Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A Sally Lunn is a large bun or teacake, a type of batter bread, made with a yeast dough including cream and eggs, similar to the sweet brioche breads of France. Sometimes served warm and sliced, with butter, it was first recorded in 1780 [ 1 ] in the spa town of Bath in southwest England .
She visited other doctors, who in turn recommended her bread to their patients. [2] [3] Rudkin then made deals with grocers in the area; it is rumored she convinced one grocer by allowing him a taste. [4] [8] The bread did come at a steeper cost, at 25 cents, compared to 10 cents for other bread. Eventually she outgrew her kitchen, and then her ...
Breakfast Is a Dangerous Meal: Why You Should Ditch Your Morning Meal for Health and Wellbeing. London: Fourth Estate. ISBN 978-0008172343. OCLC 994867927. History of breakfast Breakfast: A History. ISBN 9780759121638; The English Breakfast: The Biography of a National Meal, with Recipes. ISBN 0857854542
Pesarattu is a special breakfast in Andhra Pradesh, India. Pandesal – a common Philippine breakfast bread [120] Pastry [121] Paczki; Peanut butter [122] Pebete; Pear [123] Pekmez; Perico [124] Pesarattu – a breakfast crepe from Andhra Pradesh, India made with green gram [125] Phitti – a hunza bread that is a common breakfast food [126 ...
Algerian breakfast foods. Due to Algeria's history of having been a colony of France, breakfast in Algeria is heavily influenced by French cuisine and most commonly consists of café au lait or espresso along with a sweet pastry (some common examples are croissants, mille-feuilles, pain au chocolats known as "petits pains", etc.) or some kind of traditional bread with a date filling or jam ...
Adelle Davis (25 February 1904 – 31 May 1974) was an American writer and nutritionist, considered "the most famous nutritionist in the early to mid-20th century." [1]: 150 She was an advocate for improved health through better nutrition.
The official position taken by the Wikimedia Foundation is that "faithful reproductions of two-dimensional public domain works of art are public domain".This photographic reproduction is therefore also considered to be in the public domain in the United States.
The Old English word for bread was hlaf (hlaifs in Gothic: modern English loaf) which appears to be the oldest Teutonic name. [1] Old High German hleib [2] and modern German Laib derive from this Proto-Germanic word, which was borrowed into some Slavic (Czech: chléb, Polish: bochen chleba, Russian: khleb) and Finnic (Finnish: leipä, Estonian: leib) languages as well.