Norma - Piccola Grande Italia
Dall’alto dei Monti Lepìni, domina sullo spettacolare paesaggio della Pianura Pontìna, l’accogliente cittadina di Norma, bellissimo comune della provincia di Latina.
Norma (Lazio), Parco Archeologico dell'Antica Norba (manortiz)
Norma -- Norba (Latium, Italy)
A balcony open over the plain, with a view that starts from Nettuno and ranges without interruption all the way to Terracina and the Pontine Islands, Norma is a small jewel set on a spur called the rave that soars to a height of over 400 metres. This city's history was born from the neighbouring Norba, whose gigantic ruins -- the city walls and constructions made without mortar, using large, limestone blocks -- provide an idea of an age-old centre destroyed by war and never rebuilt.
Its foundation is dated to the late fifth century AD, during the period of the Volscian invasions in this area of southern Lazio. The area enclosed by the walls, about two kilometres in length, covers approximately 38 hectares; in it, we may still identify roads, terracing, temples, and public and private buildings. The two acropolises -- the smaller and the larger one -- are positioned on two nearby hills: remains include the castle of waters, probably one of the earliest examples of a spa facility, with cisterns, wells, and ambulacra. The end that the city chose for itself was a terrible one.
During the Civil War, Norba, an independent municipality with its own senate and the power to coin its own money, refused to fall into the hands of Aemelius Lepidus, Sulla's lieutenant and rival of Marius, who had the city's support. According to Appianus's account, thus perished the stout-hearted men of Norba: rather than surrender to the enemy, they slew each other and, so as not to leave any loot, set the town on fire, destroying it totally.
Today, Norba tells its story with the remains that can still be identified, and with an archaeological museum, located in Norma, that accompanies us on this journey back in time through finds, reconstructions, models, and video projections; interactive stations present religion, military techniques, and cuisine, allowing visitors to become inhabitants of Norba and of Republican-era Rome. The modern city of Norma, with its nineteenth-century historic centre, has another tasty tidbit for the visitor: a chocolate museum. The first of its kind in Italy, its exhibitions fill the halls of Antica Norba -- a local chocolate factory -- following the evolution of the food of the gods (indeed, it is no accident that cocoa's scientific name, Theobroma, means food of the gods.) from Mayan tradition to more recent times.
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The Boo Boo Story from Diana and Roma
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LA SCIA BIANCA - Museo del Cioccolato ANTICA NORBA
LA SCIA BIANCA: puntata del 15 e 16 dicembre 2013 registrata a Norma (LT) presso il Museo del Cioccolato Antica Norba.
14 Amazing Things People Found!
In 2013, a man found a violin in the trash and one can only imagine the story behind how it got there. He decided to have it appraised since he knew nothing about instruments, well lo and behold, it turns out that this violin was made by one of the most famous Italian violin makers of all time, Guiseppe Pedrazzini. According to the appraiser the violin was worth about $50 000 and just needed to be cleaned. I am sure that was music to his ears.
5. It’s your lucky day…
Alexander Calder was a famous and very influential American sculptor. He produced a lot of jewelery in his time as well, and this particular piece was displayed in the New York Museum of Modern Art back in 1943. It somehow went missing, and wound up in Philly flea market. A lady called Norma purchased it, and fell in love with it. She wore it to an art exhibition, where she discovered the truth about it, and sold it at auction for $267,750.
4. A cat has 9 lives
There is a reason why cats get nine chances in life-because they are clumsy, wild, cute, adventurous and they rule the internet. A family from Cornwall in England had a garage sale and sold everything except this cat, since they were probably dog people, they threw this bronze statue in the trash. Luckily a cat person came along and retrieved this Egyptian artifact dating back to 500-700 BC when this cat had its first life. It was bought by a London dealer for 80 000 POUNDS.
3. Bond, James Bond
It’s not every day you find a watch capable of detecting nuclear radiation. If it sounds like something out of a James Bond movie, then you are right. This watch was bought at a garage sale for $38 and was actually worn by Sean Connery in Thunderball. Sold for 160 175 POUNDS
2. Not a Rhino’s cup of tea
This strange looking cup was bought at a bargain store in Sydney, Australia for $4 in 2013. Turns out it is a 17th century Chinese Libation Cup carved from Rhino horn. It sold for just under $80 000 Australian dollars.
⦁ Open happiness
Sometimes it is incredible to believe how much power there can be in one document, it is just a piece of paper covered in ink after all, but wars have been started and stopped with documents and families torn apart. In 2008, a man from California bought a box of old documents for $5 at a neighbourhood garage sale. He noticed it was a 1917 stock certificate where a company by the name of Palmer Union of Oil merged with a company who then merged with Coke. This double merger entitled him to 1.8 million shares worth $130 million. Needless to say, he is one of the richest garage sale hunters in history.
Diana and Roma make a Giant slime
Diana and Roma play with slimes and make a giant slime. Fun kids video.
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Sicilian Food, Wine and Cooking
If you are looking for fine Italian wine and food, consider the Sicily region of southern Italy.
Sicily is an island in the Mediterranean Sea located off the southwest tip of Italy. Sicily was first inhabited about ten thousand years ago. Agriculture and animal raising date back well over four thousand years. Its rulers have included the Greeks, Romans, Arabs, Normans, Germans, and Spaniards, among others. This mountainous region is prone to volcanoes and earthquakes; in 1908 an earthquake and subsequent tidal wave killed eighty thousand people in the coastal city of Messina. Sicily's population is about five million, with an additional ten million people of Sicilian descent around the world.
Agricultural products include wheat, barley, corn, olives, citrus fruit, almonds, and, of course, grapes. Tomatoes, eggplants, and peppers are prominent in local cuisine. Sicily is Italy's second region for organic food. Many think that the Arabs introduced pasta to Sicily, which subsequently introduced it to the rest of Italy. Cattle, mules, donkeys, and sheep are raised. Sicily claims to have invented meatballs, The seas surrounding Sicily are bountiful, favorites include sardines, tuna, and swordfish. Sicily is famous for desserts, including frozen treats made with snow from Mount Etna.
Sicilian heavy industry includes petro-chemicals, chemicals, mining, and electronics. Tourism is a major factor in the Sicilian economy. Did you know that the Valle dei Templi in Agrigento on the Mediterranean Sea has some of the finest Greek ruins on earth?
Palermo, arguably the world's most conquered city, is Sicily's capital with a population of a little under seven hundred thousand. It is a definite tourist destination, with its numerous historical churches, museums, theaters, and Italy's largest botanical garden. Another urban tourist destination is Syracuse, dating back to Ancient Greece. The Greek writer Cicero described it as The greatest Greek city and the most beautiful of them all. Both earthquakes and World War II caused heavy damage, but many of the most interesting sites have been reconstructed.
Sicily devotes about a third of a million acres to grapevines, it ranks first among the 20 Italian regions. Its total annual wine production is about 213 million gallons, also giving it first place If Sicily were an independent country, it would rank seventh in the world for wine production. About 54% of its wine production is red or rosé (only a bit of rosé), leaving 46% for white. The region produces 19 DOC wines. DOC stands for Denominazione di Origine Controllata, which may be translated as Denomination of Controlled Origin, presumably a high-quality wine. Only a little more than 2% of Sicilian wine carries the DOC designation. Sicily is home to over three dozen major and secondary grape varieties, with more white than red varieties.
Widely grown international white grape varieties include Malvasia and to a lesser extent, Chardonnay. The best-known strictly Italian white varieties are Catarratto, Grecanico, Inzolia, and Grillo. The first three of these varieties are blended in the wine reviewed below.
Widely grown international red grape varieties include Syrah, Cabernet Sauvignon, and Merlot. The best-known strictly Italian red varieties are Nero d'Avola, Frappato, and Nerello Mascalese.
Sicily - Food and Wines - Wines
Contrasts are not the least of those things in which Sicily abounds. So perhaps it is not surprising that this ancient island boasts one of Italy's most modern wine industries of that a region noted chiefly in the past for strong and often sweet amber Marsala and Moscato has rapicly switched the emphasis toward lighter, dryer wines - whites and reds.
Sicily, the largest Mediterranean island, has more vineyards for wine than any other region. Production in recent years has reached awesome levels - frequently the greatest in volume among the regions. The westernmost province of Trapani alone turns out more wine than the entire regions of Tuscany or Piedmont or such wine nations as Hungary, Austria or Chile. But the proportion of DOC wine in Sicily's total is a mere 2.5 per cent and a major share of that is Marsala, which with some 22 million litres a year ranks among Italy's top ten DOCs in volume.
Marsala, which was devised by English merchant traders nearly two centuries ago, has remained Sicily's proudest wine despite decades of degradation when it was flavoured with various syrups and sweeteners. Recently it has enjoyed a comeback with connoisseurs, who favour the dry Marsala Vergine and Superiore Riserva with their warmly complex flavours that rank them with the finest fortified wines of Europe.
The only other DOC wine made in significant quantity in Sicily (about 2.5 million litres a year) is the pale white, bone dry Bianco d'Alcamo. Moscato di Pantelleria, from the remote isle off the coast of Tunisia, is among the richest and most esteemed of Italian sweet wines in the Naturale and Passito Extra versions. Malvasia delle Lipari, from the volcanic Aeolian isles,is a dessert wine as exquisite as it is rare.
The dry white and red wines of Etna, whose vines are draped over the lower slopes of the volcano, can show notable class, as can the pale red but potent Cerasuolo di Vittoria. Production of the others DOCs - the dry, red Faro and the sweet Moscatos of Noto and Siracusa - has been virtually nonexistent in recent times.
By contrast, a number of unclassivied vini da tavola are thriving. Increasingly prominent are the pale, faintly scented, delicately fruity whites which derive largely from native grapes such as Inzolia, Catarratto, Grecanico and Verdello. Such outsiders as Sauvignon and Chardonnay have also proved promising. Certain reds have achieved prominence, too, mainly those from such admired native varieties as Nero d'Avola (or Calabrese) and Nerello Mascalese and Perricone (or Pignatello).
The most admired brands in Sicilian tables wines - Corvo-Duca di Salaparuta and Regaleali - do not qualify under any DOC. Yet Corvo's consistent quality in dry whites and reds from grapes selected throughout the island has made them prizewinners at home and abroad. Regaleali from the Tasca d'Almerita family estate high in the island's central hills, has been producing white, rose' and reds that have won international acclaim.
The Region of Sicily distinguishes wines of consistent quality - whether DOC or not - with a Q, which appears on labels as a seal of approval.
Sicilian wine has not enjoyed universal success, however. In an era of dwindling consumption world-wide, much of the island's production is either shipped away as blending wine or designated for distillation into industrial alcohol.
The region's wine production - four-fifths of which is centred in cooperatives - has been gradually reduced as new emphasis has been given to premium quality. New methods of viticulture in the sunny, temperate hills are helping to realise wines of real character and individuality. Sicily has taken the lead in winemaking in the modern south as producers seem increasingly determined to live up to the promise that was so well known to the ancient Greeks.
Sicily - Wine Regions
Regional capital: Palermo. Provinces: Agrigento, Caltanisetta, Catania, Enna, Messina, Palermo, Ragusa, Siracusa, Trapani
Sicily is Italy's largest region (25,708 square kilometres) and ranks fourth in population (5,084,000).
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Vineyards cover 164,500 hectares (First) of which registered DOC plots total 21,000 hectares (Fifth).
Annual wine production of 11,000,000 hectolitres (Second to Apulia) includes 1.5 per cent or 277,000 hectolitre DOC (Eleventh), of which more than 95 per cent is white.
DOC AREAS
Alcamo Or Bianco D'alcamo
Cerasuolo Di Vittoria
Etna
Faro R-Dr,
Malvasia Delle Lipari
Marsala
Moscato Dinoto
Moscato Di Pantelleria Naturale
Passito
Moscato Di Siracusa
OTHER WINES OF NOTE
Cellaro
Cerde`se
Duca Enrico
Libecchio
Menfi Rosso Nerello Siciliano
Rapitala` Rosso
Regaleali Rosso del Conte
Rubillo
Terre d'Agala
W-Dr Bianca di Valguarnera
Cellaro Bianco
Cerde`se Bianco
Corvo Colomba Platino
Corvo Prima Goccia
Donnafugata Vigna di Gabri Libecchio
Menfi Bianco
Regaleali Nozze d'Oro
Rincione
Terre di Ginestra
Verdello Siciliano
Others
Conti d'Almerita Brut
Inzolia di Samperi
Stravecchio Siciliano, Vecchio Samperi,
Villa Fontane Sollicchiato Bianco
Sicily is rightly famed for its food and drink, and the island's cuisine reflects the different cultural influences which have shaped Sicily over the centuries.
Sicily's rich desserts and pastries are famed far and wide. Cannoli, sweet tubes of ricotta, can be found all over Italy but those in Sicily are the original and the best. Arab influences show in the popular brightly-coloured sweets made of marzipan, and in the sinfully rich cassata, which comes in both ice cream and cake varieties, made from ricotta with bits of candied fruit and chocolate. Ice cream, gelato is another speciality, to be enjoyed during a leisurely evening passeggiata.
Sicily's home-grown products make for a rich and varied spread, ranging from bright oranges and lemons to tasty cheeses like pecorino. Seafood is another staple of the diet, particularly around the coastal towns. Pasta with sardines (con le sarde) is local favourite. Around Catania you will find pasta or pizza alla Norma (named after Catania boy Bellini's opera), with tomato, ricotta and aubergine. Couscous, eaten particularly in the west of the island, is another example of Sicily's mixed food heritage.
One of the treats of a hot day is a good granita. This refreshing slush of fruit and ice comes served with both a spoon and a straw, and is a delicious way to cool down in the sunshine. The most zingy flavours are fresh local lemons or the Sicilian oranges which can also be enjoyed as a freshly-squeezed juice (a spremuta).
Sicily's most renowned wine is Marsala, a dessert wine, but there are several good reds and whites from different parts of the island, including Etna, where grapes are grown on the fertile slopes of the volcano. Restaurants invariably offer a house wine, white or red, which is generally cheap, local and of reasonable quality. A speciality of the eastern coast is vino alla mandorla, made with almonds.
As well as all the local culinary specialities, you'll also find all the normal Italian foods like pizza and pasta in every variety. Cheap and tasty hot snacks can be bought from a tavola calda, rosticceria or a bar, where they'll heat sandwiches for you. You can stock up on picnic food at supermarkets or general stores, where they may make up rolls for you. Desserts sometimes seem like an afterthought in Italian restaurants; you can usually find a more inspiring (and economical) choice at one of the islands many pastry shops (pasticcerie).
The cuisine of Sicily is uniquely different from any other Italian region, strongly influenced by it's many conquerors. From the Greeks, to the Romans, the Arabs, the Normans, the French and the Spanish, each conqueror and wayfarer have strongly left their influence on the foods of Sicily. Not only have these foreign civilizations converged on Sicily throughout it's history with conquest in mind, but they usually brought with them new ingredients, customs and food traditions that remained long after they had left. Blend these foreign techniques with simple peasant ingredients, including the fresh catch of the sea, and pick of the garden, and Sicilian cuisine was born.
The basic ingredients used most commonly in Sicilian cuisine are those similar to other southern Italian regions, including olive oil, pasta, seafood, fresh fruits and vegetables, including of course the beloved tomato. The philosophy of Sicilian cooking can be found throughout Italy, where one cooks with what has on hand, or what can be found fresh at the market or in the garden, rather than starting with a recipe first, and then looking for the needed ingredients.
The range of dishes found in the cuisine of Sicily is extensive, making it quite difficult to categorize it easily. A favorite Sicilian appetizer might be the traditional Caponata, which is a hearty, full bodied mixture of eggplant and other mediterranean ingredients that is delicious served with crusty bread. Another favorite eggplant appetizer is Eggplant Sandwiches, which consists of breaded slices of eggplant sandwiched a slice of cheese in between, which is then fried a golden brown. Arancini, or small oranges, consist of fried rice balls stuffed with meat and cheese, and are another Sicilian delicacy which are served as an antipasto.
A first course in Sicily may be a simple Pasta con le Sarde, or Pasta with Sardines, considered by many to be the national dish, or Pasta with Cauliflower. A vibrant, tasty tomato based pasta made with fried eggplant which is topped with ricotta salata cheese is also commonly served, called Pasta alla Norma.
Soups may include beans, lentils, rice, fresh vegetables and many combinations of these ingredients. A Rice Timbale, or a baked casserole of rice, meats, eggs and cheese is another commonly served first course. Couscous, introduced to the Sicilians by the Arabs, can also be found on many Sicilian tables.
Meat is not as popular as seafood, since Sicily is an island and has an abundance of fresh catch available. Veal however is enjoyed, such as in the recipe for Veal Marsala. Beef, when used, is commonly ground and used for meatballs or meatloaf, which are served after the pasta, as a second course. The seafood available is extensive, but swordfish and tuna are very popular. Grilled Swordfish with Orange Sauce, might be something you would find, combining both the popular fish with citrus fruit which is found across the island. Tuna With White Beans would be a recipe that typifies Sicilian cooking at it's best. Sardines are prevalent, and are used as an appetizer, first course, or even a main course. Baccala, or dried salted cod, is another seafood specialty found in Sicily.
There is a vast selection of fresh vegetables and fruit available in Sicily, producing a stupendous range of dishes put together for flavor, as well as for appearance and aroma. Sicilians have perfected the art of food presentation, where even the most simple dish becomes a work of art. Favorite vegetables consist of fennel, such as in the recipe for Baked Fennel, fava beans, which might be served as Fave con Pecorino, onions, cauliflower, and artichokes which can be found prepared in a myriad of ways.
Sicily exceeds all other Italian regions in it's choices of sweets, fruits and ice creams. Marzipan, or sweetened almond paste is shaped into many forms and artistically colored. Cannoli, are tubular crusts filled with sweetened ricotta. The filling is flavored with candies fruits and nuts or chocolate. A Cassata, is a rich cake filled with a similar filling to the cannoli. Granita and ice creams or every imaginable flavor can be found at shops on every corner.
Cucina Siciliana: Authentic Recipes and Culinary Secrets from Sicily
Other recipes
Sicilian granite recipes
Sicilian cannoli recipe
Sicilian arancini recipe
Sicilian Cassata recipe
Caponata
Polpette of Nunnata
Sardinians a beccafico
Falsomagro
Pasta with Sardinians
Pasta alla Norm
Diana helps Mommy! Kids Pretend Play with Cleaning Toys!
Good baby Diana helps Mommy. A little girl is cleaning the house, but her brother Roma again has polluted everything. Kids pretend play with Cleaning Toys! Funny video for children.
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Barstool Pizza Review - Da Nonna Rosa (Brooklyn)
Dave reviews Da Nonna Rosa Pizzeria in Brooklyn after he met the owners at a Charity event last week (what a guy) and a volcano of spit enters the review.
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Barstool Pizza Review - Florina Pizzeria (Boston)
El Pres is back in Boston for the World Series and his first stop is at Florina Pizzeria in Beacon Hill.
FAMOUS GRAVE TOUR - Hollywood Forever #2 (Rudolph Valentino, Estelle Getty, etc.)
Welcome to Hollywood Graveyard, where we set out to remember and celebrate the lives of those who lived to entertain us, by visiting their final resting places. Today we continue our tour of Hollywood Forever Cemetery, where we'll find such stars as Douglas Fairbanks, Estelle Getty, Rudolph Valentino, and many more.
Full list of stars visited today: Victor Young, Bugsy Siegel, Leon Schlesinger, Franz Waxman, Alan Crosland, Don LaFontaine, Mel Blanc, Estelle Getty, Paul Muni, Carl Alfalfa Switzer, David Horsley, Douglas Fairbanks, Douglas Fairbanks Jr, Toto, Mickey Rooney, Eleanor Powell, David White, Peter Finch, Rudolph Valentino, June Mathis, William Desmond Taylor, Harvey & Daeida Wilcox, Peter Lorre.
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Arthur's Book ZOMBIE JUNIOR:
Written & Produced by Arthur Dark
Music by Giuseppe Vasapolli
Mausoleum Piano by Arthur Dark
Disclaimer: Tour videos are independently produced, and are not endorsed by the respective cemetery. When visiting a cemetery, do so only during regular visiting hours, take only pictures, and leave only approved grave offerings. Be courteous and respectful of both the living and the dead. In deference to families of those profiled herein, any requests to remove profiles by family members of the individual will be honored.
Profile images courtesy of: DoctorMacro.com, Wikimedia Commons, public domain searches, and fair use promotional material.
Copyright: Short excerpts of media featured in this video are copyright of their respective owners, and are used herein for commentary and reference under fair use. Please contact us with any copyright concerns if you feel the use of your property does not meet the conditions of fair use, we'll be happy to comply. Famous Grave Tour videos copyright Hollywood Graveyard. Music copyright Giuseppe Vasapolli & Arthur Dark.
In the Kitchen with David | October 20, 2019
| Hey Foodies! Watch David Venable whip up some of his favorite, easy-to-prepare recipes, gourmet recipes and comfort food recipes! Whether you want to lengthen your list of homemade recipes or simply brush up on your cooking skills, be sure to tune in to QVC's In the Kitchen with David every week.
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Cafe La Boheme Slide Show
Lana Young, Event Planner shares her slide show of the newly remodeled and very sexy Cafe La Boheme
Full Minecraft Tour
Hey everyone, thanks for watching this video, if your wondering where the other little tour went, i deleted it cause this was a better one, subscribe for more!
Diana and Roma fun play at the theme park Peppa Pig
Diana and Roma met with Peppa Pig in person in the brand new and fantastic fully-themed Peppa Pig Land, and experience amazing and incredible adventures with her on many great fun rides!
Theme park of Peppa Pig Land is located in Italy
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Диана и Рома в парке Свинки Пеппы и Маши
How to Make Magnetic Slime - Science Experiment
Make magnetic slime using Elmers PVA glue. Add iron filings and watch what happens when you introduce a magnet. Simple and fun science experiment. The neodymium magnets are really strong. Make Fun Things:
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Travel Vlog Part 7: SAN MINIATO l BRONZE CAST OF DAVID l ACCADEMIA GALLERY l CATHEDRAL & BAPTISTERY
#sanminiato #bronzecastofdavid # accademiagallery #cathedral #baptistery #david #italy #florence #travelvlog #sweetescapewithdhympz #dhympz #cebuana #filipinoyoutuber #noytube #seryosongusapan #winnipegmanitoba
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Outro Music : Mangamatay Ratang Tanan by Meunnie
开启全新一周的正确方式,当然是和《朝闻天下》一起关心天下啦:
1️. 英国进入大选周,但约翰逊却面临着内忧外患的挑战啊
️2. 没谈妥!奥克兰公交罢工继续,近7万乘客恐受影
️3. 奥克兰警队挖出黑帮卧底?!搜索警队数据库2万次,最近被判刑了...
4️. 半夜只有两名警卫看守?新西兰最大监狱的值班制看着真让人后怕啊...
5️. 杨议员时间:大麻合法化草案、禁止外国政治捐款、枪支持有者隐私泄密,这些您最关心的话题,尽在杨议员时间
6️. 贺一诚:推进“一国两制”实践在澳门行稳致远
️7. 经济观察:11月中国外贸“成绩单”现三大亮点
Diana and The Best videos of 2018 by Kids Diana Show
The Best videos of 2018 by Kids Diana Show
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Диана и Лучшие видео 2018 года от канала Kids Diana Show