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This page was last edited on 15 December 2024, at 12:04 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Thousand Islands National Park (established 1904), formerly known as the St. Lawrence Islands National Park, is a Canadian National Park located on the 1000 Islands Parkway in the Thousand Islands Region of the Saint Lawrence River. The islands are actually the worn-down tops of ancient mountains.
Nutrition (Per bagel): Calories: 240 Fat: 2 g (Saturated Fat: 0.5 g) Sodium: 440 mg Carbs: 51 g (Fiber: 6 g, Sugar: 9 g) Protein: 9 g. Aunt Millie's Brown Sugar Swirl Soft Bagels have 6 grams of ...
Steinberg's began as a grocery store founded in 1917 in Montreal by Jewish-Hungarian immigrant, Ida Steinberg. Her five sons, led by Sam Steinberg, grew the company from a tiny storefront on St. Lawrence Boulevard into the most popular and largest supermarket chain in Quebec. [1]
The Montreal-style bagel or Montreal bagel (sometimes beigel; Yiddish: בײגל, romanized: beygl; French: Bagel de Montréal) is a distinctive variety of handmade and wood-fired baked bagel. In contrast to the New York–style bagel , [ 1 ] the Montreal bagel is smaller, thinner, sweeter and denser, with a larger hole, and is always baked in a ...
St. Lawrence is a French-Canadian restaurant in the Japantown neighbourhood of Vancouver, British Columbia. It opened in June 2017. It opened in June 2017. Located on the ground floor of a heritage building at 269 Powell St, originally a Japanese general store , St. Lawrence serves a blend of traditional Québécois dishes and French haute ...
The Great Canadian Bagel is a coffee house and quick service restaurant chain and franchise. [1] It was established in 1993 and is an affiliate of The Great American Bagel Bakery . [ 2 ] [ 3 ] As of March 2024 [update] it has 14 stores located in Ontario , New Brunswick , and Prince Edward Island . [ 4 ]
The Long Sault Parkway was created as a direct result of the building of the Moses-Saunders Power Dam and the St. Lawrence Seaway in the 1950s. [13] The Seaway was a massive undertaking of both the Canadian and US governments that involved the "removal" of the Long Sault rapids by raising the water level approximately 26 metres (85 ft).