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January 25th 2011 02:39
: Vyoos news
roast chilli peppers

We found the following method for roasting red chilli peppers: preheat oven to 450F or 230C (this, appropriately, is about as hot as most ovens go); spread the peppers evenly on a cooking sheet; roast the peppers for about 4-5 minutes until the skins blister; watch carefully so they do not burn.


Someone in Espoo, Finland, did this yesterday but forgot the last step. In fact, they forgot about their roasting chillies and went out.

Nasty things happen when chillies are left roasting. In this case, four people in the next-door apartment found that they were having trouble breathing. Someone managed to ring for help and pretty soon they were all in hospital being treated for respiratory problems.

Meanwhile firefighters had to try to get into the apartment where the chillies were still blistering away. The firefighters put on industrial-strength gas masks, but even so the first man in had a coughing fit and had trouble breathing.

One firemen said there was no smoke, but the air smelled like "pepper spray".

The four neighbours taken to hospital recovered.

Do not try this at home, and remember never to underestimate the final step of a recipe.
news.com.au



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Dave Ismay gets a life

November 22nd 2010 09:36
: Vyoos news
Dave Ismay
Dave Ismay: big spender

What do you do when you are told you have three months to live? For Dave Ismay, a 64-year-old Briton who has spent a lifetime on stage as a comedian, the answer was: make a bucket list.


This Ismay said, was a list of things to do before he kicked the bucket.

His list included buying a Mercedes, visiting Australia, playing golf in Ireland, finishing a book about his life and auditioning for a part in a big pantomime, even though he had no idea if he would live to see the end of the season. Or even opening night.

Ismay won the pantomime role, and crossed all the other items off his list too. Well, all except one. The last one: Immortality. He might have had only months to live, but his sense of humour was surviving just fine.

He crammed all the list's activity into two months, and then returned to the real world by agreeing to independent, second-opinion liver biopsy test.

Ismay's original diagnosis was advanced cirrhosis of the liver, caused by a lifetime of heavy drinking. Ismay claims he was perplexed by this because, in his honest opinion, he had never been a heavy drinker. But how do you argue with a liver which shows all the signs of taking your life within weeks?

That's why the independent opinion seemed worthwhile. Nothing to lose.

The result of that second opinion deeply shocked Dave Ismay. Essentially, it was this: you aren't dying. You are suffering from hereditary haemochromatosis, a condition which leaves too much iron in the blood. And which is treatable.

Now Ismay has to re-budget the rest of his life. He spent all his savings having fun before he died.

He's cheated death. We suggest he cross immortality off his list as well.
106
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Melissa's miracle

September 30th 2010 11:09
: Melissa's miracle
We love stories that feature heroism, determination, invention and, most of all, a happy ending.

Melissa Peacock is a 17-year-old from Bradford, England. She suffers from a rare condition called intracranial hypertension, or IH, which causes a build-up of spinal fluid in her skull which results in headaches.

The headaches have been described as "severe migraines", but another IH sufferer said calling them migraines is like calling the Nile a brook.

Melissa Peacock has been treated for eight years for the condition, but with little effect, and little relief from the headaches.

As a result, she has watched her friends enjoy a teenager's life while she has spent up to two weeks at a time in bed unable to move because of pain. Most of the time, she can't see properly. Sometimes she can barely see at all.

In her own words, it's like constantly trying to "see through a steamed-up window".

Melissa's inability to find relief from this miserable existence was not due to lack of trying from her doctors. The usual treatment for IH is a spinal puncture to drain the pooling fluid. It isn't a pleasant procedure. Melissa knows, she's had eight of them.

Her case proved unusual, if not unique, because the fluid built up again so quickly. The doctors needed to find another treatment.

They tried attaching a tube from Melissa's lower spine to her stomach, but it ended in disaster when the tube shifted and lodged in Melissa's neck. They tried the same thing again, but it ended in disaster when the tube shifted and lodged in Melissa's stomach, creating huge water blisters on her back and stomach as fluid leaked.

The doctors didn't give up.

Finally they came up with another idea; something radical, never tried before. They suggested a tube all the way from Melissa's skull to her stomach. The tube would be a permanent drain, removing the fluid as it collected from her brain, which couldn't cope with it, to her stomach, which could cope.

Her stomach would do with the fluid what it did with Melissa's dinner - check it for anything useful, and dispatch the rest to the waste disposal unit.

The idea worked.

"It has been a long journey but I can start to get on with the rest of my life now," Melissa Peacock said.

After eight years of agony, she deserves it. She's a hero just to have survived. Her determination over this period is a beacon to anyone suffering.

"I am studying photography at college now and hope I can go on to live a life that isn't controlled by my condition." We hope so too, Melissa.

As for the medical people who fashioned a miracle from iron will, skill and invention, you are as inspirational as Melissa Peacock.


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Questions about the afterlife

April 19th 2010 11:38
life after death

A remarkable story has unfolded today about the near-death experience of a three-year-old boy in Germany.

[ Click here to read more ]
75
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Are women vain? The eyes have it

April 2nd 2010 01:32
womens glasses
For women confident enough to see it, glasses can be an elegant statement of self-assurance.

Scientists have produced evidence that just under 50 per cent of women are vain.

[ Click here to read more ]
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