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<title>In the 17th century, the</title>
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<![CDATA[ <p>In the 17th century, the arrogant, cruel Hugo Baskerville (David Oxley) brutalizes a servant and prepares to turn the man's daughter over to his equally depraved companions, but she escapes. When he catches up with the girl in a ruined abbey, he kills her and then is attacked and killed himself by a huge hound that is never seen. The audience then learns that this story is being told in flashback to Sherlock Holmes (Peter Cushing) and Dr. Watson (Andre Morell) by Dr. Richard Mortimer (Francis DeWolff). He was the physician and friend to <a title="Authentic Derrick Morgan Jersey" href="http://www.titansmalls.com/authentic_derrick_morgan_tennessee_titans_jersey.html" target="_blank">Authentic Derrick Morgan Jersey</a> the late Sir Charles Baskerville, who recently died apparently of fright on the Devonshire moors near that same ruined abbey. Holmes is very skeptical, but agrees to meet Sir Henry Baskerville (Christopher Lee), who has just arrived in London to claim the estate. Sir Henry is cold and aloof but becomes convinced he's in danger when he's almost bitten by a tarantula. Holmes insists that he not go to Baskerville Hall alone, so Holmes sends Watson to Devonshire with Sir Henry.</p><p>In Devonshire, Sir Henry and Watson learn that an escaped convict, Selden, is at large on the moor. Watson meets local Bishop Frankland (Miles Malleson), and later on the moor, Baskerville's neighbors, Stapleton (Ewen Solon) and his daughter, Cecile (Marla Landi). Watson is almost trapped in one of the many bogs that dot the moors, but he escapes. Later, leaving Sir Henry stricken with a mild heart attack at the hall, Watson ventures again onto the moors, and to his surprise, discovers Sherlock Holmes there. Holmes has been hiding and watching for developments. They hear the howl of the hound, and are too late to prevent the huge beast from killing a man they take for Sir Henry. But back at Baskerville Hall, they find Sir Henry alive and well: the dead man was the convict Selden, dressed in some old clothes of Sir Henry's. At the ruined abbey, they find evidence that a strange rite has been performed.</p><p>When Holmes visits Frankland for information, he learns that someone has stolen the bishop's tarantula. (He's an amateur naturalist.) Meanwhile, near Baskerville Hall, Sir Henry meets Cecile, and they are attracted to one another. Holmes, Mortimer and Stapleton descend into a disused tin mine in search of evidence, but a cavein almost traps Holmes. That evening, when Sir Henry goes to meet Cecile on the moors, he learns that she actually hates him, and that the hound is now on his trail. Holmes and Watson arrive almost too late to save him, but Holmes kills the hound and reveals it's an ordinary, if large, dog in a mask. The villain is a descendant of Sir Hugo's from "the wrong side of the sheets"; he and his daughter were determined to use the legend of the Hound to kill those standing between them and Baskerville Hall.</p><p>No movie version of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's most famous novel follows its source very closely, and this colorful Hammer film is no exception. An extra killer is added, events are compressed, and even the novel's most famous line "they were the tracks of an enormous hound!" is omitted. The film also suffers at times from a budget too low for its ambitions and by extraneous elements aimed at making it more like a Hammer movie, such as the unexplained "rite." However, the movie has a brisk pace and particularly strong characters. Lee, initially icy and arrogant perhaps to remind us of Sir Hugo thaws into a likable person romantic enough to fall in love, atypically for Lee. Andre Morell is one of the most solid and realistic Watsons ever; there's nothing whatever of the harrumphing Nigel Bruce, no comedy elements to the role at all. He's straightforward, heroic in his own right. But the triumph of the film</p><p>was the casting of Peter Cushing as Sherlock Holmes. Cushing's Holmes is vivid, dynamic and arrogant; the actor does not even attempt to make Holmes likable, but instead plays the character exactly as Doyle wrote him. It's a performance of steely integrity and terrific skill, one of the greatest Holmes performances ever. Cushing later played Holmes in a television series, and became as identified with the role in England as Basil Rathbone was in the United States. Cushing returned once again to the role late in life, in the TV movie The Masks of Death, as well as writing about Holmes for several books. Bill Warren, RoviThe Hound of the Baskervilles is the preferred version of many Sherlock Holmes aficionados, particularly those who treasure the character as he appears in the works of Arthur Conan Doyle. Peter Cushing gives the detective the same aloof confidence that he has in the novels, subtly sneering as he cracks the case that lesser minds could not. The film has the stylish look common to Hammer Films' best efforts of the late 1950s. Director Terence Fisher has a good feel for what makes the material work, keeping the most cinematic aspects of the original story and creating new elements as required. The film's biggest liability is the unconvincing look of the hound itself, but even that does little to mar Hound's overall qualities. In spite of his friends' warnings, Baskerville pursues her throughout the moor and stabs her to death in the nearby abbey ruins. However, a huge doglike creature suddenly appears and kills Baskerville. From then on, the hound of hell has become known as the Hound of the Baskervilles and, any strange night a Baskerville is alone on the moor, the hound will come and kill him.</p><p>Several centuries later, the death of Sir Charles Baskerville is being reported by his best friend Dr. Richard Mortimer (Francis de Wolff) to Sherlock Holmes (Peter Cushing) and Dr. Watson (Andr Morell), who are willing to meet the new owner of Baskerville Hall, Sir Henry (Christopher Lee). After meeting Sir Henry, Holmes remembers that he is going to be away on the day Sir Henry arrives at Baskerville Hall, so he puts Watson in charge of watching over him. A tarantula attacks Sir Henry briefly; Holmes suspects foul play. Before he leaves, Holmes reminds Watson to not let Sir Henry go out onto the moor at dark.</p><p>On the way to Baskerville Hall, the coach driver Perkins (Sam Kydd) warns of a convict named Selden (Michael Mulcaster) has escaped from nearby Dartmoor Prison two days ago. Watson recalls Seldon's case about Seldon murdering a number of street women; plus due to some talk of him being insane, he was sentenced <a title="Derrick Morgan Jersey" href="http://www.titansmalls.com/authentic_derrick_morgan_tennessee_titans_jersey.html" target="_blank">Derrick Morgan Jersey</a> to life imprisonment instead of hanging.</p><p>While at Baskerville Hall, Watson meets a man named Stapleton (Ewen Solon) and his daughter Cecille (Marla Landi), who save him from sinking into the Grimpen Mire. Cecille seems to act strangely around both Sir Henry and Watson. At night, Watson sees a light shining out upon the moor, and starts to suspect something is going on. He and Sir Henry investigate the mysterious light. While out upon the moor, the Baskerville hound howls, causing Sir Henry to suffer from heart problems. As they leave, a strange man rushes past. The two pursue the man, but he gets away; they go back to Baskerville Hall.</p><p>Soon, Watson discovers that the strange man was actually Holmes in disguise; Holmes had arrived hours after Watson did. They find out that the convict, Selden is actually the butler Barrymore's brotherinlaw, was the one signaling with the light the other night, and that Barrymore and his wife were the ones returning the signal. Several events occur, such as Sir Henry being invited to dinner by Cecille and Stapleton, the hound mistakenly killing Selden because Selden is wearing Sir Henry's clothes, and finally Holmes' almost being trapped inside an old mine while investigating.</p><p>Cecille takes Sir Henry out to the moor one night. By now, Holmes has solved the case: The Stapletons are actually illegitimate descendants of Sir Hugo, and are next in line to get the Baskerville fortune and mansion if all of the Baskervilles are killed off. Cecile has taken Sir Henry out onto the moor so that he may be killed by the hound an actual, living dog bought by Stapleton, not a ghost as many were led to believe. Holmes and Watson rush out just on time to hear Cecile reveal her intentions to a horrified Sir Henry. Stapleton appears and attacks from behind, but in turn is shot in the side by Watson. The hound of the Baskervilles suddenly appears and attacks the group but desists when shot by Holmes; Stapleton is then mauled to death by the animal. Cecille flees while Holmes kills the beast, revealing it to be a normal dog with a mask on to make it look more terrifying. Cecile accidentally falls into the mire and slowly sinks to her death.</p><p>Cushing was an aficionado of Sherlock Holmes and brought <a title="Derrick Morgan Titans Jersey" href="http://www.titansmalls.com/authentic_derrick_morgan_tennessee_titans_jersey.html" target="_blank">Derrick Morgan Titans Jersey</a> his knowledge to the project.[1] It was Cushing's suggestion that the mantle feature Holmes' correspondence stabbed into it with a jackknife as per the original stories.[1]</p><p>Changes <a title="George Wilson Jersey" href="http://www.titansmalls.com/authentic_george_wilson_tennessee_titans_jersey.html" target="_blank">George Wilson Jersey</a> from the novel</p><p>There are several significant changes in plot details. Among them:</p><p>Sir Henry arrives from Toronto in the novel, while he arrives from Johannesburg <a title="George Wilson Titans Jersey" href="http://www.titansmalls.com/authentic_george_wilson_tennessee_titans_jersey.html" target="_blank">George Wilson Titans Jersey</a> in the film.</p><p>Sir Henry does not suffer a minor heart condition in the novel, as he does in the film.</p><p>There is nothing involving a ritual sacrifice, a tarantula or a mine shaft in the novel, nor is Holmes thought to have been accidentally trapped in a cavein.</p><p>Rather than being Stapleton's daughter, Miss Stapleton is Stapleton's wife in the novel and is playing the part of his sister. In the novel, Holmes, Watson and Lestrade eventually find her bound, gagged and badly bruised after being mistreated by Stapleton. She does not hate Sir Henry, as she does in the film, and is a far more sympathetic character in both the novel and in nearly all the other film versions of the story. (In the 1939 film version she is really Stapleton's sister, but he never mistreats her or forces her to deceive anybody, and she is completely unaware of his criminal actions until Holmes reveals the truth. Miss Stapleton falls in love with and presumably marries Sir Henry in the 1939 film.)</p><p>Miss Stapleton survives in the novel, whereas in the film she <a title="Authentic George Wilson Jersey" href="http://www.titansmalls.com/authentic_george_wilson_tennessee_titans_jersey.html" target="_blank">Authentic George Wilson Jersey</a> drowns in the Grimpen Mire.</p><p>In the novel, the hound is made to look "demonic" through the use of phosphorus paint, but in the film the same effect is accomplished with a mask. The hound was played by a brindled Great Dane.</p>
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<pubDate>Sat, 08 Aug 2015 10:45:13 +0900</pubDate>
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<title>The Christian Science</title>
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<![CDATA[ <p>The Christian Science Publishing Society publishes "The Christian Science Monitor", a weekly newspaper covering domestic and international news. In addition to the print version of the paper, the Monitor publishes daily content online and syndicates its news stories through The Christian Science Monitor News Service. The Christian Science Monitor was established in 1908 by Mary <a title="Bjoern Werner Jersey" href="http://www.coltsmall.com/authentic_bjoern_werner_indianapolis_colts_jersey.html" target="_blank">Bjoern Werner Jersey</a> Baker Eddy, founder of Christian Science. </p><p>Key <a title="Mike Adams Jersey" href="http://www.coltsmall.com/authentic_mike_adams_indianapolis_colts_jersey.html" target="_blank">Mike Adams Jersey</a> Dates: </p><p>1875: Mary Baker Eddy publishes the first edition of Science and Health.1897: The Christian Science Publishing Society is incorporated.1898: The Publishing Society assets are sold to Mrs. <a title="Mike Adams Colts ersey" href="http://www.coltsmall.com/authentic_mike_adams_indianapolis_colts_jersey.html" target="_blank">Mike Adams Colts ersey</a> Eddy, the corporation is dissolved, and a Deed of Trust is established.1908: The Christian Science Monitor begins publication.1961: Last year the Monitor is profitable.1984: Monitor Radio is established.1988: World Monitor begins publication. </p><p>The Christian Science Publishing Society is the nonprofit, independently run media arm of The First Church of Christ, Scientistbetter known as Christian Science, a Bostonbased religious sect that stresses spiritual healing. The Publishing Society is best known for its flagship venture, the Christian Science Monitor, a wellrespected international daily newspaper that since its inception in 1908 has won numerous journalism awards. In addition to a book publishing program, the Publishing Society is responsible for the Christian Science Journal, devoted to providing readers with a better understanding of Christian Science; Christian Science Quarterly, offering weekly Bible lessons for selfstudy; Christian Science Sentinel, applying the tenets of Christian Science to world events; and the Herald of Christian Science, published in 13 languages and intended to share the message of Christian Science to a world audience. (She took the last name Eddy in 1877 after marrying her third husband, Asa Gilbert Eddy.) As a child she suffered from an unknown nervous disorder that caused hysterical seizures and prevented her from attending school on a regular basis. Instead she was educated by her older brother, Albert, who taught her Hebrew, Greek, and Latin. She also took to writing poetry, and at a young age had her work appearing in periodicals. As a young adult she continued to endure tribulations with her father. At the age of 21 she married builder George Washington Glover and moved to Charleston, South Carolina, but shortly after she became pregnant her husband died from an illness, forcing her to return to New Hampshire, impoverished, to give birth to a son, who she would eventually have to give up. Continuing to suffer from nervous disorders and bouts of depression, which led to an abiding interest in methods of healing, she married in 1853 a homeopath and dentist named Dr. Daniel Patterson. Nine years later, at the outbreak of the Civil War, she was once again visited by misfortune. Patterson, visiting the Bull Run battlefield, was captured by Confederate troops and sent to a prison camp. Once again, Mrs. Eddy was destitute and forced to return home to live with her family as an invalid. Now 40 years of age, she reached a turning point. She turned to a Portland, Maine, mental healer, Dr. Phineas Parkhurst Quimby, who within three weeks cured her, essentially relying on the power of suggestion. Raised in a Congregational Church in New Hampshire, she viewed through a religious prism Quimby's system, which assumed that disease had a mental rather than physical cause. Her own beliefs were then crystallized in 1866, when after bedridden from a fall and three days of intensely reading the Bible, she reported experiencing a revelation. Eddy had a group of followers and a number of practitioners who performed healing. Her beliefs were codified with the 1875 publication of Science and Health (after the original title, The Science of Life, was found to be already in use), which was financially backed by friends George Barry and Elizabeth Newhall. For the rest of her life Mrs. Eddy would continually revise and expand the book, as it took its place alongside the Bible as an essential study aide for The First Church of Christ, Scientist, which she (as head) and her followers founded in Boston in 1879. The Church's present form dates to 1892 when it was reorganized. By the time of her death in 1910, combined editions of Science and Health, which targeted an educated middleclass audience, sold approximately 400,000 copies. It also made Mrs. Eddy's influence became involved in magazines. Its first periodical was the Journal of Christian Science, which made its debut in April 1883 and was at first mostly written and edited by Mrs. Eddy. In 1885 the publication assumed its present name, the Christian Science Journal. Unlike Science and <a title="Authentic Bjoern Werner Jersey" href="http://www.coltsmall.com/authentic_bjoern_werner_indianapolis_colts_jersey.html" target="_blank">Authentic Bjoern Werner Jersey</a> Health, the Journal was meant to appeal to lowerincome, less educated readers, presenting Christian Science tenets in digestible form through testimonials, anecdotes, and letters to and from the editor. In 1890 Mrs. Eddy established another monthly magazine, Christian Science Bible Lessons, to provide weekly Bible lessons for church services and individual study. It was subsequently renamed Christian Science Quarterly and publication was cut back to a quarterly basis. It was also in 1890 that the Church printed a fourpage leaflet of hymns, published by an entity called the Christian Science Publishing Society. In 1897 the Publishing Society was incorporated and obtained a state charter. In January 1898 the corporation sold all of its assets to Mrs. Eddy, the corporation was dissolved, and she subsequently set up the current Publishing Society as a Deed of Trust. The deed also provided independence for the three trustees of the Society, an arrangement that would become a matter of controversy in the years following Mrs. Eddy's death. Later in 1898 the Christian Science Weekly (soon renamed the Christian Science Sentinel) was founded. Eddy, who despite having retired from active involvement in the running of the Church nearly 20 years earlier still held considerable sway in the Church. She had entertained thoughts of starting a newspaper for some 25 years, disturbed by the tawdry yellow journalism practiced at the time. In 1906, at the age of 86, she and the rapidly emerging Christian Science church became the victim of that excess when Joseph Pulitzer's New York World launched a scathing crusade against her and McClure's Magazine published a virulent profile of Mrs. Eddy. Suggesting that the wealthy elderly woman was either senile and being used by others, or was simply dead and replaced by an impostor, the World was not merely satisfied with making lurid claims. It managed to convince her son to sue for control of her estate, which led to a sensational trial in 1907. Although an interview with courtappointed officials shortcircuited the suit, Mrs. Eddy was clearly upset by her treatment in the press. Another important factor in her decision to launch a newspaper was a letter she received from John L. Wright in March 1908. A journalist as well as Christian Scientist, he made the case that there was a deep need for a truly independent newspaper that would be "fair, frank and honest with the people on all subjects and under whatever pressure." On July 28, 1908 she sent a letter to the directors of the Church, followed by an August 8 note to the trustees of the Publishing Society, stating: "It is my request that you start a daily newspaper at once, and call it the Christian Science Monitor. Let there be no delay. The Cause demands that it be issued now." Despite the misgivings of the directors and trustees, Mrs. Eddy's request was fulfilled in an astonishingly short period of time. On November 25, 1908 the first issue of the Monitor was published, reflecting considerable direct input from Mrs. Eddy herself. She was consulted about the type to be used and instructed that a better quality paper be used. She also chose the publication's motto (and location of it): "First the blade, then the ear, then the full grain in the ear." She also defeated attempts to find a more commercial name for the newspaper. On the editorial page of the first issue she offered an insight into the naming of all the Publishing Society's major periodicals: "The first was The Christian Science Journal, designed to put on record the divine Science of Truth; the second I entitled Sentinel, intended to hold guard over Truth, Life and Love; the third, Der Herold der Christian Science, to proclaim the universal activity and availability of Truth; the next I named Monitor, to spread undivided the Science that operates unspent. Eddy died in 1910 and without her presence the trustees of the Publishing Society and the directors of the Mother Church came into conflict. What became known as the Great Litigation lasted from 1917 to 1921, initiated after the trustees sued to stop the directors from interfering with their running of the Publishing Society. At issue legally was whether Mrs. Most Christian Scientists supported the directors, firmly believing the Publishing Society should unquestionably serve the needs of the Church, but in the end the courts agreed with the trustee's position that Mrs. Eddy and the periodicals she was so instrumental in founding. The Herald, which began publishing a French edition in 1918, added other languages over the years, including the Scandinavian languages in 1930, Dutch in 1931, Spanish in 1946, Japanese and Indonesian in 1962, and Greek in 1964. Christian Science Quarterly also expanded to more than a dozen languages over the years. The Sentinel changed formats in the 1940s, eschewing its original broadsheet presentation for a digestsize that became extremely popular. The Monitor, in the meantime, became the Publishing Society's most visible face to the world. It grew into an awardwinning newspaper, ironically receiving a number of Pulitzer Prizes, endowed by Mrs. Eddy's former tormentor, Joseph Pulitzer. Rather than rely heavily on wire services for international coverage, the Monitor maintained correspondents around the world as well as throughout the United States. From a financial point of view the Monitor peaked in the 1950s, after which the growth of television, rising production costs, and the expense of maintaining an international operation made it impossible for the newspaper to turn a profit. Starting in 1962 it began operating at a loss, subsidized by the Publishing Society. On the radio side, the Publishing Society established Monitor Radio in 1984, producing a onehour weekend program distributed by National Public Radio. In October 1985 a daily show was introduced, with an early edition added in July 1989. A shortwave radio program was initiated in March 1987 with facilities located in Maine, South Carolina, and Saipan. From 1983 to 1985 the Publishing Society produced pilots for what became a 30minute television news program relying on the Monitor's newsgathering network. The show finally premiered in September 1988. The Publishing Society purchased a Boston television station (WQTV, channel 68) in 1986, with the original intent of operating it on a commercial basis. The strategy resulted in a larger audience share than anticipated and led to the investment of $14 million in syndicated programming. Management then decided to change course and converted WQTV into a noncommercial, public service station, essentially making it a laboratory for an even grander vision: the Monitor Channel, a cable television service. Not only was most of the syndicated programming shelved at the cost of $10 million, the Publishing Society had to buy out the contract of a highpriced consultant who had been hired to advise the station on commercial operations. A nightly cable news program, "World Monitor," also debuted in September of that year. As a result of its rapid accumulation of media operations, the Publishing Society and the Church now faced a severe financial crunch. Although the Monitor remained the flagship product, on whose brand all the other ventures were dependent, it was the newspaper that was forced to hike its subscription price and accept cuts, while at the same time money was poured into television. According to Hoagland, the Publishing Society was committed to publishing the Monitor at a deficit, "But television will have to prove itself." Staff reductions as well as scaling back the size of the Monitor did not sit well with some of the newspaper's top editors, who in December 1988 resigned in protest. Furthermore, the Publishing Society elevated its television aspirations, deciding to launch a 24hour, satellitebased cable programming network. In essence the directors of the Church and the trustees of the Publishing Society were gambling that television would turn profitable before they were pressured to back off. Because of Christian Scientists' beliefs, the service refused to accept pharmaceutical or alcoholrelated commercials, which handicapped its chances from the outset. By March 1992, however, the situation reached a tipping point, following press reports that the Church had borrowed $41.5 million from an employee pension fund and another $5 million from its trustee endowment in order to keep afloat its television operations, which now were consuming $1 million a week and already had cost the Church and Publishing Society a total of $250 million. Despite protestations from officials that the Monitor Channel remained on track to become profitable by 1996, prominent Church members brought enough pressure to bear that several leaders were forced to resign, the syndicated news was cancelled, and the cable service put up for sale. The Monitor and World Monitor were not affected, but WQTV was sold in 1993, while on the radio side the weekend program came to an end in June 1996 and, later, the daily shows were terminated as well. It was not until July 1998 that the Church was able to repay the pension funds. The Monitor's circulation, which fell to a low of 75,000 in 1997 (a loss of 100,000 since 1988), rebounded to 90,000 in 1998. To help the newspaper stage a comeback, the Publishing Society renovated its newsroom and invested $500,000 in a national ad campaign. mail. The Sentinel also was redesigned in 1998. Although matters clearly were improving for the Monitor and other ventures of the Publishing Society, the world of media was changing rapidly, making it all but impossible that the organization could enjoy the kind of impact it once held. </p>
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<pubDate>Sat, 08 Aug 2015 10:42:36 +0900</pubDate>
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<title>Proteins extracted from</title>
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<![CDATA[ <p>Proteins extracted from certain vegetables using a chemical process. Depending on the manufacturing method, the extracted proteins are more or less gelatinous, slimy and soluble.PreparingFor homemade proteins without additives: use frozen tofu; defrost in a colander and extract the water. Mash the drained tofu with a fork or using a mortar and pestle and season with stock, tomato juice, tamari sauce, fresh herbs, etc. Wet hands before shaping to stop the rehydrated proteins from sticking.Serving IdeasTextured vegetable proteins come in various forms (granules, powder, cubes, slices); they are sold plain or flavored (meat, vegetable, nut, fish, seafood, etc.).Nutritional InformationThe range of commercial cooking uses is so wide that it is difficult to know the nutritional value unless this is indicated on the label. It is extruded into various shapes (chunks, flakes, nuggets, grains, and strips) and sizes, exiting the nozzle while still hot and expanding as it does so.[3] The defatted thermoplastic proteins are heated to 150200C, which denatures them into a fibrous, insoluble, porous network that can soak up as much as three times its weight in liquids. As the pressurized molten protein mixture exits the extruder, the sudden drop in pressure causes rapid expansion into a puffy solid that is then dried. As much as 50% protein when dry, TVP can be rehydrated at a 2:1 ratio, which drops the <a title="Stephen Curry Jersey" href="http://www.warriorsmall.com/stephen_curry_warriors_jersey.html" target="_blank">Stephen Curry Jersey</a> percentage of protein to an approximation of ground meat at 16%. TVP is primarily used as a meat substitute due to its very low cost at less than a third the price of ground beef, and when cooked together will help retain more weight from the meat by absorbing juices normally lost.[2]Many TVP producers use hexane to separate soy fat from soy protein, and trace amounts of the solvent are left after manufacturing. But the few rodent studies that have been done suggest it would be almost impossible to get enough hexane from TVP to cause harm.[4]TVP can be made from soy flour or concentrate, containing 50% and 70% soy protein, respectively; they have a mild beany flavor. Both require rehydration before use, sometimes with flavoring added in the same step. TVP is extruded, causing a change in the structure of the soy protein which results in a fibrous, spongy matrix, similar in texture to meat. In its dehydrated form, TVP has a shelf life of longer than a year, but will spoil within several days after being hydrated.Soy protein TVP can also be used as a low cost/high nutrition extender in comminuted meat and poultry products, and in tuna salads.[5][6] Food service, retail and institutional (primarily school lunch and correctional) facilities regularly use such "extended" products. Extension may result in diminished flavor, but fat and cholesterol are reduced.Textured vegetable protein can be found in natural food stores and larger supermarkets, usually in the bulk section. TVP is also very lightweight and is often used in backpacking recipes. Because of its relatively low cost, high protein content, and long shelf life, TVP is often used in prisons and schools, as well as for disaster preparedness. </p>
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<pubDate>Sat, 08 Aug 2015 10:38:34 +0900</pubDate>
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