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my photos of the week 71 - Lake Lugano
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Ruphus
Posts: 3782
Joined: Nov. 18 2010
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RE: my photos of the week 71 - Lake ... (in reply to Escribano)
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And pike, if it is like in the Lago Maggiore. Man, did I try to catch one. Nothing but some whitefish. All while I was able to fish from right at the water. And just when I had given up, friends told me of a guy in the know who had come and thrown his bait from the distance of a public sight point. Within half an hour he pulled out a big pike, took it and left. - Got to say though that I need compagnion to kill the fish. Already mean to take out the hook and put them in a bucket of water. - Bill, lemon? Why not ketchup? Should be just as good to suppress fish flavour. brrrr - Thursday, my guitar student told me of a music theorist who said to him how rock music compared like simple trash to classical music. Me then said something to the extend that there can be beauty in both complexity and simplicity. For an example pointing to the two cuisines most known for their delicious dishes; the French and Italian one. The first one shining with its refiness and knowledge of how to produce, combine and prepare, the second one for its talent to bring forward great taste in simple ways. And when I would return from the Lago Maggiore (all fruits and vegetables harvested ripe from own garden) or even from Como (commercial supply, yet so rich in taste) the eating in Germany (mass products, largely from Holland´s green houses) would appear so pale for a while. If you pardon my OT excursion into the field of rich taste, I´d like to add that in fact fruits from here can be of extremely rich flavour. (Grapes alone, so honey sweet and flavoured like I havn´t seen anywhere. Maybe no coincidence that vine was "invented" / found in these realms.) But with my bad luck there is hardly a benefit from it. Almost all of its finest quality is being exported to the rich Arabs where it is ranked as top product, whilst the remains on local market are either rubbish or exclusive (kg prices between 5 and 25 bucks) or both in the same time. If I could sit in an Italian Trattoria overlooking one of these lakes and only just nibble away that fresh bread and butter served beforehand, I would be in heaven. Darn, Simon, I am jelous! And besides, I forgot to congratulate for the publishing. Great to have one´s shots used commercially! Ruphus PS: I was researching on real estate prices in Italy some years ago (for a humble budget). There seems not even any remote rural province left over where one could obtain some ruin for decent money. All totally inflated market pricings, probably even in Apulia (where food production and cuisine isn´t as developed. -Though their pottet artichoke hearts in olive oil are to die for!). Guess the only regions where it could be affordable would be way down in the south, where poverty in conjunction with Arabic influenced mentality could make it unlikely to be left alone.
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Date Sep. 25 2015 10:55:24
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Richard Jernigan
Posts: 3431
Joined: Jan. 20 2004
From: Austin, Texas USA
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RE: my photos of the week 71 - Lake ... (in reply to Escribano)
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Escribano Probably the weather, but you might invest in a UV filter to cut through some of it if the camera has a filter thread. The camera for the photo I uploaded was an Olympus TG-3, bought for its ruggedness. It doesn't have a standard filter ring. Photos with the Nikon D800 and a UV filter showed the same symptoms. Sometimes you could get that lovely layered background, fading into the distance, that you see in Renaissance paintings. Other times, distant views in the same plane were just very dull to the camera, while the eye and brain compensated to some extent. One way of dealing with water haze is to boost the contrast in post-processing, but in some cases the Lake Como haze resisted even this. Your photos are beautifully clear in the distance, hence the question. Thanks, RNJ
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Date Sep. 25 2015 19:45:52
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Richard Jernigan
Posts: 3431
Joined: Jan. 20 2004
From: Austin, Texas USA
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RE: my photos of the week 71 - Lake ... (in reply to BarkellWH)
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quote:
ORIGINAL: BarkellWH Trout is my favorite freshwater fish, and I would love to catch a few each day to grill for dinner each evening, bathed in lemon juice. Bill At Easter time in the early 1970s my former college room mate, his father, son and I rented a 7-series BMW and drove from Rotterdam to Munich via the lower Rhine, Alsace, the Black Forest and Austria. At Bonn we turned right and followed the Mosel, which became the Moselle as we crossed into France. We stopped for lunch that day on the right bank of the river. Trout came from the river, white wine from the vineyard on the hillside that sloped from behind the inn down to the river bank, salad and vegetables from the garden. The trout was served with fresh cut lemons for juice. Delicious. While we lived in Alaska, Skilak Lake on the Kenai Peninsula was available to Air Force personnel for recreation. In those days the only way to get there was by float plane. There were big rainbow trout as well as lake trout. When rainbows grow to over five pounds, their flesh turns pink like salmon. I still remember the aroma when my mother would bake a big rainbow with lemon and garlic butter, and the delicious taste of the fish when it was done. In the summer we would camp for a week or two near a chain of three small lakes, not too far from the highway, 120 miles northeast of Anchorage. There were no trout per se in the lakes, but plenty of Arctic grayling, a trout-like fish. As the youngest one in camp, I was given the task of catching enough fish for breakfast for a half dozen people. There was plenty of light at 4 AM, so I got up early enough to be sure of doing my job. I soon discovered that it only took the time to cast the fly and reel it right in six times to catch six fish. I didn't have to get up very early after all. Pan fried breaded grayling, or one roasted on a spit over a wood fire made a luxurious breakfast. RNJ
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Date Sep. 25 2015 20:11:33
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BarkellWH
Posts: 3458
Joined: Jul. 12 2009
From: Washington, DC
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RE: my photos of the week 71 - Lake ... (in reply to Ruphus)
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quote:
Bill, lemon? Why not ketchup? Should be just as good to suppress fish flavour. Ruphus, there is a huge difference between lemon juice and ketchup. Ketchup has a taste and consistency that would indeed suppress the flavor of fish. Lemon Juice, on the other hand, has the slight acidity and tangy taste that complements the flavor of the fish. That is why ceviche is prepared with lemon juice. Ceviche would be OK but bland without it. With it, ceviche has a zesty taste. The same holds true for trout and other fish. They would taste good without lemon juice. But adding lemon juice complements the fish's natrually good flavor by adding a tangy zest to it. It may not be for everyone, but for some of us it adds just the right touch to a delicious seafood dinner. Bill
_____________________________
And the end of the fight is a tombstone white, With the name of the late deceased, And the epitaph drear, "A fool lies here, Who tried to hustle the East." --Rudyard Kipling
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REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |
Date Sep. 25 2015 23:35:41
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