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Pain de campagne – French for "country bread", and also called "French sourdough", [5] it is typically a large round loaf (miche) made from either natural leavening or baker's yeast. Most traditional versions of this bread are made with a combination of white flour with whole wheat flour and/or rye flour, water, leavening and salt.
Manhattan Village Academy (MVA) is a small, public high school located in the Flatiron District, New York City. It consists of grades 9–12 with an enrollment of 461 students. The school is part of the New York City Department of Education. The school was founded by veteran educator Mary Butz in 1993.
PS 41 opened in 1867. When Grammar School No. 41 first opened, it was located by what is now the school yard entrance at Greenwich Avenue and Charles Street. At the time a girls’-only school, it was described by The New York Times as a “model of comfort and neatness” and “one of the finest school buildings in the city.” [1]
Pain de campagne ("country bread" in French), also called "French sourdough", [1] is typically a large round loaf ("miche") made from either natural leavening or baker's yeast. Most traditional versions of this bread are made with a combination of white flour with whole wheat flour and/or rye flour, water, leavening and salt.
The pan bagnat (pronounced [pɑ̃ baˈɲa]) (pan bagna, and alternatively in French as pain bagnat) [2] [3] [a] is a sandwich that is a specialty of Nice, France. [5] The sandwich is composed of pain de campagne, a whole wheat bread, enclosing a salade niçoise, [6] a salad composed mainly of raw vegetables, hard boiled eggs, anchovies and/or tuna, and olive oil, salt, and pepper.
Warwick School: East New York, Brooklyn [86] PS 159: Isaac Pitkin School: East New York, Brooklyn [87] PS 165: Ida Posner School: Brownsville, Brooklyn [88] PS 174: Dumont School: East New York, Brooklyn [89] PS 183: Dr. Richard Green: Rockaway Park, Queens [81] PS 183: Daniel Chappie James School: Brownsville, Brooklyn: Daniel Chappie James ...
The Bayard Rustin Educational Complex, also known as the Humanities Educational Complex, is a "vertical campus" of the New York City Department of Education which contains a number of small public schools. Most of them are high schools — grades 9 through 12 – along with one combined middle and high school – grades 6 through 12.
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