Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In Italy, they are known as cantucci, biscotti di Prato or biscotti etruschi and may be dipped in a drink, traditionally Vin Santo. Smaller biscotti may be known as biscottini [2] or cantuccini. [3] In Italian, the word biscotti (sg.: biscotto) encompasses all types of biscuits or cookies.
Vin Santo (Italian: [vin ˈsanto]; lit. ' Holy Wine ' ) is a style of Italian dessert wine . Traditional in Tuscany , these wines are often made from white grape varieties such as Trebbiano and Malvasia , although Sangiovese may be used to produce a rosé style known as "Occhio di Pernice" or eye of the partridge .
The Three Eyes National Park (Spanish: Parque Nacional Los Tres Ojos) is a 50-yard open-air limestone cave located in Mirador del Este park, within the Santo Domingo Este municipality of the Dominican Republic. [1] The park features a series of three lakes, or ojos, [2] and is one of the country's most popular tourist attraction.
Vortex Spring is a popular diving area both for experienced and novice divers. Recreational diver training is offered at the park. There are two underwater training platforms at 20 feet (6.1 m) which are often used for Open Water certification dives, and an inverted metal "talk box" that traps air, allowing divers to remove their regulators and talk to each other while under the surface. [1]
Cave Spring or Cave Springs may refer to a location in the United States: Cave Springs, Arkansas; Cave Spring, Georgia. Cave Spring Commercial Historic District, Cave Spring, GA, listed on the NRHP in Georgia; Cave Spring Residential Historic District, Cave Spring, GA, listed on the NRHP in Georgia; Cave Springs, Kansas
Cave Spring is a city in Floyd County, Georgia, United States. It is located 17 miles (27 km) southwest of Rome , the county seat . The population of Cave Spring was 1,200 at the 2010 census , [ 4 ] up from 975 at the 2000 census.
The inhabitants of both sites moved to Santa Domingo Pueblo. Pueblo de los Muertos: Hohokam: Cibola County: Ruins Pueblo Largo: Tano Galisteo: Great house Ruins located on the Galisteo Basin. There were eight rectangular great houses of stone and adobe with four regular kivas, five plazas, and a shrine.
The name, Cave of the Winds, relates to a legend involving the Apache, who were said to believe the cave was the home of a Great Spirit of the Wind. The first documented mention of the cave came in 1880 when two brothers, John and George Pickett, discovered the cave during a hike in Williams Canyon led by the Rev. Roselle T. Cross, pastor of ...