tv Euromaxx Deutsche Welle April 19, 2020 8:30am-9:00am CEST
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still. so many different walks of life. some want to. talk to troy but all of them come straight from the heart to its core a sea of deep but it was no more delusion the mushroom interests. from the whims of the law to their final resting place the russians d.w. documentary. from polar bears to handbags and they all add up because they are catholics and that's the date so we're going to visit the well past kent. and with that very well
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welcome to another edition of your a mix and this is what else we have lined up for you. europe's last chapters carry heavy loads to slovakia's monk and my colleague magdalene has tips for a perfect weekend in granada spain. what's an essential part of every birthday writes the cake but the creations in our 1st reports today are more off work then pastry they are made by cake autists comparing at the cake international in birmingham england and they've come up with all kinds of bizarre ideas we joined cake on his bed callen at the fair and watched him create something very special. thing called otherwise known as the bite king.
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in his world is that of cake artist every year the best from around the world meet at the cake international in birmingham england. this year some 1300 bakers professionals and amateurs are here to present their creations. some of these artworks it's hard to tell that they are in fact cakes. such as this life size effigy of a character from the t.v. series killing eve. my favorite thing for me is seeing so so incredible. is you know committed. by steve realizing in the industry your level how you can improve things you can do things that other people do that just really give you strong ideas. then cohen's
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own entry is a chimpanzee life size at one metre high and 80 kilos but this one is edible ben put 4 days of work into it. the biggest challenge doing this was actually trying to get the stunts how they see it is so so weird so strange then i thought when i started it and it's a cross reference so many different photos of where that happens go how their legs sort of fold into each other. in studio in north wales to form the chimpanzee he stuck several layers of pastry together and then cut them into shape . the cake are the studied in graphic design his fascination with baking only developed later on. to learn how to mike was a simple as. and scientology in. that's genuinely how it started when i wanted to make the 1st one i had not the foggiest clue how to might because. he modeled the
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schools bone structure and fudge. he also used the multiple sugar paste to sculpt the facial features as well. this is now what the public are going to see what the clients going to say this is the final bit so it's really you have to go deep in thought my show you get in every line because if i were to make a mistake i. made an hour of baking $62014.00. he makes a living from his creations for birthdays weddings and anniversaries. in addition he also maintains his own you tube channel. with mike it's often that nobody sees the mica they just see the finished piece well i like people seeing the inside the behind the scenes the process of how it got so what it looked like. then cullen
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puts the finishing touches on his chimpanzee case with food coloring. at this stage i know it's going in the right direction but there's a lot more to do there's a whole body a lot more than if you do the tongue so there's a long process ahead we're really up to the hour. here build the completed work to some 20000 cake lovers. but he's already got ideas for new projects. one of the main things i want to get around to doing is doing a walk in the house of interactive you can walk in it. sits in it live in it for a few minutes and yet you can. ben cohen will need some fairly original ideas to stand out among the legions of imaginative cake bakers. one cake is more off
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the wall than the next but they all look good enough to eat. when you think of share this thing you may as immediately come to mind these people from tea but traditionally work as porters but here in europe we have a few remaining porters to carry tons of food drinks and material up to the mountain shelters in the slovakian tetra national park without the strength courage of skill the mount largest could not exist and twice a year the european sharpest meet for a cup of titian to find out who is quickest at carrying heavy loads to the top. 50 sherpas set off on a race each carrying 60 kilos of supplies on their backs through the high touch of mountains of slovakia. for many hikers the route would be too hazardous even
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without the extra weight on their backs. but time is the main challenge sherpas like stefan back are faced as they navigate the 6 kilometers of rocky paths to the finish. there. is nothing special anywhere in the whole thing's more a matter of the mind. but there are some difficult moments overcome get tough so they're going to get over it but that's where the shepherds pride comes into it so you have to get the job done. normally stefan back or would make the climb to the lodge alone he makes up to 3 trips a day. at the base camp and study smoke of in. he packs all the supplies onto his back frame that people will meet high in the mountains. he can heave
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up to 100 kilos onto his shoulders. to. look at was it every time no bottles of the strength comes from inside from the mind but mainly from the hot. in summer as in winter the sherpas keep the lodges of the high touches supplied and open to serve hikers and mountaineers the region's flora and fauna are unique in europe. so i was never scared so it's also just gives a strength about a bit but it's great to be out all day makes around this part of nature. or you can't do this job if you don't love nature there are what we do involves a sense of ecological results on it only because we carry the supplies up to the lodges can they be maintained without road so cable cars or even helicopters. sometimes when the lodges are short handed it's part of the sherpas job to stay and
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help out so the largest depend on them in more ways than one to be able to stay open. in a sense it's magical. because lobel it's like an island of freedom to me is that far away from the hectic business world with nothing but a mountain is all around. and people completely different up here. when stefan back or if down in the valley he helped his wife run the sherpa cafe. the cafe has its own little museum where patrons can get an impression of the hard life sherpas had and still have. they're only about 50 of them in europe. they're principally men who have a strong will and they're driven by an almost fanatical love for the mountains
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those are the winning traits but after. the last few metres of the sherpa race. the fastest among them cover the $700.00 metre climb to the proper slide at some 2000 metres elevation in about one hour and 20 minutes. or arrives at the finish line almost half an hour later but all of them are satisfied. to get some of this is simply my life not just a way for me to earn money. is just incredibly fun so by yeah it's hell for 2 hours but it's all the more fun afterwards about rembrandt it was that i thought the great thing about this competition is that we only in our daily routine we have no time to communicate and i throw out the whole year we never get to meet up like we do here it's super if you sagittal because. i support you. after the winner is awarded they finally have time to party. but the very
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next morning the sherpas of the high touches chief their loads onto their facts and set out once again to keep the largest supplied with everything they need to. it's starting to get cold in many parts of europe but in on the lucia in the south of spain it's the long mostly sunny and mild the reach of this not very far from north africa and there are many remnants of the time when the muslim invaders from north africa rule their one of their strongholds was the city of grenada and that is where my colleague magalie spent a perfect week at. your . own law and welcome to my perfect weekend in grenada. a good way to get an overview of this city in southern spain is from the middle door
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decided you can last square it also provides the finest you for not us most famous landmark the. my 1st stop here is this medieval fortress complex the most visited site in all of spain it was billed as a residence for the mauritian emirs and sultans of granada all the splendor of their islamic art comes into its own in the labrat non's repack listen here i meet up with the head archaeologist. he explains to me in detail the typical features of the not assured style. even in this inscription we see a mix of a floral ornamentation and verses from the koran geometric patterns that we get. together in silence in a very meticulous style. perhaps the most famous part of the complex is the
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court of the lines named for its fountain which 12 stone lines. every sultan wanted to build his own palace to clermont respect from he's got us that. the sultan's also built their own summer palace called the hangar a leaf a full of gardens fountains and artificial streams. this is my culture tip taking a tour of the alhambra. we're not as old as quarter of the scene is located at the front of the hombre morrish influences are just as visible here too i walk through the narrow streets to the city center where i'd like to sample some of the popular local cuisine. grenada like the rest of spain has the typical top us culture but here it's slightly different let's find out what. the guy manual is studio explains what's so special about it these topis cost all of
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nothing. right now that this is almost upon us i'd like to offer you a call to see. if you got a drink a cup of whatever you put off that's what i call genuine hospitality. not far away at this bizarre you can almost imagine you're in the tails of 1001 nights in fact it was once an air of market for silk fabrics today the range is much broader and i even find just the right accessory for my flamenco class which takes place tomorrow. i'm going to meet up with carmen vienna a dance instructor at the municipal flamenco school. seeing kerman in action here i'm a little scared i don't know what i've gotten myself into not don't worry come on let's go. towards like myself and sign up for a lesson here after just one hour i need some real progress.
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another highlighting granada's old town is the renaissance cathedral it was built by christian monarchs after the end of moore's rule in $1492.00. tucked away here is. an aerobatic dating back to the 11th century and one of the oldest structures and granada. now it's a museum no bathing allowed but even so the middle eastern basque culture lives on in this city. in a modern among with warm and cold basins. so there you go we could go through. that and i was so they were going to come on the ground up to prove that it's not a. deal. and this is my specialty for
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perfect we can not experiencing a real. unique. and finally my trip is not complete without visiting a flamenco show that's what granada is famous for most of the shows are put on in capes. to be saddled although this is all improvised it's what we feel in our hearts and want to convey to the public. and for me it's the perfect end to a perfect weekend. and mag and has lots more tips on perfect weekends on our you tube channel check it out and find more exciting places like company hagen proc and bullet for it decades
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germany was really known for its truffles but 17 years ago french coke john g. men made a stunning discovery and small town in western germany burgundy truffle the resist coverage of this precious fungus has trumped the small town of zin seek into germany's truffle of capital collecting and selling why a truffle is bad in germany so do you then figure out a way to get around that. lips with truffles in leaks. he need found bathed in pedagogue truffle sauce. truffle kind of cotton i would kind of. top chef shell money demesne nuff said using truffles 2 and a bit of panurge to his dishes. the delicacy is regarded as the world's most expensive undefinable cullin every mushroom.
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that goes into the you'll notice the aroma a truffle takes over the entire kitchen they knock you over there fascinating you can't see them they grow in the wild and they're not genetically modified breads they can't be manipulated this guy could say they're a very fine and natural product. the exulting travels cost up to $700.00 euros per kilogram. and the white albatross can fetch as much as $9000.00 a year and it's. a demesne also discovered truffles in germany 17 years ago he made a sensational find. but i discovered 45 truffles in october 2002 and it was an incredible feeling i can only remember 3 moments of such happiness in my life but of getting married to my wife
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by the birth of my children and finding those german truffles. the french long suspected that he would find truffles in west germany our valley. if you do not do the wilderness starts right here we have sunlight fresh air and branches that drip when it rains and the perfect spot is where the trees drip and the air is just right this place was predestined for truffles because ivy holds the moisture really well. connecting while travelling is prohibited in germany so got to get on like minded people and founded a society together they started germany's 1st truffle plantation but even in spots where truffles are abundant it's good to have adult to help find mushrooms that grow underground the scent of this is a burgundy truffle 80 grams cost about 30 euros in the markets. up until the ne 20th century germany was
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a main jet travel exporter shipping truffles to europe's top restaurants and even into the french quarter. so truffles taste better when they're cut very thin paper thin but that way they stimulate the tongue and give off more of their aroma because if the pieces of it gets too crumbly then you have to chew a lot if not most in the mouth. on to society invite experts from all over europe to sensation council to exchange ideas about truffles. truffle has a life span of about 10 days if you love to travel up and it feels like a stone. it's fresh when its weight resembles a piece of wood but it's not so fresh is and what it feels like styrofoam that means it's very very old. for the renowned called the symposium i mean it's hard to
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work in the kitchen. today he's cooking for people who know as much about truffles as much as. this is the n.c. good pizza is the only mushroom that goes well with all dishes. this is so now it's a very adaptable food. aid you men will keep searching for innovative flavor combinations that show the multifaceted truffle in all of its splendor. the bass player in the bow and the silent type the bass not in the foreground that's the cliche but bass can be different too mellow dick sounds played by a young woman in the tip toeing male dominated field. do you recognize. it's very glam cheers and happy kid got big from poland rose to
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the internet fame with this version and now she full concert halls with her music. playing 22 year old kinkade quick plays the bass the instrument comes out of the shadows and into the spotlight. i just felt it in my heart that i wanted to play and then basically look the sound low sound and the connection between melody and. new and. this is great to have all 4 strings for me. her interpretation of sums to somehow make the young musician and internet stuff.
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to. deal with her brother uploaded it and 3 days later. i called my brother and he has like. 20. like you know crazy and and we were. like something's broken through what do you know so that was the moment. we didn't like. hear she's running a sound check out the jets festival. she's currently touring europe with her 4th album. she's considered
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a rare talent on the electric bass i'm one of few women playing an instrument typically associated with men. most of them are like oh you play bass. do not play bass and you do it so i'm happy to do it and i always knew it did and to be a bass player so there was no doubt that i want to play in the piano or guitar or my you know the way space that's my. father taught her to play but she's had to teach herself quite a lot to say well. you know you play whatever you want but you have to practice to do it. in a musical family near the city of quetta and she started playing bass at the age of 12 and her 1st gigs where with the family's band. later she became
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a sonar artist with her own band but she doesn't say. you know. and i hope my bass. with me. this is my voice. but the playing adaptations of popular favorites or her own compositions keeps winning over audiences by making her base sing. and that brings us to the end of your max for today but don't forget to check out our website. i for this week's draw there you can find out how to win next if you're a max watch. and from all of us here at the end. of
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marks 21. 30 minutes on d w. each style tells my story. of the people who shunned me. dedicating their lives to me. and not to jump to pasadena and venus on the secrets of my main hands. not tied down depending. on the farm in tokyo. has a virus spread. why do we panic and when will all this. computer through the topics covered in the weekly radio show is called spectrum if you would like
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any information on the crown of virus or any other science topic you should really check out our podcast you can get it wherever you get your podcast you can also find us at delhi dot com slash science. rooms are always. symbol of a long conflict in the philippines between the muslims and the christian population last month as fighters occupied the city center until now 17 president to church's response was moved. by it or it will now. foothold. the reconquest turned into tragedy is not the kind of freedom that we want. how did morality become a gateway to islamist terror. an exclusive report from
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