Hot pot Essays

  • My love for Hot Pot

    598 Words  | 2 Pages

    I love hot pot, always have and always will. Eating hot pot is the thing can cheer me up anytime. Choosing menu makes me happy; waiting for serving food makes me happy; watching the soup to boil makes me happy; even stew the vegetables and meat I love also makes me happy. It’s suitable for any events: birthday, dinner party, gathering, or just for hunger. There is nothing not good about hot pot for me, besides one: it makes me miss it too much. As now this far away from home, it’s quiet hard to find

  • Hot Pot Simulation

    678 Words  | 2 Pages

    to $4.49 and up to $5 therefore increasing the revenue of two or more $829,298 for 2 year and 9 months. Hot pot prices are higher not as high as Melvin's prices we were maybe ten fifteen cents cheaper than him but nevertheless we're in the high range on prices for ice cream. The cost of the operations for the business profits are sufficient to cover the day-to-day operations. Hot Pot has a business loan that is to cover

  • Marketing Case Study: Eat-You-Can Hot Pot Marketing

    914 Words  | 2 Pages

    Business Model Core Strategy  Vision To create the best, branded and a healthy eating catering company to the clients and to be recognized as one of the most admired companies in Malaysia within 5 years.  Mission 1. Eat-All-You-Can Hot Pot Restaurant is a dining shop that provides food and beverages to the consumers around Tronoh area. 2. We aimed to provide plenty of choices of the seafood materials for steamboat buffet to the customers. 3. We endeavor to be dedicated, disciplined and loyal

  • Social Revolution In Cambodia

    2307 Words  | 5 Pages

    April 17, 1976 that Pol Pot the leader of Khmer Rouge regime entered the Cambodian capital of Phonm Penh and took control of the entire country for four horrific years that filled the citizens with terror. Once they got control they declared the day year zero, the day Cambodia would return back to a simply way of life based on mass agriculture. Basically no one was above one another in social class. The Cambodian people would essentially live the life of their ancestors’. Pol Pot and his political supporters

  • My Hot Family Vacation

    516 Words  | 2 Pages

    A few minutes before we landed at the airport, I looked at the screen in front of me and it showed ‘33°C’. It had been a year since I last experienced that kind of heat and I couldn’t bear it last time, so I wondered how I would cope with the heat this time. As the plane began to slow and turn into terminal, I could hear people around me start to get there belongings together so that they could get off the plane first. People returned the magazines to the rack on the back of the chair in front of

  • History And History Of Cambodia

    1166 Words  | 3 Pages

    for four grueling years by Khmer Rouge. The intention of this organization was to return the country back to an agrarian society composed of peasant people focused on agriculture. This Political organization was led by a man with the radical name Pol Pot. This communist regime without a doubt would have slaughtered more of its own people if it weren’t for the invasion of Cambodia by the Vietnamese Army. This invasion ended the horror of the Cambodian population and the rule of terror by the Khmer Rouge

  • You Can Shave the Beast, But Will the Fur Grow Back?

    1934 Words  | 4 Pages

    You Can Shave the Beast, But Will the Fur Grow Back? I live in Brooklyn, New York City. I was born and bred there. I am one of eight million New Yorkers. New York City is sometimes described as a "melting pot," meaning we are like different Kool-Aid powders that dissolve into a uniform color and flavor. My view differs, though. I think we are eight million different insoluble liquids layered one on top of the other, appearing like oil floating on water. When stirred these liquids are rustled

  • A Trip To Panama City

    965 Words  | 2 Pages

    buccaneers led by Henry Morgan. The city was rebuilt within a year, this time on a peninsula 18 miles away and surrounded by a strong wall. This old Spanish city is now the in the middle downtown Panama City. Panama City is an international melting pot and its eating choices range from American fast food to excellent internationall cuisine. Eager to begin our sightseeing, we grabbed lunch at a nearby McDonald's after checking in then caught a bus. The buses in Panama are a tourist attraction in themselves

  • Minorities in Congress

    4214 Words  | 9 Pages

    brows as both the executive and judicial branches of government have also maintained a very white, male, Protestant resemblance. However, Congress was formed for a distinct purpose: to represent the people of the United States of America. The melting pot of America’s huddled masses has been slow in placing leaders that truly represent its demographics. There are a number of simple and complex reasons as to why this under-representation of minorities has occurred. Who is the real minority in Congress

  • The Mosaic of American Culture, It's No Melting Pot

    603 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Mosaic of American Culture, It's No Melting Pot Culture is a behavior that consists of several critical elements, such as language, religion, race and ethnicity, clothing and politics. Culture is what one does in his/her daily life. In order to understand others, we must first keep in mind that every culture carries its own set of values and assumptions. Culture is an evolving, ever changing civilization, which includes several different groups people. For immigrants, America is a land of

  • Biracially Raised Children

    2165 Words  | 5 Pages

    4 % of the US population which report themselves as people who have two or more races. (United States). The number of interracial couples has reached to 1.6 million, which account for almost 4 % of U.S. marriages. ( Fletcher, par. 3 ). In a melting pot country like the United States, where immigration and emigration rates are high, inter-cultural marriage has become an inevitable by- product of mobility. Interracial marriage refers to a marriage which consists of couples with two different racial

  • Realistic and Magical Elements of A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings

    1103 Words  | 3 Pages

    is a type of Magical Realism. How many people know everything? For that matter, how many people actually know anything? The point is that no one, no matter whom, is capable of knowing everything. Realistic elements are tossed into the melting pot of Magical Realism just as fictional elements are so commonly done. Capitalism is a realistic element that is never forgotten. No matter what any writer creates, it will more then likely have at least some kind of capi... ... middle of paper ...

  • British Poetry

    4054 Words  | 9 Pages

    that has many voices to it. There are various ethnicities, cultures and nationalities involved in shaping the face of the contemporary British poetry. But a walk down the memory lane and we find that the early poetry of the century acted as a melting pot to shape the face of the present day trend of the poetry scene. Since 1945 British poetry has moved steadily from what many regard as twentieth century parochial to a twenty-first century international. In the space of little more than fifty years the

  • The Debate Over Multicultural Education in America

    3068 Words  | 7 Pages

    The Debate Over Multicultural Education in America America has long been called "The Melting Pot" due to the fact that it is made up of a varied mix of races, cultures, and ethnicities. As more and more immigrants come to America searching for a better life, the population naturally becomes more diverse. This has, in turn, spun a great debate over multiculturalism. Some of the issues under fire are who is benefiting from the education, and how to present the material in a way so as to offend

  • History of Folk Music in America

    2148 Words  | 5 Pages

    and African). Likewise, the ethnic origin of the music of the southern region is complex. There were Irish jigs, English and Scottish ballads and folk songs, hymns, etc. However, as Malone (1985:4) suggests, the end result of the musical melting pot was a product "more British than anything found in Great Britain today." The 1790 census report indicates that the population of the United States was 60.1% English, 14% Scotch-Irish and 3% Irish. These three groups made up 78% of the total population

  • Tony Hillerman's The Ghostaway

    1003 Words  | 3 Pages

    Tony Hillerman's The Ghostaway In a country that is the melting pot for many cultures, it is hard to interact with all of them. Tony Hillerman educates readers about one culture, the Navajos, through his novel, The Ghostway. After a shooting occurs in the quiet Indian reservation, a Navajo police Jim Chee, officer overcomes many obstacles physically, mentally, and spiritually to sort the case out and protect a young girl. He is constantly struggling with his identity, whether or not he should

  • Cultural Standards Are All That We Have

    2101 Words  | 5 Pages

    Cultural Standards Are All That We Have Our world is a melting pot of different cultures, each one unique in its own respect. Who we are, and what we generally believe to be true or right is a product of what our society values. Because our way of living is what we were raised to believe as “right”, it is often hard to except the fact that others live differently. In reality, different cultures have different moral codes. The belief in the objectivity and universality of moral truth is an unachievable

  • Genocide Essay

    2179 Words  | 5 Pages

    Genocide is the intentional killing of groups with the purpose of eliminating the existence of the group. The term "genocide" was created in 1944 to describe the systematic elimination of Jews under the Nazi regime. The word combines the Greek suffix, "geno-", meaning race, and "-cide", meaning "killing". According to Article II of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Genocide, genocide refers to the following acts that are meant to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical

  • The Cambodian Genocide: A Tragedy Hidden from the World

    2053 Words  | 5 Pages

    discovered years after it began. It took place over a four-year period, from 1975-1979, and left a profound impact on not only Cambodia, but also the world. Pol Pot, the leader of the Cambodian Genocide, sought to impose his view of a perfect communist society throughout Cambodia, with everyone completely equal in economic status, class, and job. Pol Pot believed that the only way to create this society was to force everyone in the country to be rural peasants. To do this, he considered everyone who was

  • How My Environment Shaped My Life

    656 Words  | 2 Pages

    Indian. This separation into types of food allows a convergence to occur between the two types of food. This environmental adaptation is a key difference between India and America. America is often referred to as the salad bowl, rather than the melting pot because the cultures do not join into the majority culture; they rather assimilate into something new and different, which is not always bad. As a whole we are all affected by environmental factors which play in due to personality. You may find someone