New Hope For Development Of H1N1 Vaccine

NEW HOPE FOR DEVELOPMENT OF H1N1 VACCINE

AZG DAILY
11-11-2009

Swine flue

According to CNN, researchers at a South Korean university say they
have discovered a candidate strain for an H1N1 vaccine, though it has
not yet been approved by health authorities in the United States or
the World Health Organization.

The strain is a genetically modified version of a live virus, and
could lead to a vaccine against H1N1 — commonly known as swine flu,
said Seo Sang-heui, a professor at Chungnam National University’s
College of Veterinary Medicine in South Korea.

"We created a candidate strain," Seo told CNN on Wednesday. The
strain would still have to undergo additional testing and tweaking,
but Seo believes it could be the right one to develop a vaccine.

He said the university is sending eight vials of the strain to the
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Seo added that the CDC
had sent the university an original strain of the virus for testing.

CDC spokesman Dave Daigle told CNN said the agency has sent
H1N1 strains to roughly 10 labs around the world, but he had no
information on South Korea’s claims. He said the CDC would check out
the university’s research.

Researchers around the world are racing to come up with a vaccine
for the widespread virus, but the CDC and the WHO have said it could
take up to six months between the time a virus appears to the time
the vaccine is available to the public.

Earlier this month, WHO officials said candidate vaccine strains would
undergo quality-control measures and be evaluated in clinical trials.

If it meets certain criteria, a candidate vaccine would still have
to be approved by the federal Food and Drug Administration before being

Border Posts To Be Increased In Turkey

BORDER POSTS TO BE INCREASED IN TURKEY

AZG DAILY
11-11-2009

Turkey

According to news.am, Turkish Defense Minister Vecdi Gonul stated that
the number of frontier posts on the Turkish border, including the one
with Armenia in the frames of struggle against PKK (Kurdistan Workers’
Party) will be increased, Turkish CNNTurk reports.

According to Gonul, PKK’s efforts weakened, whereas Turkish security
services are resolute in their struggle against terrorism. The Defense
Minister underlined that 18 border outposts will be constructed on
Syrian border, 17 – on Iranian and Iraqi and 11 – on the Armenian
one to be completed by 2010.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Maestro Michel Legrand Concert At Boston Symphony Hall

MAESTRO MICHEL LEGRAND CONCERT AT BOSTON SYMPHONY HALL

AZG DAILY
11-11-2009

Culture

Legendary French-Armenian composer, virtuoso pianist and multiple
Oscar winner Michel Legrand will be playing a rare Boston engagement
at Symphony Hall in Boston (300 Massachusetts Avenue, Boston) on
Wednesday, November 18, at 8:00 pm. He will be joined by Quebec
recording star MARIO PELCHAT and special guest Dionne Warwick. They
will be accompanied by a quartet of brilliant musicians including
Catherine Michel (harp), a soloist with Opera de Paris. The concert
is a mixture of classical movie tunes by Maestro Legrand, as well as
jazz and Hollywood hits, built around the romance and nostalgia of
the French ‘chanson’.

Tickets available at are $45.00 – $75.00 For more
information visit:

www.bso.org
www.maestrartist.com.

CCAF on blatant violations of fair trial principles at of Chakhalyan

CCAF France
Conseil de Coordination des Organisations Arméniennes de France
34, avenue de Champs Elysées – 75008 Paris (France)
<;
e-mail: <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]
Tél. : 01 43 59 65 19

The Statement of the Coordination Council of Armenian Organisations of
France (CCAF) on blatant violations of principles of the fair trial of
Vahagn Chakhalyan in Georgia

Paris,
October 13, 2009

On September 5, 2009 the Coordination Council of Armenian
Organisations of France mandated Mr Philippe Kalfayan (lawyer, expert
by the Legal Affairs and Human Rights Directorate of the Council of
Europe, and secretary general of the FIDH from 2001 to 2007) to
observe the ongoing trial of Vahagn Chakhalyan in the Court of Appeals
of Tbilisi (Georgia).

The president of the political movement `Democratic Alliance `United
Javakhk’, Vahagn Chakhalyan, is one of the leaders of the Armenian
minority residing in Samtskhe-Javakheti province in Georgia. He was
arrested in his residence on July 21, 2008, and then jailed and put on
trial for alleged acquisition and possession of firearms, a charge
which he pleaded not-guilty. On April 7, 2009, he was sentenced by the
Akhalskha District Court to 10 years of imprisonment for `illegal
possession of firearms’, but also for `participation in mass actions
disturbing the law and public order’ and `hooliganism’.

>From a strictly legal point of view, both the observations, made
during the Court hearings on September 18, and the study of the
judicial documents reveal the violations of the principles of a fair
trial by the Georgian authorities, especially Vahagn Chakhalyan’s
rights to defense:

– The accumulation of the criminal charges on the mass protest actions
of 2005 and 2006 surprisingly took place during the trial in the Court
of First Instance on December 3, 2008, due to a new law adopted in the
interval. That law authorizes the accumulation of charges and
application of relevant punishment and penalties, as long as the
criminal offences in question have not expired; the date of the
proceedings of the offences being taken as a reference. The
application of this new law in Chakhalyan’s case, even if it seems
that the procedures have been met, clearly demonstrates the will of
the Georgian authorities to convict Chakhalyan of a serious crime and
keep him in jail for a longer term, because for the offence of
possession of weapon he could be sentenced to only one year
imprisonment.

– Until September 18, 2009, the date when the hearings of the Court of
Appeals were resumed, no examination of the weapons, hypothetically
belonging to Chakhalyan, was carried out. This time the Court’s next
hearing was postponed to October 23, in anticipation of the
examination results.

– The Prosecutor refused the presence of independent experts and
defense lawyers to observe examination of the weapons; in this respect
a lawsuit was filed by Chakhalyan’s lawyers to dispute this decision.

– The translation of the Court debates into Armenian has been
incomplete and of a very bad quality. As a result, both the accused
and his Armenian lawyer cannot follow the debates, thus, the equity of
the debates is grossly and openly ridiculed. This implies a violation
of Article 6 (paragraph 3e) of the European Convention of the Human
rights.

– The refusal of the Court of First Instance to allow the accused or
his lawyers to summon and interrogate some of the witnesses of
prosecution, is an obvious violation of Article 6 (paragraph 3d) of
the European Convention of the Human rights; It is also a violation of
Article 42 (paragraph 6) of the Georgian Constitution. The Court of
Appeal did not reconsider this refusal and justified its rejection of
the motions lodged by the Armenian lawyers by claiming that no motion
had been filed in the Court of First
Instance;

– The refusal of the Georgian Ministry of Justice, that drafted and
made the Georgian Parliament ratify urgently a legislative amendment
prohibiting access of foreign lawyers to the Georgian courts, and the
subsequent refusal to register Chakhalyan’s French lawyer, is another
blatant violation of Article 6 (paragraph 3c) of the European
Convention of Human rights, as well as Article 42 of Georgian
Constitution. Lawsuit to the Constitutional Court of Georgia will be
lodged without delay by one of Chakhalyan’s lawyers.

The Coordination Council of Armenian Organisations of France questions
the motives that lay behind the willingness of the Georgian
authorities to violate in such a blatant and targeted manner the
rights of Vahagn Chakhalyan to a fair trial and to infringe the
international engagements of the Republic of Georgia.

Reports of Human Rights NGOs, as well as institutional organizations
such as ABA (American Bar Association) stress an overall deficiency of
the judicial system in Georgia and the unlimited influence of the
Prosecution, in other words, of the dominance of the Executive
power. However, this general situation could not exonerate from the
judicial relentlessness of the Georgian authorities against Vahagn
Chakhalyan.

The Coordination Council of Armenian Organisations of France
legitimately raises the question of the correlation between the
demands of Vahagn Chakhalyan concerning the linguistic, religious,
socio-cultural and educational rights of the Armenian minority of
Samtskhe-Javakheti of Georgia and his judicial pursuit: is there an
intention to fully neutralize Chakhalyan, through conviction of the
latter, eliminating any spirit of demand for the respect of the rights
of the Armenian population of Samtskhe-Javakheti?

Consequently, Coordination Council of Armenian organisations of France
call upon the Georgian authorities:

– To put an end to this unfair lawsuit, and to restore all the rights
of Vahagn Chakhalyan;

– To abolish anti-constitutional law forbidding foreign lawyers to
defend their clients in the Georgian courts;

– To respect the legal obligations inherent to international
engagements of the Republic of Georgia, in particular the
International Pact on the Civil and Political Rights and the European
Convention of Human rights, two instruments to which the Georgian
State is a party, and whose normative primacy is recognized by article
6 of the Georgian Constitution;

– To give a special consideration and respect to all the provisions of
Article 6 of the European Convention of Human rights, that provides
that any person is entitled to a fair and public hearing of his case
by an independent and impartial tribunal establishing equality between
the prosecution and defense.

http://www.ccaf.info/&gt
www.ccaf.info

Former NKR Pres Arkadi Ghougassian Visits TCA Arshag Dickranian

TCA Arshag Dickranian Armenian School
1200 N. Cahuenga Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90038

Tel: 323-461-4377
Fax: 323-323-461-4247
Contact: [email protected]

Former NKR President Arkadi Ghougassian Visits
TCA Arshag Dickranian School

Los Angeles, November 10, 2009 – TCA Arshag Dickranian School was honored
with a visit from former NKR president Mr. Arkadi Ghougassian, accompanied
by The Armenia Fund Chairman Ara Aghishian, Esq. and the Fund’ Executive
Director Mr. Sarkis Kotanjian on Friday, November 6th, 2009. The guests
arrived at the school at 2:30 p.m. where they were warmly greeted by the
chairman of the School Board of Trustees Mr. George Mandossian, vice
chairman Mr. Parsegh Kartalian, board member Mr. Yegia Taglyan, principal
Vartkes Kourouyan and members of the Student Council. This was Mr.
Ghougassian’s second visit to Arshag Dickranian School, as his first was
in September 2002.

Mr. Ghougassian was first escorted to the principal’s office for a
briefing. There he was presented with a back copy of the school’s
2002-2003 yearbook bearing the pictures of his first visit. The guests
were then led to the Walter and Laurel Karabian Hall where 6th to 11th
grade students, teachers and PTO members had gathered to greet them and
conduct a short program.

Welcoming remarks were made by vice chair Parsegh Kartalian, student
council president Alex Garibyan and teacher Ms. Alvard Uzunyan. After the
greeting remarks the students watched a video projection about Karabakh
and a short documentary about the hardships of a family living in Shoushi.

Mr. Ghougassian then got to the podium following the introductory remarks
by Mr. Ara Aghishian. `Such gatherings remind us of our Armenian identity
and heritage,’ said the honored guest. `We are all obligated to serve our
country and to contribute to its development.’ Mr. Ghougassian also
reminded students of the importance of supporting Shoushi and encouraged
them to participate in the upcoming Thanksgiving Telethon on November
26th, 2009.

After the program, the guests proceeded to the school’s new basketball
court where a rousing free throw match took place between Mr. Ghougassian
and the school team captain Alex Garibyan amid the cheers and applause of
the onlookers.

At the end and prior to their departure, the guests were invited to join
the school lounge for a treat of assorted cookies and refreshments served
by the PTO.

Located at 1200 North Cahuenga Blvd., Los Angeles, the TCA Arshag
Dickranian Armenian School is a federally tax exempt, Pre-K to 12th grade
private educational institution. For more information visit

www.dickranianschool.org.

Season review: Armenia

Season review: ArmeniaTuesday 10 November 2009
uefa.com

FC Pyunik’s dominance appears to know no bounds after they added the
Armenian Cup to their ninth successive Bardzraguyn khumb title, while
FC Ulis Yerevan raised eyebrows with a third-placed finish.
Champions: FC Pyunik
Pyunik remain top of the pile after landing their 12th title in 18
years. Pushed hard by eventual runners-up FC Mika for much of the
campaign, they finally asserted themselves by clinching the league on
the penultimate day before seeing off their nearest challengers 4-0 in
the final round of matches.
Cup final: FC Pyunik 1-0 FC Banants
The 20-year-old Genrikh Mkhitaryan became an instant hero with an
added-time winner that secured Pyunik’s double triumph with their
fourth Armenian Cup victory.
Player of the Year: Hrayr Mkoyan (FC Ulis Yerevan)
The central defender was an inspired leader in helping his side to a
third-place finish. Ulis were breached 25 times in the 28-game season
– a defensive record second only to Pyunik – with Mkoyan a towering
figure throughout. The 23-year-old made his international debut
against Belgium in September and already looks to be a mainstay of the
national team.
One to watch: David Manoyan (FC Pyunik)
The Pyunik youngster made his bow in May 2008 at just 17 but this
season came to age, making 23 league appearances and contributing two
goals. However, it is his vision and creative flair which has stood out.
Surprise package: FC Ararat Yerevan
Second in 2008, they were once again among the favourites this
year. However, after collecting a meagre 14 points, they now find
themselves in the second tier.
Leading scorer: Arthur Kocharyan, FC Ulis Yerevan (15)
Number: 9
Pyunik won the league for a ninth successive year.
Quote
"It is very important to have the winning psychology in my team. The
opponents played against my young footballers with double energy and
I’m happy that my team progressed and showed itself as a united group
of players."
Pyunik coach Vardan Minasyan

Krekorian to Join Environment California in Releasing Important Data

Office of Assemblyman Paul Krekorian
Jeremy Oberstein | Press Secretary
300 E. Magnolia Blvd., Suite 504
Burbank, CA 91502-1145
Tel: 818-558-3043
Cell: 323-632-2492

Event Date: Thursday, Nov. 12 at 10 a.m.
Contact: Jeremy Oberstein (818) 558-3043

Assistant Majority Leader Paul Krekorian to
Join Environment California
Group will reveal never before released data on air quality

BURBANK – Assemblymember Paul Krekorian (D-Valley Glen) will join
Environment California <; Thursday
morning as the environmental group will release a new analysis of
government data on clean air trends. The report will detail carbon
dioxide levels from fossil fuel consumption in California and around the
country from 1990 to 2007 – the first time the 2006 and 2007 data levels
for California have been released. The report comes as Congress moves to
consider a major energy and global warming bill, as EPA considers the
first-ever federal rules to cut global warming pollution from tailpipes
and smokestacks and as California continues to advance the state’s
global warming pollution regulations.

Krekorian is the author of AB 64, legislation the governor vetoed that
would have delivered some of California’s toughest clean air regulations
in decades. He also wrote legislation in 2007 that imposed strict
restrictions on plastic pollution in ocean run-off.

Who: Assemblymember Paul Krekorian
Assemblymember Kevin de Leon
State Sen. Fran Pavley =09
Dr. Glen MacDonald, Director, UCLA Institute of the Environment
Mike Kantor, Federal Field Organizer, Environment California

Where: UCLA Institute of the Environment, Los Angeles, CA 90025
La Kretz Hall, Suite 300
Conference Room
Map and directions here
< ?parentid=3D974>

When: Thursday, November 12 at 10 a.m.

Assemblymember Paul Krekorian represents the cities of Burbank and
Glendale, and the Los Angeles communities of Atwater Village, Los Feliz,
North Hollywood, Silver Lake, Toluca Lake, Valley Glen, Valley Village
and Van Nuys. His website is Follow him
on Twitter <; (@PaulKrekorian) and
Facebook <; .

###

http://www.environmentcalifornia.org/&gt
http://www.ioe.ucla.edu/about/article.asp
http://twitter.com/PaulKrekorian&gt
http://www.facebook.com/paulkrekorian&gt
www.assembly.ca.gov/krekorian.

Demystifying the Quince

Id=3D120288799

Demystifying The Quince

by Laura McCandlish
Quinces
Enlarge Laura McCandlish for NPR

Quinces
Laura McCandlish for NPR

Get recipes for Quince Paste, Vegetarian Quince And Parsnip Medley,
Quince Pip Tea For A Sore Throat, and Quince Tarte Tatin.

November 10, 2009

Until recently, I had never seen a fresh quince. I knew quince paste,
or membrillo, from Spanish cheese plates. I knew that Korean friends
boiled down quince juice into a tea.

However, since moving to Oregon I’ve found quinces at the local
farmers market and even growing on trees in my neighborhood. In fact,
it turns out that the most diverse quince grove in North America, if
not the world, thrives at a U.S. Department of Agriculture gene bank
just down the road.

Still, close proximity to quinces doesn’t necessarily give you the
nerve to try the rock-hard, acerbic fruit. But last spring, I had my
quince revelation. Just one bite of the tangy, poached morsel on a
charcuterie plate had me counting the days until this fall’s season.

In late September, I huddled beside our market director, staking my
claim on her orchard’s first-to-ripen crop. She even spikes her apple
cider with quince.

I began more humbly, slipping the peeled fruit into a pie. With their
beguiling fragrance and subtle flavor, quinces naturally partner with
their more universally beloved pome sisters, apple and pear.

Revered since antiquity, quinces are still treasured all over the
globe. With their high pectin content, quinces lend themselves to
jellies, pastes and preserves. … Now, underground enthusiasts are
reviving the nostalgic fruit, hoping it can resurge.

A quince is a fruit of contradictions. It’s generally too astringent
to eat raw, yet it smells so guava-sweet. Its white, dry, hard flesh
blushes and softens, without turning mushy, when cooked. It has tough,
waxy skin that bruises more easily than you’d think.

Revered since antiquity, quinces are still treasured all over the
globe. With their high pectin content, quinces lend themselves to
jellies, pastes and preserves. The word marmalade, after all, derives
from the Portuguese name for quince.

In the United States, quinces were common in the garden and in the
kitchen from colonial days through the 19th century, until the advent
of commercial gelatin and pectin. Americans instead turned to sweeter,
eat-out-of-hand fruits. About The Author

Laura McCandlish is an Oregon-based freelance writer. She contributes
to The Oregonian’s FOODday section and hosts a monthly food show on
Portland radio station KBOO. She blogs at baltimoregon.com.

Now, underground enthusiasts are reviving the nostalgic fruit, hoping
quince can resurge just like once-forgotten rhubarb. A motley tribe
recently gathered here in Corvallis for an "unappreciated fruits"
event. Home orchardists and horticulturalists, members of Slow Food
USA’s endangered foods board, and Lebanese and Iranian natives longing
for quince, their grandmother’s stewing staple, rounded out the crowd.

One key question divided the devotees: Can a quince be eaten raw? Yes,
evidently – depending on the variety. That weekend, we walked among
the hundred or so clones at the USDA orchard, sampling some quite
palatable ones from their native Caucasus region. They tasted juicy
and crisp, with notes of raspberry and star fruit. No chalkiness. On
hand was famed fruit sleuth and food writer David Karp, who advocates
biting right into the sometimes elusive, sweeter-fleshed quince. He
hopes an apple-like variety brought here from Peru will soon be tested
and rolled out for commercial cultivation.

Many fans agree with cookbook author Barbara Ghazarian that the quince
is "the quintessential slow food," whose magic is only revealed
through cooking. She just published a culinary tome devoted to the
forbidden fruit (botanists believe the quince, not an apple, was Eve’s
true Garden of Eden temptation). Drawing on the recipes of her
Armenian ancestors, Ghazarian includes savory preparations, such as
lamb-stuffed quince dolmas and a sweet-tart quince and parsnip stew.

She, like many chefs, recommends poaching quinces over a low flame for
several hours. Try simmering slices of them in a sweetened white wine
syrup (think Riesling), with a touch of vanilla bean and citrus
zest. Reusing the poaching liquid for subsequent batches only
intensifies the sections’ ruby color. Cooking the quince coaxes out
the anticarcinogen anthocyanins, those purple pigments also found in
berries. These jewels then caramelize when baked into a tart.

By now you’re thinking, great, you live in the Mediterranean-like
Willamette Valley, where quinces flourish. Where can I buy them? Try
upscale grocers and ethnic markets, which ship them in from
California. The San Joaquin Valley grows most of the country’s
quinces, primarily the most common Pineapple variety, on a scant
couple of hundred acres. That’s all we demand.

But first, search for ones from your local apple or pear
vendor. They’re readily available at farmers markets in the
East. Unfortunately, quinces fall prey to fire blight in humid parts
of the country. More ubiquitous are flowering quince shrubs, a
different genus from the fruit-bearing Cydonia oblonga. They do,
however, produce small pomes that can be substituted in some recipes.

With a season that runs through December, quinces make an aromatic
holiday centerpiece. How can you tell they’re ripe? Rubbing off their
fuzz should reveal a bright, yellow peel. Better yet, just follow your
nose. A quince’s perfume should fill a room. Quince Paste

This recipe comes from canning maven Linda Ziedrich, author of The Joy
of Jams, Jellies and Other Sweet Preserves (Harvard Common Press
2009). The fruit leather-like texture and taste is similar to Mexican
guava paste. Go Middle Eastern by adding a whisper of cardamom and
rose water. Serve it with blanched almonds on a cheese plate. Pair it
with salty Stilton or manchego cheese for a tangy grilled panini. I
even topped pizza with the paste and fresh figs.

Quince Paste
Enlarge Laura McCandlish for NPR

Quince Paste
Laura McCandlish for NPR

Makes about 1 3/4 pounds

2 pounds quinces (about 3 cups), quartered but not seeded or peeled

1 cup water

2 cups sugar

Crushed seeds from 7 cardamom pods (less than 1/4 teaspoon), optional

1/2 teaspoon rose water, optional

Combine the quinces and water in a pot. Over low heat, simmer the
quinces, covered, until they are tender, about 20 minutes. Remove the
pot from the heat and let the quinces cool a bit. For a redder paste,
let the quinces stand at room temperature for 8 to 12 hours.

Scoop out the seeds from each quince piece and discard them. Pass the
fruit and any juice through the medium screen of a food mill. (If you
don’t have a food mill, peel and core before cooking. Then puree in a
food processor, to an applesauce-like consistency at this stage.)

Put the puree into the pot along with the sugar (and the crushed
cardamom, if desired). Heat the mixture over low heat, stirring, until
the sugar is completely dissolved. Simmer the mixture, stirring often
at first and almost constantly toward the end, for 40 minutes or
more. When the paste is ready, you’ll have to hold onto the pot to
keep it from sliding around as your spoon leaves a clear path across
the bottom. Stir the rose water into the paste, if desired.

Pour the paste about 3/4-inch thick into lightly oiled ceramic
ramekins or an 8-inch square cake pan with vertical sides. Let the
paste cool and then turn it out to dry in a warm place, perhaps in
your oven on its lowest setting, or in the sun.

When the paste is dry to the touch, after about 2 hours, cut it into
smaller pieces if you like, and wrap the pieces in plastic or waxed
paper. Unless you’ll be eating the paste soon or you’re sure it’s
thoroughly dry, store it in a heavy-duty plastic bag in the
refrigerator, where it should keep for several months. Vegetarian
Quince And Parsnip Medley

"Queen of Quince" Barbara Ghazarian includes this "curiously sweet"
recipe in her new cookbook Simply Quince (Mayreni Publishing
2009). These two "ugly duckling" foods blend together into a beautiful
stew. The aromatic dish would grace any Thanksgiving table. Serve it
over rice, bulgur pilaf, couscous or even, as I did, polenta.

Vegetarian Quince And Parsnip Medley
Enlarge Laura McCandlish for NPR

Vegetarian Quince And Parsnip Medley
Laura McCandlish for NPR

Makes 8 servings

1 large yellow onion, coarsely chopped

1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil

Two 14 1/2-ounce cans diced tomatoes

1 teaspoon curry powder

1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon

2 teaspoons coarse salt

1/2 teaspoon ground black pepper

1/2 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes

1 pound parsnips, cut into bite-size pieces (about 2 cups)

1/2 to 3/4 pound fresh quinces, peel left on, cored and cut into
bite-size pieces (1 1/2 to 2 cups)

One 15-ounce can garbanzo beans, drained

1/2 cup chopped fresh flat-leaf parsley (about 1 bunch)

1/2 cup currants

1 cup vegetable broth

3 tablespoons shelled pistachio nuts, optional

Saute the onion in the olive oil in a large heavy-bottomed pot over
medium heat until the onion begins to brown, 8 to 10 minutes. Add the
tomatoes, curry, cinnamon, salt, black pepper and red pepper
flakes. Simmer, stirring occasionally, for about 5 minutes. Add the
parsnips, quince, garbanzos, parsley, currants and broth.

Cover and simmer, stirring occasionally, for 1 1/4 hours, or until the
parsnips and quince are tender throughout. Adjust seasonings to
taste. Sprinkle with pistachio nuts, if desired, and serve.

Quince Pip Tea For A Sore Throat

Vegetarian chef Deborah Madison features several quince recipes in her
Local Flavors cookbook (Broadway Books 2002), including this
brew. Make up a batch just in time for cold season. The medicinal,
emollient-coated quince seeds are used to soothe sore throats the
world over, so why waste the cores?

Quince Pip Tea
Enlarge Laura McCandlish for NPR

Quince Pip Tea
Laura McCandlish for NPR

Makes 4 cups

Skins, cores and pips (seeds) of 4 quinces

2 quarts water

Honey

Put the skins, cores and pips in a saucepan with water. Bring to a
boil, then simmer until the liquid is syrupy and reduced to about 1
quart. While still warm, strain and sweeten to taste with honey.

Refrigerate in a clean jar. Sip warm or cold when you feel the need
for something soothing on your throat. The tea keeps in the
refrigerator for several months. Quince Tarte Tatin

Georgeanne Brennan resurrects this old recipe in her new cookbook
Gather (Sasquatch Books 2009). Using quince yields a rosy syrup and
zing that apples can’t match. Garnish each piece with a dollop of
sweetened creme fraiche. I used whole wheat pastry flour for the
crust. My topping didn’t adequately caramelize because I couldn’t find
my Pyrex pie dish; use a glass one if you can, so you can watch as it
bakes.

Quince Tarte Tatin
Enlarge Laura McCandlish for NPR

Quince Tarte Tatin
Laura McCandlish for NPR

Makes 8 servings

Quince Filling

6 to 8 large, ripe quinces

2 cups red wine (merlot, syrah or a Rhone-style blend)

1/2 cup sugar

One 2-inch piece vanilla bean, slit

1 cup sultana raisins

Pastry

2 cups all-purpose flour

1 teaspoon sea or kosher salt

1 stick plus 3 tablespoons (11 tablespoons total) unsalted butter,
chilled and cut into chunks

6 tablespoons ice water

Finishing

2 tablespoons unsalted butter, divided

1/2 cup sugar, divided

Filling

Peel and core the quinces and cut them into slices about 3/8-inch
thick. In a large bowl, combine the wine, sugar and vanilla bean. Add
the quinces and raisins. Cover and let the quinces marinate overnight
at room temperature, turning them several times to ensure an even
color.

Pastry

Combine the flour and salt in a food processor and pulse once or
twice. Add the butter and pulse only until pea-sized bits form, about
45 seconds. Add the water 1 tablespoon at a time, pulsing just until a
ball of dough forms, about 1 minute. Gather the ball, cover it in
plastic wrap and chill in the refrigerator for 15 to 30 minutes.

Preheat the oven to 375 degrees.

Using 1 tablespoon of the butter, heavily grease a baking dish 9 or 10
inches in diameter and 2 to 2 1/2 inches deep. Sprinkle the bottom
with 1/4 cup of the sugar.

With a slotted spoon, remove the quince slices and raisins from the
wine marinade. Arrange the quince slices snugly, making concentric
circles in a single layer around the bottom of the dish. Sprinkle a
third of the raisins and a third of the remaining sugar over the
quince slices. Repeat this entire process twice, but since the second
and third layers of quince won’t be visible once the tart is inverted,
they don’t have to be arranged quite as carefully. Cut the remaining
butter into small pieces and dot the top of the quince.

On a lightly floured board, roll out the pastry dough 1/8-inch thick
and just a little bit larger than the diameter of the baking
dish. Drape the pastry over the rolling pin and transfer it to the
baking dish. Unfold it and gently place it over the quince, tucking
the dough inside the dish. Press the edge of the crust gently against
the sides of the dish. Lightly prick the pastry all over with a
fork. Bake the tart until the crust is golden and a thick,
garnet-colored syrup has formed in the bottom of the baking dish.

When the tart is done, remove it from the oven and let it stand just a
few minutes. Run a sharp knife between the pastry crust and the edge
of the baking dish to ensure that nothing is sticking. Invert a
serving platter on top of the baking dish, and, using a hot pad, hold
the platter and the dish firmly together and flip them over, so the
dish is upside-down on the platter. The tart will unmold itself onto
the platter. Should any slices of quince stick to the bottom of the
baking dish, simply replace them on the tart. Serve warm.

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?story

Sahakyan, Kasprzyk Discuss Situation At Contact Line

SAHAKYAN, KASPRZYK DISCUSS SITUATION AT CONTACT LINE

PanARMENIAN.Net
10.11.2009 11:12 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ President of the Nagorno Karabagh Republic Bako
Sahakyan met Tuesday with personal representative of the OSCE
Chairman-in-Office, Ambassador Andrzej Kasprzyk to discuss issues
related to the current situation along the line of contact between
NKR and Azerbaijani armed forces, Central Information Department of
the Office of the NKR President.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Turkey’s Foreign Policy Moves In The West And In The East Are Comple

TURKEY’S FOREIGN POLICY MOVES IN THE WEST AND IN THE EAST ARE COMPLEMENTARY TO EACH OTHER

PanARMENIAN.Net
10.11.2009 11:23 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ President Abdullah Gul made clear on Monday
that Turkey’s foreign policy moves in the West and in the East are
complementary to each other, not contradictory. Gul’s remarks came in a
speech delivered at an economic summit during the 25th session of the
Standing Committee for Economic and Commercial Cooperation (COMCEC)
of the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) in Ýstanbul. While
underlining the importance of favoring a two-state solution in the
Middle East process, thus the need for the recognition of Israel
as a state, Gul voiced Ankara’s firm support for the resolution of
the international dispute over Iran’s controversial nuclear program
through diplomatic means.

"Turkey is in intense commercial and economical relations with
both the Western world and Islamic countries. The European Union
membership process pursued by our country and its efforts within
COMCEC are complementary elements of our foreign policy, but are not
elements which exclude each other," Gul told the gathering in his
opening speech.

Citing recent intensified contacts with the Arab League and the Gulf
Cooperation Council as well as with neighboring countries such as
Iraq and Syria, with whom Turkey has established high-level strategic
cooperation councils, Gul urged support for Turkey’s foreign policy
moves.

While touching upon the stalled Middle East process, Gul delivered
separate warnings to the parties involved. Without having a resolution
of the Palestinian issue with the establishment of a Palestinian
state, the capital city of which is East Jerusalem and which lives
beside Israel with secure and recognized borders, it is impossible
to maintain peace and stability in the region, he said.

Turkey will continue playing a "facilitator" role in regards to
the dispute over Iran’s nuclear program, Gul said, while urging the
international community to use diplomatic means for solution of the
issue. Meanwhile, Gul asked OIC member-countries for support in order
to ease the international isolation of the KKTC, which is recognized
only by Turkey. KKTC leader Mehmet Ali Talat, who also delivered
a speech at the summit, complained that OIC member-countries were
hesitant to take concrete steps toward easing his people’s isolation,
Today’s Zaman reported.