While it’s one thing to be updated with the theatrical launch of Tron Legacy, details have been pretty scarce about its accompanying video game. Than…
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SEAT dominates with second consecutive World Touring Car Championship
Filed under: Motorsports, China, SEAT, Diesel
If you would have told us ten or twenty years ago that diesel would come to dominate motor racing, we probably would have laughed in your face. But since Audi charted new territory by dominating Le Mans with its R10 TDI, the competition benefits of burning oil is beyond reproach. Not satisfied to let diesel power dominate endurance sportscar racing, however, sister company SEAT picked up the mantle last year in the World Touring Car Championship with the Leon TDI.
As it turns out, running on diesel came to be a liability for SEAT as the WTCC reformatted the rules to reduce diesel’s advantage. But the Sociedad Española de Automóviles de Turismo (Spanish Touring Car Company) pulled together, rallied its team and went on to dominate the World Touring Car Championship for the second year in the row, clinching all three of the series titles this past weekend in Macau – China’s closest approximation of Monaco and the final round in the championship.
SEAT won the manufacturers’ title, outpacing rivals BMW by three small points and outshining Chevrolet (with their new Cruze-based touring car) and Lada. SEAT’s main shoe, Gabriele Tarquini, clinched the drivers’ title ahead of his teammate (and defending champion) Yvan Muller. As if that wasn’t enough, privateer Tom Coronel drove his gasoline-powered Leon to secure the Independents Trophy as well, making it a resounding triple victory for SEAT and its WTCC crew. Details in the press release after the jump and photos in the high-res image gallery below.
Gallery: SEAT Leon TDI at WTCC Macau
[Source: SEAT]
Continue reading SEAT dominates with second consecutive World Touring Car Championship
SEAT dominates with second consecutive World Touring Car Championship originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 24 Nov 2009 15:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Dr. Lydia Gray Installed as President of the Illinois State Veterinary Medical Association
What a whirlwind weekend! It all started Thursday with an ISVMA board meeting followed by dinner at Jim’s Steakhouse in Peoria, IL. Imagine my surprise when the waitress read off our three choices for entrees: ribeye steak, orange roughy, or Chicken a la Lydia!
Then it was Friday, and time for the Equine Neurology Wet Lab at a local mixed practice clinic. A “wet lab” is a hands-on teaching experience where veterinarians work in small groups with real patients, receiving one-on-one instruction by the facilitator to improve their clinical skills. We were thrilled to be able to bring in world-renowned Dr. Stephen Reed as the instructor.
I arrived back to the convention center just in time for the Welcome Address, Keynote Speaker, a few awards, and an opening reception in the Exhibit Hall. My favorite exhibit this year was Chesire Partners, who brought a remote control bird on a tricycle and startled attendees!
Illinois puts on an incredible state veterinary convention, so in addition to sitting in on a few of Dr. Reed’s equine neurology talks (herpesvirus, EPM, Wobblers), I also went to presentations on supplements in the Complementary and Alternative Medicine track and communication in the Business Practices track. But that still left a second Business Practices track, Exotics, three Small Animal tracks, three small animal wetlabs and a Vet Tech program. There’s just no way to get to them all!
For me, though, the highlight of Saturday (and in fact, the whole convention) was the ISVMA Annual Meeting, where the current president, Dr. Shelly Rubin, gave an address and turned over leadership of the organization to the new president (me!) What made this year’s installment particularly poignant was that Oprah (yes, Oprah Winfrey) heard about her personal veterinarian’s retirement and sent a taped message about how much she appreciated Dr. Rubin over the years.
During my president’s address, I thanked my husband, who had kindly informed me beforehand that his new title is the “First Gentleman.” As only the second female president of the Illinois State Veterinary Medical Association in its 127-year history, I am actually the first married female president (and youngest, but we don’t have to discuss age).
So the next year will be a busy one for me–attending regional meetings as well as national meetings on behalf of ISVMA, presiding at board meetings, reviewing the budget of the Association, developing a strategic plan, naming volunteers to committees, and so on–but it will be a fun one. Don’t worry though, I’ll keep writing blog answers as long as you keep sending in those questions!
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Facebook Creates Dual-Class Stock Structure To Maintain Control After IPO
Facebook says it has created a dual-class stock structure.
Startups sometimes take this step before an IPO.
In a statement, however, Facebook says “this revision to the stock structure should not be construed as a signal the company is planning to go public.”
“Facebook has no plans to go public at this time.”
In instances where the creation of a dual stock struction does precede an IPO, the idea is to create one class of “super-voting shares” for the company to own, and one non-controlling class for the public markets.
This enables holders of those “super-voting” shares (likely management or the VC investors) to maintain voting control of the company while selling some economic stake to the public.
Facebook says it changed the stock structure “because existing shareholders wanted to maintain control over voting on certain issues to help ensure the company can continue to focus on the long-term to build a great business.”
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More reasons to be thankful: Tekken 6 getting patched for Thanksgiving
As folks gather around Thanksgiving dinner, Tekken-atics will have one more thing to be thankful for – Namco Bandai follows up on a promise and will…
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Quick Spin: Nissan Leaf the tip of mass market EV spear
Filed under: Hatchback, Nissan, Electric, Quick Spin
Nissan Leaf – Click above for high-res image galleryNissan has gone into a back room, pulled out its Ouija board and decided that the time is right to make a huge bet. The Japanese automaker, along with its partner Renault, wants to be the world leader in pure electric vehicles. Even though you can go buy an Altima hybrid right now, the company didn’t develop its own gas-electric technology (the sedan uses Toyota tech). This time around, Nissan believes the future belongs to vehicles without an internal combustion engine (ICE) and is preparing to put its own foot forward. It’s way too early to know for sure, but Nissan’s gamble could pay off handsomely. Toyota leads the hybrid race, General Motors and others are adding plugs to vehicles with liquid-fueled engines, but no major automaker has claimed the pure EV pole position. If everything goes right, Nissan will be that automaker.
The flagship vehicle for the automaker is, of course, the Leaf EV hatchback, which was unveiled in August and recently made its North American debut in Los Angeles. We were on hand to take a Leaf mule out for a short (very short) spin and heard directly from Nissan how this unique-looking EV will secure Nissan’s place in the auto industry as tremendous changes take place in the coming years. Follow us after the jump to learn about Nissan’s wager and find out if the Leaf has got the potential to (silently) propel the company to the top.
Gallery: Quick Spin: Nissan Leaf Test Mule
Photos copyright (C)2009 Sebastian Blanco / Weblogs, Inc.
Continue reading Quick Spin: Nissan Leaf the tip of mass market EV spear
Quick Spin: Nissan Leaf the tip of mass market EV spear originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 24 Nov 2009 14:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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HD2 now available on T-Mobile (UK)
You can now get the T-Mobile HD2 from here.
This puts T-Mobile ahead of O2 for actually releasing it, though I swear they never announced it…
It’s free on a 24 month £35 a month contract, and £195.73 on an 18 month £15 a month contract. It’s by no means cheap, but it is at least competitive with more fruity phone prices (as far as I can tell).
Let us know if you’ve got one, or it’s full of bloatware!
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Publishers Getting The Wrong Message Over eBook Piracy
Well, you just knew this was going to happen eventually. Suddenly publishers are starting to freak out over “ebook piracy,” claiming (totally inaccurately) that they’ve lost $600 million to it. Of course, as some are noting the real problem isn’t “piracy” but the industry’s response to it:
The best way to fight piracy? Got e-book shoppers accustomed to buying from legitimate sources before it’s too late. That means easy downloading, fair prices and the ability to move content easily from machine to machine within a household. Use of the standard ePub format and the end of traditional DRM could go a long way in that regard.
Instead, they’re likely to go in the other direction (they always do) and try to raise the DRM walls higher in a futile effort to “fight” piracy. Of course, as we discussed nearly a year ago, the ebook industry could really use more piracy, because it’s actually a great indicator of what people really want. And, of course, locking up content with more DRM will only serve to take away value. If there’s growing piracy, that just means the industry is putting up unreasonable barriers. Hopefully publishers realize this before totally screwing things up, but somehow it seems likely they’ll make all the same mistakes as the music industry.
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Towers of San Gimignano
San Gimignano, Italy | Incredible Ruins
In the age of the Renaissance, Tuscany was the center of the Western World. Its towns and cities grew insanely wealthy from a dense network of trade routes that spanned the Mediterranean and continental Europe. Florence, Sienna and Pisa are home of some of the most iconic architectural and artistic marvels of Italy. However, many more incredible are hidden away in smaller towns scattered across the region.
A small town of San Gimignano lies conveniently on one of most important medieval pilgrimage routes. Its inhabitants exploited the situation well. Made quickly rich by the constant influx of pilgrims, the families of San Gimigano wanted to show off. Each of them yearned to have a palace, but only thing that could be crammed between the tight confines of towns walls was a tower. Merchant families of San Gimignano entered an informal contest of building a higher and more splendid stone tower. The law forbid building the tower higher than the main communal one, known as Rognosa. Owning one become a status symbol. At the peak of fashion San Gimignano boasted no less the 72 of them.
Today only 15 remain. In 1348 the Plague devastated the city. It faded in obscurity, until it was rediscovered as tourist attraction in 19th century. Historic center of San Gimignano is protected as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
A similar Tuscan tower, the
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Former Alabama Death Row Inmate Herbert Williams Sentenced to Life Without Parole
On November 12, 2009, Herbert Williams was sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals struck down Mr. Williams’s death sentence last year after finding that his trial lawyer failed to provide effective representation because he did not investigate or present powerful evidence of abuse and psychological trauma at trial.
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Miyamoto: It’s not all about the college degree
If Shigeru Miyamoto had just graduated, chances are, he won’t even land a job with Nintendo. He said so himself. This is coming from a man who’s way…
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HP iPAQ Glisten coming to AT&T soon
Click for larger version
AT&T and HP today announced the upcoming availability of the new HP iPAQ Glisten, a feature-rich 3G world phone that meets the increasing demands of modern mobile professionals. AT&T’s first smartphone with an AMOLED (active-matrix organic light-emitting diode) screen, the HP iPAQ Glisten is loaded with features tailored with the business power user in mind.Featuring the Microsoft Windows® Mobile 6.5 operating system, the iPAQ Glisten offers a touch-friendly user interface and improved browser with Flash support. Connections to your favorite people, content and applications are a fingertip away on the redesigned Start Menu, and Internet Explorer Mobile** supports the rich experiences that many Web pages offer for desktop computers.
Users can easily move between work and leisure with advanced mobile e-mail capabilities, built-in Wi-Fi and GPS functionality as well as rich multimedia features and applications. AT&T supports Windows Marketplace for Mobile for access to a variety of applications.
The iPAQ Glisten features a full QWERTY keyboard and five-way directional pad for fast, easy and accurate messaging including SMS/MMS and e-mail. The touch-enabled AMOLED screen, among the best displays on the market, allows users to easily navigate through menus, windows, and links with the touch of a finger.
“iPAQ Glisten adds to our innovative Windows Phone portfolio,” said Michael Woodward, vice president, Mobile Phone Portfolio, AT&T Mobility and Consumer Markets. “It meets the demands of our business customers while boasting a beautiful AMOLED touch screen and a full package of multimedia features.”
“The iPAQ Glisten packs a powerful punch with its multiple input methods, variety of connectivity options, and a familiar, consistent email experience that allows mobile professionals to connect with the people and information that matter most to them,” said Susan Macke, vice president, Marketing, Handheld Global Business Unit, Personal Systems Group, HP. “Our strategy for success in growing the iPAQ business and customer base is working with industry leaders, like AT&T and Microsoft, and leveraging our collective strengths in the business and prosumer markets.”
Manage and take control of demanding professional lifestyles
Power users stay more connected with Outlook calendaring, Microsoft Word and Excel as well as the ability to view Microsoft PowerPoint and Adobe PDF documents. The HP iPAQ Glisten gives users the ability to manage a single contact list and synchronize them wirelessly or with a PC using a supported e-mail account. It also comes with an integrated inbox that summarizes recent emails, calls, and texts.In addition, users can take advantage of the built-in speakerphone and enjoy the freedom of hands-free control with Voice Commander, voice recognition software which reads text messages, emails and appointment details and lets users begin messages and dial contacts using simple voice prompts.
Bridge work and social life
Web browsing and streaming video on the HP iPAQ Glisten are fast and enjoyable with the improved Internet Explorer Mobile 6. Users can turn on the built-in Wi-Fi quickly with a dedicated on/off button and enjoy high-speed Internet access – featuring automatic access to over 20,000 AT&T Wi-Fi hotspots included at no additional charge with select smartphone data plans.Users can also connect with friends and colleagues on their favorite social networking sites, including a preloaded Facebook application. Mobile professionals can capture pictures and videos with the 3.1 megapixel camera and view them in brilliant color and clarity or edit them with HP Photosmart Mobile and easily share them via email or on the Web using Snapfish.
Pricing and availability
The HP iPAQ Glisten will be available in the coming weeks for $229.99 (receive a $50 AT&T Promotion Card with two-year agreement, smartphone data plan). The smartphone will be available through AT&T business services, HP corporate sales, small and medium business and consumer Websites at AT&T.com and HP.com as well as through third-party e-commerce sites.More information on HP iPAQ Glisten is available at www.att.com/hpipaqglisten and www.hp.com/go/glisten.
Via Engadget.com
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REPORT: BMW using money saved from F1 pullout for more product placement
Filed under: Marketing/Advertising, BMW
You wouldn’t know it if you weren’t a serious film buff or marketing exec, but Propaganda GEM is responsible for a big share of the products you see placed in films. The entertainment marketing agency represents such brands as Audi, Lamborghini, Nokia, Panasonic, Bang & Olufsen and Casio, to name just a few. And it has a new client: the BMW Group.
Following such films as I, Robot and Iron Man, Propaganda has helped Audi significantly increase its profile in Hollywood. But the agency will be terminating its 13-year relationship with Audi (and, we’d expect, Lambo along with them) in order to take on BMW (together with Mini, Rolls-Royce and BMW motorcycles), spearheading a new marketing initiative for the Bavarian automaker.
Having temporarily stolen the James Bond spotlight from Aston Martin and Lotus in the mid-Nineties and launched The Hire film short series in 2001, BMW is no stranger to product placement, but the tie-in with Propaganda promises to take things to the next level. Apparently Munich’s marketing budget has increased recently, thanks in large part to the termination of the company’s Formula One program this year. BMW’s sponsorship of the 2012 Olympic Games in London will only be the tip of the proverbial iceberg, as we can expect to see its products and those of its subsidiaries in more movies, television shows, music videos and video games in the near future. Thanks for the tip, Adam!
[Source: Variety]
REPORT: BMW using money saved from F1 pullout for more product placement originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 24 Nov 2009 14:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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eBay Introduces Bargain-Hunting Deals App for the iPhone
The biggest shopping day of the year for Americans is this Friday, the dreaded Black Friday, and people are in a consuming mood. At the same time, economic pressures have folks watching what they spend. eBay today introduced a new app that capitalizes on both those impulses, called Deals.Deals shares a lot of the functionality of the more full featured eBay mobile app, but it specifically targets eBay’s daily deals, and any zero bid items that have less than four hours remaining in their auction times, with no reserve price and free or fixed rate shipping, and a total price that includes shipping costs. In other words, with the deals the app presents, you pay exactly the price listed.
The app opens with a few featured daily deals already displayed in rotation on the main screen. You can then click on category buttons at the bottom, choosing between apparel, sports, computers, instruments, jewelry, electronics, collectibles, and photography to view auctions from those categories that fit the criteria I mentioned above.
The built-in searches are great for idle browsing (and possibly ruinous for those with strong impulse buying urges), but if you want to target items more specifically, you can either search on the fly, or create and save your own custom search. Creating a custom search allows you to specify keywords, a category, and a price range, and also assign an icon that will be displayed alongside the other default categories at the bottom of the app screen.
If you’d rather not save your search, there’s a magnifying glass icon at the top of the app that you can use instead to launch a one-time search. Next to that is another button that lists all the deals found in your most recent search. In use, I found that there wasn’t enough search criteria to ensure truly focused results. I’d love the addition of an “at least x dollars” filter, so that when I search for “iPhone,” for example, I can filter out most accessories and replacement parts.Finally, you can sign in with your eBay account so that you can pay on the fly for any deal you find via the app with PayPal. The idea behind the app, after all, is to make sure eBay customers have access to the site no matter where they are. Apparently eBay mobile wasn’t driving enough business, and the Deals app is designed to remedy that situation. The app is free in the U.S. store (iTunes link), but beware the hidden costs of shopaholism.
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LG IQ/ Monaco in the wild!
SnapDragon, WVGA, 5 megapixel camera and slide-out keyboard. It seems this will all be arriving for happy Canadian Windows Mobile users.
The LG IQ, which will be showing up on Telus soon and previously known by the code-name LG Monaco, appear to feature an optical mouse/ D-pad, and runs Windows Mobile 6.5 with elements of LG’s S-class interface, which no doubt will run excellently on the Snapdragon processor.
MobileNinjas has published this collection of pictures of the device in the wild, showing what appears to be an excellent 4 row keyboard.
See more pictures below.



Click for larger versions
See more pictures at MobileNinjas here.
Thanks RileySFreeman for the tip.
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The Impact of KSR
As you all know, the Supreme Court’s April 2007 decision in KSR v. Teleflex was a landmark case in the law of obviousness. Although the KSR Court reaffirmed the well-known Graham v. John Deere inquiries as the appropriate framework for evaluating claims under 35 U.S.C. 103, the Court’s emphasis on a flexible approach clearly calls for new thinking about obviousness by patent examiners and practitioners alike.
For its part, the Office’s first step toward addressing the implications of the KSR decision was to publish examination guidelines – available at http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/com/sol/notices/72fr57526.pdf – for its personnel to follow when determining obviousness. In accordance with the Supreme Court’s instructions regarding flexibility, the guidelines recognized that an examiner’s approach to obviousness had been broadened beyond the strict teaching-suggestion-motivation test. At the same time, they also stressed that in order to arrive at a proper conclusion of obviousness, examiners still needed to couple sound reasoning with particular findings of fact.
It has now been just over two years since the publication of the guidelines, and I think it’s understandable that practitioners have been asking the Office for additional guidance. We have heard the public’s concerns about the manner in which the Office is applying the KSR decision. Some have suggested that the Office is determining obviousness in a way that stifles innovation by refusing patents for truly inventive subject matter. They’ve asked us to provide examples of non-obvious claims in view of KSR. Such examples would serve as a complement to the examples of obvious claims already in the guidelines.
Now that a body of case law has been decided in light of the KSR decision, we are able to undertake that task. Office personnel are presently reviewing court decisions with an eye toward identifying factual scenarios to illustrate the developing law of obviousness. The obvious-to-try rationale is one that seems to be garnering quite a bit of interest, and has already been addressed in several such court decisions. We also recognize that this task will be on-going, as the Federal Circuit – and perhaps the Supreme Court – continues to weigh in on the question of obviousness.
KSR has unquestionably refocused the obviousness inquiry by reinvigorating the fundamental questions of Graham. Because the Supreme Court clarified that teaching-suggestion-motivation was not the sole test of obviousness, the Graham analysis is not to be carried out in a rigid manner. As a result, some claims that may have been found to be non-obvious before KSR will now correctly be found to be obvious.
Inventors and practitioners will need to take these developments into account when preparing and prosecuting applications. For example, it may be necessary to review a broader cross-section of prior art than was previously necessary, or to consider filing evidence of unexpected results earlier rather than later in the course of prosecution. By being proactive, practitioners will expedite prosecution and avoid unnecessary fees and RCE filings.
I am committed to providing appropriate and ongoing education for examiners and managers to ensure that the Office is applying KSR and other relevant obviousness decisions as faithfully and clearly as possible. To that end, I would like to continue to hear your concerns about applying the law and developing appropriate additional guidance. I look forward to hearing from you as we continue to work together to understand the contours and boundaries of the Supreme Court’s KSR decision.
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2011 Kia Cadenza bows in Korea, replacing Amanti in the U.S.
Filed under: Sedan, Kia, Misc. Auto Shows, South Korea
2011 Kia Cadenza – Click above for high-res image galleryKia has taken the wraps off the 2010 Cadenza in its home market before its official debut at next month’s Riyadh Motor Show in Saudi Arabia, and if you’re wondering what the South Korean automaker had planned for the next generation Amanti, this is it.
Based on an all-new front-drive platform (Type-N) spanning 195.5 inches, the Cadenza is slightly shorter than the Amanti it’s due to replace, but its wheelbase has grown to 112 inches and Kia managed to reduce the weight by over 280 pounds while keeping torsional rigidity and overall strength up. MacPherson struts are employed up front with a multi-link suspension in the rear, while 11.8-inch discs (front) and 11.2-inch rotors (rear) are hidden behind standard 16-inch or optional 17-inch wheels.
Three engines, each mated to a six-speed automatic transmission, will be available when the Cadenza launches outside of North America in January. Outputs will range from 162 (four-cylinder) to 286 hp (V6), with the latter like to come to the US. Kia hasn’t released when the new Amanti will make it Stateside, but the smart money says sometime late in 2010. Make the jump for the full release.
Gallery: 2011 Kia Cadenza/Amanti
[Source: Kia]
Continue reading 2011 Kia Cadenza bows in Korea, replacing Amanti in the U.S.
2011 Kia Cadenza bows in Korea, replacing Amanti in the U.S. originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 24 Nov 2009 13:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Uranium Demand Could Outstrip Supply For Three Years Straight
While Uranium prices have fallen from 2008 levels, there’s reason to believe they could potentially be back on the upswing.
World uranium consumption outstripped production in 2008 and could do the same in 2009 and 2010. According to the Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics (ABARE) this could send uranium prices up 22% from a forecast average of 46.4 US$ in 2009 to $56.7 in 2010.
Meanwhile, Nymex Uranium futures for December 2010 delivery appear to be around $48.50. Thus ABARE’s last commodities outlook might not yet be priced into the market consensus for this radioactive metal.
One potential uranium-related play might be Canada’s Cameco (CCJ), though we caution investors to due their own due diligence on any stock.
The author does not own shares in Cameco (CCJ).
Join the conversation about this story »
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Red Eye – s2 | e624 – Sat, Nov 21, 2009
Guests Steven Crowder, Andrew W.K., Kimberly Guilfoyle and Mrs. Gutfeld discuss why climate change may drive some women to prostitution!
Add this to your queue
Added: Tue Nov 24 18:31:05 UTC 2009
Air date: Sat Nov 21 00:00:00 UTC 2009
Duration: 43:44 -
Party time: Semi-homemade Edamame and Sweet Pepperdew Hummus Dip
I really enjoy traditional hummus, but sometimes you want to dress it up and take it out dancing. Well, okay, you can’t dance with a chickpea dish, but you can dress up the hummus for a party.On the menu for my first catering gig, a 9-person book club meeting, I made this Edamame and Sweet Pepperdew Hummus dip. What’s great about this hummus combo is that the edamame gives the dip some added texture, and combined with the sweet pepperdews produces an experience similar to a chunky cheese spread.
One of the vegan guests at the book club thought that the hummus had cheese in it which I took as a high compliment because it’s not easy to replicate a cheese-like experience.
To make the dip even easier to make, I started by just buying a tub of traditional hummus at the store. No need to to start from literal scratch. We’re all about fast & simple here at Noshtopia.
Ingredients:
- 14oz. tub of Traditional hummus (your favorite brand)
- 1 cup frozen shelled edamame (I used organic. Frozen is cheaper, but you can use fresh. Trader Joe’s has fresh ready to eat edamame)
- 8 Sweet Pepperdews (these are usually available in the olive bar in the deli section of a grocery store)
Let’s get cooking:
- Soak the frozen edamame in a bowl of warm water for about 15 minutes. The instructions on the bag typically say to microwave the edamame to heat it up, but I try to nuke food as little as possible to retain as much of the nutrients. The warm bath is much friendlier to the edamame (in my opinion).
- Pour the tub of hummus into a mixing bowl.
- Take the pepperdews and put them in 3-cup food processor and grind them up until they are as fine as you can get. I ground the pepperdews for about a minute. Pour the ground pepperdews into the mixing bowl with the hummus.
- When the edamame is thawed, drain the water, and place the edamame into the 3-cup food processor and grind until it’s fine chunky.
- Pour the ground edamame into the mixing bowl with the hummus and pepperdews. Mix all ingredients together until you get a nice even blend.
Pour the Edamame and Sweet Pepperdew Hummus dip into a pretty serving bowl, and compliment with pita bread, pita chips, vegetables, or crackers. Enjoy!








