Intensive Writing

You might also like

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 4

Achmad Rifaldi

201912500850
R5H

There are many different ways of using eggs in cooking.


1. They can be boiled lightly and eaten with toast.
2. Hard boiled eggs are good for picnics, sandwiches or use in salads.
3. Fried, poached and scrambled eggs are commonly eaten at breakfast,
while an omelet provides a light and nourishing meal at any time.
4. For an exotic touch, eggs can be curried or used in sauces such as
mayonnaise and hollandaise sauce.
5. To give lightness and substance, eggs are usually added to cakes and
pastries.
There are few foods that are as nourishing and versatile as eggs.

Topic:
There are many different ways of using eggs in cooking.
Supporting:
1. They can be boiled lightly and eaten with toast.
2. Hard boiled eggs are good for picnics, sandwiches or use in salads.
3. Fried, poached and scrambled eggs are commonly eaten at breakfast,
while an omelet provides a light and nourishing meal at any time.
4. For an exotic touch, eggs can be curried or used in sauces such as
mayonnaise and hollandaise sauce.
5. To give lightness and substance, eggs are usually added to cakes and
pastries.
Concluding:
There are few foods that are as nourishing and versatile as eggs.
Japan has a rich cocktail culture, one studiously built around classic drinks
executed with precise technique. Mixologists invest a lifetime in learning how to
perfect the hard shake, the gentle stir, the crystalline sphere carved from a giant
block of ice. You will find textbook Gibsons and definitive Manhattans in
drinking dens from Sapporo to Kagoshima, but you won’t find many bartenders
in this country pushing the limits of freewheeling cocktail creation.

Topic:
Japan has a rich cocktail culture
Supporting:
one studiously built around classic drinks
executed with precise technique. Mixologists invest a lifetime in learning how to
perfect the hard shake, the gentle stir, the crystalline sphere carved from a giant
block of ice. You will find textbook Gibsons and definitive Manhattans in
drinking dens from Sapporo to Kagoshima
Concluding:
but you won’t find many bartenders in this country pushing the limits of freewheeling
cocktail creation.

Ginza is the heart of Tokyo’s sushi culture, making it the center of Japan’s
sushi culture, making it the greatest neighborhood in the world for eating fish.
Walk these gilded streets for a few blocks and you’ll soon figure out why: this is
one of Japan’s wealthiest zip codes, home to extravagant department stores and a
battery of international luxury brands housed in beautiful buildings created by
famous architects. A perfect fit for the world’s most expensive cuisine.

Topic:
Ginza is the heart of Tokyo’s sushi culture
Supporting:
making it the center of Japan’s sushi culture, making it the greatest neighborhood in the
world for eating fish.
Walk these gilded streets for a few blocks and you’ll soon figure out why: this is
one of Japan’s wealthiest zip codes, home to extravagant department stores and a
battery of international luxury brands housed in beautiful buildings created by
famous architects.
Concluding:
A perfect fit for the world’s most expensive cuisine.

Japan may claim one of the world’s great tea cultures, but it’s no stranger to
the coffee bean. Coffee arrived in the country in the eighteenth century, piled
high in the bellies of Dutch trading ships. It went relatively unnoticed by most
Japanese until, in the early twentieth century, the Brazilian government began
sending free coffee beans to Tokyo shop owners. By the 1930s you could find
three thousand kissaten (called kissa for short), traditional Japanese coffee shops,
offering Tokyoites a current of caffeine and a respite from city life.

Topic:
Japan may claim one of the world’s great tea cultures, but it’s no stranger to
the coffee bean.
Supporting:
Coffee arrived in the country in the eighteenth century, piled
high in the bellies of Dutch trading ships. It went relatively unnoticed by most
Japanese until, in the early twentieth century, the Brazilian government began
sending free coffee beans to Tokyo shop owners. By the 1930s you could find
three thousand kissaten (called kissa for short)
Concluding:
traditional Japanese coffee shops, offering Tokyoites a current of caffeine and a respite from
city life.
The date is the most important fruit in Islam. It was important in the early days
of Islam and it remains important today, at least in the parts of the Islamic world
where it grows, which is mainly the Middle East and North Africa. In many
places, the date palm is known as the tree of trees, also known as “the mother
and aunt of Arabs,” as their lives depended on it. Long before oil riches, dates
were the main staple of Gulf Arabs, both in terms of diet and trade (the date
palm sap is used to make palm sugar), as well as construction (its wood,
although not very hard, is used in building), and they were also Gulf Arabs’ main
sustenance along with bread, meat, and milk. Dates were a commodity used to
barter with neighboring tribes.

Topic:
The Date

Supporting:
It was important in the early days of Islam and it remains important today, at least in the parts
of the Islamic world where it grows, which is mainly the Middle East and North Africa. In
many places, the date palm is known as the tree of trees, also known as “the mother and aunt
of Arabs,” as their lives depended on it. Long before oil riches, dates were the main staple of
Gulf Arabs, both in terms of diet and trade (the date palm sap is used to make palm sugar), as
well as construction (its wood, although not very hard, is used in building), and they were
also Gulf Arabs’ main sustenance along with bread, meat, and milk

Conclude:
Dates were a commodity used to barter with neighboring tribes.

You might also like