Senin, 22 April 2013

TUGAS 2, Exercise 13

1.                  The teacher decide to accept the paper.
2.                   They appreciate to have this information.
3.                  His father doesn’t approve of his going to Europe.
4.                  We found it very diffuclt to each a decision.
5.                  Donna is interested in opening a bar.
6.                   George has no intention of leaving the city now.
7.                  We are eager to return to school in the fall.
8.                  You wold be better off buying this car.
9.                  She refused to accept the gift.
10.              Mary regrets to be the one to have to tell him.
11.              George pretended being sick yesterday.
12.              Carlos hopes to finish his thesis this year.
13.              The a greed to leave carly.
14.              Helen was anxious to tell her family about her promotion.
15.              We are not ready to stop this research at this time.
16.              Henry shouldn’t risk to drive so fast.
17.              He demands to know what is going on.
18.              She is looking forward to return to her country.
19.              There is no excuse for leaving the room in this condition.
20.              Gerald returned to his home after leaving the game

Rabu, 17 April 2013

how to make indonesian salad (gado-gado)


 Gado-gado is a traditional dish in Indonesian cuisine, and is comprised of a vegetable salad served with a peanut sauce dressing.


Many stores now offer Gado-Gado dressing in dried blocks to which you simply add hot water, making it easier and cheaper to cook at home.

Recipe for Gado-Gado
Gado-Gado Ingredients:

Blanched/steamed vegetables
  • long green beans, cut into 4-5 cm long
  • Chinese cabbage, shredded
  • Bean sprouts
Fresh Vegetables
  •  Lettuce
  • Tomato, wedged 
  • Cucumber, sliced
Other Complements
  •  Boiled/steamed potatoes, sliced
  • Boiled eggs, wedged
  • Fried/baked tempe
  • Fried/baked tofu
  • Lontong (rice cake with log shape), cut into 1 cm thick 
  • Ready-to-use fried shallot
  • Shrimp crackers

Gado-gado sauce

  •  10 cloves garlic, stir fried/fried/roasted 
  • kencur
  • 13 cloves onion, stir fried/fried/roasted
  • 300 g roasted/fried peanuts (In this case, I used 1 cup of organic crunchy peanut butter) 
  • 10 red chilies, discard the seed and stir fried/fried
  • 1 tsp terasi (dried shrimp paste), toasted
  • 1 block of coconut sugar (about 62.5 grams) 
  • 2-3 tbsp rice flour dissolve in a small amount of water

Sambal

    20 red bird eyes chilies, boiled /steamed
    1/2 tsp sugar
    Sea salt as desired

Method:

Gado-Gado Sauce

    Process garlic, peanuts/peanut butter, a half part of coconut milk, red chilies, terasi, coconut sugar in a food processor or blender.
    In a sauce pot, combine processed mixture with the rest of coconut milk, stir and turn on the stove at low-medium heat. Stir occasionally.
    Cook sauce until boiled, the volume reduced and the sauce surface looks a bit oily. Add rice flour mixture. Keep stirring until bubbling about 5 minutes. Remove from the heat.

Sambal

    Combine all ingredients and process in a food processor/blender or you can grind them with mortar and pestle.

Serving

    Place lettuce, slices of lontong and boiled potatoes, blanched vegetables, wedges of boiled egg, slices of fried tempe and tofu, and wedges of tomato, slices of cucumber. Pour the warm sauce over, garnish with fried shallot, crushed shrimp crackers and emping nuts crackers. Put sambal on the side as people has different tastebuds to handle the spiciness. You can omit the sambal if you don’t like the spicy sauce.

ACTIVE & PASSIVE VOICE


Active Voice (Sentences On) is the subject line to do something or to do a job. In the Indonesian language characteristics of the active sentence is the verb always beginning with "me" and a few more have the prefix "be".

Passive Voice (Sentences Passive) is a sentence that is the subject of a job or experiencing something. In other words, the sentence is subject to the target activity stated by the verb. In the Indonesian language traits are passive verb phrases that begin with "in-" and some have the prefix "ter-" (depending on the context of the sentence).

Passive - Use

We only use the passive when we are interested in the object or when we do not know who caused the action.
Example: Appointments are required in such cases.
We can only form a passive sentence from an active sentence when there is an object in the active sentence.

Form

to be + past participle 
 
     How to form a passive sentence when an active sentence is given:
- object of the "active" sentence becomes subject in the "passive" sentence
- subject of the "active" sentence becomes "object" in the "passive" sentence" (or is left out)

    

Changing Active Voice (Sentences Active) into the form of Passive Voice (Sentences 
 Passive)

Tenses
ACTIVE
PASSIVE
Jane helps Tina.
Tina is helped by Jane.
Jane is helping Tina.
Tina is being helped by Jane.
Jane has helped Tina.
Tina has been helped by Jane.
Jane helped Tina.
Tina was helped by Jane.
Jane was helping Tina.
Tina was being helped by Jane.
Jane had helped Tina.
Tina had been helped by Jane.
Jane will help Tina.
Tina will be helped by Jane.
Jane is going to help Tina.
Tina is going to be helped by Jane.
Jane will have helped Tina.
Tina will have been helped by 
 Jane.




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