SKU: 33917302793

mi shin ramyun black nongshim 134g

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mi shin ramyun black nongshim 134gtrt n th v m Shin Ramyun, mt loi m ramen tiu biu ca Hn Quc gy n tng v thu ht hng triu thc khch cc nc trn th gii, th bn cng nn check in ngay v lin M Shin Ramyun Black Nongshim 134g mt phin bn nng cp hon ho siu cun vi bao b mu en m ni bt. gi Shin Ramyun Black ln ny, si m tr nn mm dai v chc hn khi t l trn ca cc thnh phn nh bt m v tinh bt c iu chnh ph hp t c kt cu tt nht. c bit, sp ramen cng c nhn i ln thnh 2 gi cho vo trc v sau khi nu. Gi bt sp mu chu

Đã trót ăn thử và mê “Shin Ramyun”, một loại mì ramen tiêu biểu của Hàn Quốc gây ấn tượng và thu hút hàng triệu thực khách các nước trên thế giới, thì bạn cũng nên check in ngay và liền Mì Shin Ramyun Black Nongshim 134g – một phiên bản nâng cấp hoàn hảo siêu cuốn với bao bì màu đen đậm nổi bật.

Ở gói Shin Ramyun Black lần này, sợi mì trở nên mềm dai và chắc hơn khi tỉ lệ trộn của các thành phần như bột mì và tinh bột được điều chỉnh phù hợp để đạt được kết cấu tốt nhất.

Đặc biệt, súp ramen cũng đã được nhân đôi lên thành 2 gói để cho vào trước và sau khi nấu. Gói bột súp màu đỏ chịu trách nhiệm về vị cay, mặn và vị umami của Shin Ramyun Black dùng để cho vào nấu cùng mì khi đun sôi nước.

Còn gói bột màu vàng có các thành phần như chiết xuất xương bò, hành tây, bột nấm hương,… dùng để trộn vào sau cùng khi đã nấu mì xong mang đến nước dùng đậm đà và sâu hơn.

Ngoài ra, gói nguyên liệu là rau củ khô như nấm hương, tỏi, hành, cải ngọt và thịt khô cũng được Nongshim cho vào nhiều hơn mọi khi. Chính vì có quá nhiều điểm hấp dẫn như thế nên Shin Ramyun Black đã thành công chiếm lĩnh thị trường, đứng đầu danh sách “mì ramen ngon nhất thế giới” do The New York Times bình chọn.

Với gói mì mlem đến như vậy thì còn chần chừ gì mà không order ngay nào các mem ơi!!! Hứa hẹn sẽ mang đến một tô mì cay thơm siêu kích thích, đánh thức mọi giác quan. Càng ngon hơn khi ăn kèm với những topping như kim chi, thanh cua, thịt hộp, trứng…

Thành phần: 

  • Mì: Bột mì, tinh bột khoai tây, tinh bột biến tính, dầu cọ, muối, gia vị, mì thêm chất kiềm (chất điều chỉnh độ chua), chiết xuất trà xanh, vitamin B2,...
  • Gói bột súp: Bột xương bò, bột chiết xuất ức bò, muối tinh, hạt nêm nước dùng, hạt nêm nấm và rau củ, bột chiết xuất tỏi, đường, củ cải, bột chiết xuất giá đỗ, bột nước tương, bột ớt đỏ, bột tiêu, gia vị kimchi, bột nấm hương, bột chiết xuất gừng, bột nêm cay, nước dùng thịt bò, nấm hương khô, hành lá khô, tỏi khô, ớt khô tẩm vị....

Đóng gói: 134g/gói

Bảo quản: Nơi khô ráo, thoáng mát và tránh ánh nắng mặt trời

Hạn sử dụng: 12 tháng kể từ ngày sản xuất

Hướng dẫn sử dụng: Đun sôi 550ml nước (khoảng 3 cốc), sau đó cho mì, gói bột nêm (màu đỏ), gói rau vào nấu thêm khoảng 4 phút 30 giây. Sau khi tắt bếp cho thêm gói bột nêm còn lại (màu vàng) vào khuấy đều và thưởng thức.

Xuất xứ: Hàn Quốc

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SKU: 33917302793

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4.8 ★★★★★
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The Professor
Belleville, US
★★★★★ 5
Documents the influence of American Eugenics on the Holocaust
Format: Hardcover
American Court decisions, and what some call the genocide of Native Americans, was one major source of inspiration behind Nazi policy against both the Jews and people that the eugenic scientists considered inferior races. American policy also was very influential in inspiring the Nazi goal of lebensraum, expanding the Germanic population and reducing, and making slaves, of the Slavic peoples (Poles, Russians and other Eastern populations). Following Hitler's rise to power, Lebensraum became an ideological goal of Nazism and provided for them justification for the German territorial expansion into East-Central Europe. After all, the Americans decimated the naïve population of America so, the Nazis reasoned, how is that different from the decimation the native population of Eastern Europe? Some even referred to Ukrainians and other Slavic people as "Indians." Reservations for Native Americans was a factor justifying the concentration camps for Jews, only a few of which were death camps, and this is one reason why the Nazis got away with the Holocaust for so long. It was not until after the war when the Soviets liberated the death camps that we knew for certain the extent of the genocide goal of the Nazis. The main extermination camps were Belzec, Sobibór and Treblinka, which served as "death factories." Auschwitz II–Birkenau was a combination concentration/extermination camp. Anti-Semites, eugenicists and racists inspired by Darwinism in the U.S. helped inspire those in Germany, and vice versa. The US was “a global leader in ‘scientific’ eugenics,” so naturally the German scientists would have to rely on American research and law (page 8). The author covered only briefly the well-documented important influence of Darwin and mentioned evolution only in connection with the evolution of racism (p, 114). Conversely, the eugenics idea and movement was discussed 28 times, such as page 8 where the author documents that eugenics was the basis of both the Nazi Germany and American discrimination laws and policy. The support of the U.S. to Nazi German went well beyond that. U.S. bankers and industry, even the weapons industry, invested heavily in the Nazis war machine. Nazis borrowed ideas from U.S. books, such as the 1916 American best seller racist book titled The Passing of the Great Race and other propaganda, such as that developed in World War I. The U.S. refused to admit significant numbers of Jewish refugees, such as in 1939 the United States refused to admit over 900 Jewish refugees who had sailed from Hamburg, Germany, on the St. Louis to the West. Denied permission to land in the United States, the ship was forced to return to Europe where many died in Nazi German camps. The most famous example is the State Department rejected Anne Frank's attempt to enter the United States (pages 53,116, 149).
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Reviewed in the United States on October 29, 2017
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OLD1mIKE
Lowell, US
★★★★★ 4
Interesting and Informative
Format: Kindle
Interesting and informative. This is a book about German political leaders and how they perceived the United States, its culture and it’s laws. Although it touches on the American culture and legal system, it is mostly comprised of quotes from German writers, lawyers and politicians. It’s worth reading if you are interested in how the German goverment evolved the laws supporting the eventual persecution of its Jewish citizens. This is a book about Germany and makes some high level generic observations on American Eugenics and Race Laws. It is informative and makes some interesting observations on our race laws, but if you’re more interested in the United States race law history, I would recommend something more focused the United States.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 1, 2023
S
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Silesia
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 5
Much Better than its Title.
Format: Hardcover
The author, Professor of Comparative and Foreign Law at the Yale Law School, tells us in the Acknowledgments that Princeton U. Press received from some of its referees "suitably bilious responses", validating his decision to bypass commercial publishers. Still, James Q. Whitman assures us time and again that he has nothing nefarious in mind, that Hitler's extermination ideology was not made in the USA, as the title may suggest. Instead, he brings to light the keen scholarly interest nationalist and Nazi German jurists took in contemporary American race legislation and Jim Crow practices. By separating the racist dimension of the "American Legal Realism" of the 1930s from its larger liberal context, Whitman arrives at the true nexus with its German counterpart. The " 'realists' of both countries shared the same eagerness to smash the obstacles that 'formalistic' legal science put in the way of 'life' and politics - and 'life' in both New Deal America and Nazi Germany did not include only economic programs (...). 'Life' also involved racism." (p. 156) The author's familiarity with both, the German and American legal landscapes of the 1930s and 40s and his painstakingly sober analysis, assure this reader that the book is exactly NOT "spellbinding and haunting", as one dust-cover reviewer sees it. The topic could be embedded in the larger history of the American eugenics movement, so carefully illuminated by Christine Rosen (Preaching Eugenics (Oxford, 2004) who cites this opinion of the great Oliver Wendell Holmes, abbreviated in our book: "It is better for all the world, if instead of waiting to execute degenerate offspring for crime, or to let them starve for their imbecility, society can prevent those who are manifestly unfit from continuing their kind. Three generations of imbeciles are enough." (p.150) As contemporaries of the Trump era, we may want to stop and reflect on Whitman's somber conclusion "(...) To have a common-law system like that of America is to have a system in which the traditions of the law do indeed have litte power to ride herd on the demands of the politicians, and when the politics is bad, the law can be very bad indeed." (p.159) Professor Whitman summarizes his interpretation of recent literature that support his thesis as follows: "All of these works paint a darker picture of early twentieth-century American intellectual and political life than we might wish. So does this book." Makes it a timely one, doesn't it ?
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Reviewed in the United States on March 10, 2017
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Nemo
Pawtucket, US
★★★★★ 5
Essential reading for a fuller and more accurate comprehension of American history
Format: Hardcover
I'm not in the habit of writing reviews, but I strongly recommend Hitler's American Model as critical reading for our political moment, especially given the conversations about racism, antisemitism, and white supremacy that the Trump administration and Charlottesville have bought to the fore. It's imperative that we understand the depth of racism integral to American policy making and execution. Numerous European countries recognized America as the world's leader in racist legislation, and American immigration, naturalization, and antimiscegenation law influenced the Nazi legislators who crafted the Nuremberg Laws. They did not import American legal policy and praxis wholecloth, but studied it deeply as a precedent for not just a race-based, but a racist, system of laws that privileged the "master race" over the inferior dilutors of that race--in the Nazi case, the Jews. American exclusion and criminalization of non-white people proffered a blueprint of inspiration to Nazi radicals, who engaged intimately with it in the hopes of carrying it out to its logical extent: an openly racist legal system that drove out the racially decrepit to foster a pure Aryan state.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 29, 2017
J
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Jim Emison
Chelsea, US
★★★★★ 5
America's Fascist Governments
Format: Hardcover
"Love it" is not the correct phrase for how I related to the book. An important book for which I am thankful sobered and shamed by the book, better express my feelings. America to our lasting shame was the Mid-Tewentith Century global leader in the law of racial disenfranchisement & suppression despite our constitution to the contrary. That we were one model for Nazi race law is an abomination, a stain we can never remove. Professor Whitman though is generous to America, and this old, white, Tennessean, believes incorrect, when he states (p. 145) that the Nazi's went beyond American racism by creating, "...something different: the "organization of a fascist state"." The author is correct that the United Staes of America was itself not a "fascist state". However, within the United States, at least at the county level, governments existed and were tolerated by the federal government, that were indeed fascist in all but name. One-party county governments based on white supremacy and dedicated to maintaining white rule, black poverty & political powerlessness, racial purity & separation, at any cost including murder, existed in the South, in Tennessee, long before Hitler. These Southern county governments were very effective police states that employed government led white terror to control African Americans. White terrorists county governments they were. Fascist they were. Americans organized fascist local governments long before Germans organized on a national scale and streamlined their murder machine. Americans fascists killed fewer, but kill they did.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on October 27, 2017

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