behavior of an iconic #Italian pasta dish, cacio e pepe
#chemistry #foodscience #cooking #yum

Despite only 3 ingredients, it's not simple to attain the classic creamy sauce

Beware the mozarella phase!
#haha #funny #cookingfails

arxiv.org/abs/2501.00536

arXiv.orgPhase behavior of Cacio and Pepe sauce"Pasta alla Cacio e pepe" is a traditional Italian dish made with pasta, pecorino cheese, and pepper. Despite its simple ingredient list, achieving the perfect texture and creaminess of the sauce can be challenging. In this study, we systematically explore the phase behavior of Cacio and pepe sauce, focusing on its stability at increasing temperatures for various proportions of cheese, water, and starch. We identify starch concentration as the key factor influencing sauce stability, with direct implications for practical cooking. Specifically, we delineate a regime where starch concentrations below 1% (relative to cheese mass) lead to the formation of system-wide clumps, a condition determining what we term the "Mozzarella Phase" and corresponding to an unpleasant and separated sauce. Additionally, we examine the impact of cheese concentration relative to water at a fixed starch level, observing a lower critical solution temperature that we theoretically rationalized by means of a minimal effective free-energy model. Finally, we present a scientifically optimized recipe based on our findings, enabling a consistently flawless execution of this classic dish.

Today in Labor History December 24, 1913: Seventy-three people in Calumet, Michigan died in the "Calumet Massacre," including 59 kids. The majority were Finns, Croats and Slovenes. The Western Federation of Miners (WFM) was having a Christmas party for striking copper miners at the Italian Hall. About 500 miners and their family members were at the party. Someone yelled "Fire!" and dozens were trampled in the panic. Goons and scabs had barred the doors, trapping people inside, exacerbating the injuries and deaths. The person who yelled “fire” was never identified, but many strikers believed it was a company guard. WFM president Charles Moyer claimed that the person was wearing the badge of the Citizen’s Alliance, an anti-union, pro-boss vigilante group that routinely terrorized the miners and their families. In the aftermath, some Alliance members formed a relief committee and collected $25,000 for the survivors’ families, but they refused the money. Committee members believed that Moyer had forbidden his members from accepting the money. So, they shot and kidnapped him, sending him out of town by train, and forbidding him from ever returning to Michigan.

youtube.com/watch?v=UgrPK2CNuJ

There were over 15,000 miners working in Michigan’s Copper Country at the time of the strike. 9,000 had already signed up with the Western Federation of Miners (WFM). They were striking for union recognition, as well as better wages and hours, and safer working conditions. They typically had to work 10-12 hours per day, six days per week, including children. Additionally, they were forced to live in Company Towns, in which everything was owned by the mine owners. Rent, heating fuel, medical care, and even the tools of the trade, were deducted from the workers’ paychecks, leaving them little, to nothing, for themselves. The mine owners used Pinkertons, and several other private detective agencies as strike breakers and agents provocateur. In addition to those who died in the Calumet Hall disaster, another 15-20 were killed by cops and private cops. The strike continued until April, 1914, when the union was driven out of the Keweenaw Peninsula. The Copper Country strike in Michigan occurred concurrently with the Colorado Minefield War, with the infamous Ludlow Massacre occurring just days after the Michigan strike ended, in which National Guards and private cops massacred over a dozen unarmed women and children.

Prior to the Copper Country strike, in 1905, Moyer and WFM organizer, Big Bill Haywood were falsely charged with the murder of former Idaho governor, Frank Steunenberg, a long-time enemy of the WFM. Famed Pinkerton detective James McParland, who had previously infiltrated and helped destroy the WBA mining union in Pennsylvania (1875), ran the investigation. McParland (using his pseudonym, James McKenna) is also the villain in my first two novels: “Anywhere But Schuylkill” and “Red Hot Summer in the Big Smoke.” Famed union attorney Clarence Darrow successfully defended Haywood and Moyer. Mary Doria Russell wrote about the Calumet disaster in her 2019 novel, “The Women of Copper Country.”

You can read my full article on the Ludlow Massacre here: michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/04/

And my article on the Pinkertons here: michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/04/

And my article on the WFM here: michaeldunnauthor.com/2021/05/

You can pick up a copy of Anywhere But Schuylkill here:
keplers.com/
greenapplebooks.com/
boundtogether.org//
christophersbooks.com/
thehistoricalfictioncompany.co

You can also get it from Amazon, but I’d prefer you didn’t, at least not until their strike is over.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #calumet #massacre #italian #mining #union #strike #scabs #goons #christmas #party #woodyguthrie #children #ludlow #pinkerton #wfm #michigan #colorado #books #novels #fiction #historicalfiction #author #writer @bookstadon