Comiendo Locro Argentino + Festejando el 25 de Mayo
Feliz 25 de Mayo! Para esta fiesta patria, decidimos cocinar un rico locro argentino - un plato que ustedes nos venían pidiendo hace mucho tiempo. En realidad, no hay una única manera de preparar el locro; este es un plato que uno puede encontrar en la gastronomia de muchos países en Latinoamérica y los ingredientes van cambiando. Nosotros cocinamos un locro argentino, como mi papá lo sabe hacer. En este video vamos a mostrarles como hacer un rico locro, vamos a compartir unos vinos, y escuchar unas historias de campo. Esperamos que lo disfruten!
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SAMUEL:
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Nuestro equipo de fotografía:
Panasonic GH5:
Canon G7X ii:
Rode Video Micro:
Joby Gorilla Pod:
SanDisk 16GB Extreme Pro:
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Música:
Milan - heaven of shopaholic
ilovetravelling.co bring to you Milano redirects here. For other uses, see Milano (disambiguation) and Milan (disambiguation).
Milan
Milano
Comune
From top, clockwise: Porta Nuova Business District, Milan Cathedral, San Siro Stadium, Parco Sempione with the Arch of Peace in the background, Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II
From top, clockwise: Porta Nuova Business District, Milan Cathedral, San Siro Stadium, Parco Sempione with the Arch of Peace in the background, Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II
Flag of Milan
Flag Coat of arms of Milan
Coat of arms
Nickname(s): The Moral Capital of Italy[1]
Milan is located in Italy
Milan
Milan
Location of Milan in Italy
Coordinates: 45°28′N 09°11′ECoordinates: 45°28′N 09°11′E
Country Italy
Region Flag of Lombardy.svg Lombardy
Province Flag of Milan Province.png Metro City of Milan
Settlement of the Golasecca culture As Mediolanum 222 BC - Roman Republic
Government
• Mayor Giuliano Pisapia (SEL)
Area
• Total 181.76 km2 (70.18 sq mi)
Elevation 120 m (390 ft)
Population (February 2015)[2]
• Total
City 1,338,264
Metro 3,198,031
Demonym Milanese
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
• Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Postal code 20100, 20121–20162
Dialing code 02
Patron saint Ambrose
Saint day 7 December
Website comune.milano.it
Milan (English /mɨˈlæn/ mə-LAN; Italian: Milano [miˈlaːno] ( listen); Milanese: Milan [miˈlaŋ]), the second-most populous city in Italy, serves as the capital of Lombardy. The city proper has a population of about 1.3 million, while its urban area (the 5th-largest in the EU) comprises an estimated 5,264,000 people.[3] The massive suburban sprawl that followed the post-war boom of the 1950s–1960s and the growth of a vast commuter belt suggest that socioeconomic linkages have expanded well beyond the boundaries of its administrative limits and its agglomeration, creating a polycentric metropolitan area of 7 to 10 million people,[4][5][6][7] stretching over the provinces of Milan, Bergamo, Como, Lecco, Lodi, Monza and Brianza, Pavia, Varese and Novara. The Milan metropolitan region is part of the so-called Blue Banana, the area of Europe with the highest population and industrial density. In terms of GDP, Milan has the third largest economy among EU cities and the largest among European non-capital cities.[8]
Milan was founded by the Insubres, a Celtic people. The Romans later conquered the city, which they knew as Mediolanum, and which eventually became the capital (286 - 402 CE) of the Western Roman Empire. During the Middle Ages, Milan flourished as a commercial and banking center.[9] In the course of the following centuries, it had been alternatively dominated by France, Habsburg Spain, and Austria, until 1859 when the city joined the rising Kingdom of Italy. During the early 1900s, Milan led the industrialization process of the young nation, being at the very center of the economic, social, and political debate. Badly affected by World War II, and suffering a harsh Nazi occupation, the city became the main centre of the Italian Resistance.[10][need quotation to verify] In post-war years the city enjoyed a prolonged economic boom, attracting large flows of workers from Southern Italy.[11] During recent decades Milan has seen a huge rise in the number of international immigrants, and as of 2011 more than one sixth of its population was foreign born.[2]