This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
| Both sides previous revision Previous revision Next revision | Previous revision | ||
|
aerodrome_finance [2026/01/16 00:40] 57.141.14.36 old revision restored (2025/07/18 06:05) |
aerodrome_finance [2026/02/09 09:30] (current) 57.141.14.8 old revision restored (2025/07/18 06:05) |
||
|---|---|---|---|
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
| ====== Aerodrome Finance ====== | ====== Aerodrome Finance ====== | ||
| - | It’s the world’s largest building shaped like a chicken. It’s also a hotel | + | New cookbook encourages cooks to follow charts, not recipes |
| - | [[https://sites.google.com/ | + | |
| - | Travelers to the Philippines can now book a room in the world’s largest building shaped like a chicken, located in the country’s remote highlands. | + | |
| - | No, you’re not expected to bed down on top of a pile of straw in a chicken coop. | ||
| - | The towering six-story building stands nearly 35 meters (over 114 feet) tall and has 15 rooms, all equipped with air-conditioning. The rooms don’t have windows, though – they’d ruin the effect of the chicken’s feathers. | + | Julia Turshen wants you to break the rules. |
| - | Located atop the hills of Campuestohan Highland Resort on the island of Negros Occidental, | + | Once she was ruled by weighing or measuring everything to the gram or teaspoon — due to her own self-described challenges with disordered eating and the requirement to be precise in the recipes she has developed |
| - | The brainchild behind the building, Ricardo Cano Gwapo Tan, told CNN he always wanted | + | Over time, Turshen has learned |
| - | The 70-something former local politician said he is still a “big kid at heart,” and the resort has always been his playground to create something | + | “Keep Calm & Cook On” is the mantra (and podcast/ |
| + | “One-pot rice + stuff” was the title of the first chart she shared on Instagram. Take some cooked rice, she coached, then choose a meat, a vegetable, spices, a liquid and toppings. This template style of culinary instruction garnered such a positive response, she followed up with soup, salad and cornbread charts — and quickly realized she had the makings of a book. | ||
| - | Tan said he dedicated | + | “The charts have given me a way to show how I think about cooking rather than tell you how I think about it,” Turshen |
| - | Cockfighting, known locally as “sabong,” has been a traditional past time that dates before Spanish colonial rule in the Philippines. The practice also remains popular in rural parts of Thailand | + | Turshen’s October 2024 cookbook, “What Goes With What,” includes 20 charts, 100 recipes |
| - | + | ||
| - | “The fighting cock industry is a billion-peso empire in our province,” Tan said. “The Philippines now has an iconic building | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | There are over 2,000 game fowl breeding farms across Negros Occidental | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | Millions of pesos are made in cockfighting arenas across the Philippines where rowdy punters cheer on combative chickens duel until one dies, despite protests | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | Aside from being fierce fighters, Tan said chickens can be “calm yet commanding creatures.” | + | |