Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This recipe starts with the classic three ingredients that makes up any good dip: sour cream, cream cheese, and mayonnaise! Add some canned artichokes, cheesy parmesan, and spicy pickled cherry ...
A recipe for a tequila-based cocktail first appeared in the 1930 book My New Cocktail Book by G. F. Steele. Without noting a specific recipe or inventor, a drink called the Tequila Daisy was mentioned in the Syracuse Herald as early as 1936. Margarita is Spanish for Daisy, which is a nickname for Margaret. [18]
Corona is a Mexican brand of beer produced by Grupo Modelo in Mexico and exported to markets around the world. Constellation Brands is the exclusive licensee and sole importer of Corona in the fifty states of the United States, Washington, D.C., and Guam.
The word raita first appeared in print around the 19th century; it comes from the Hindi language. [1] The word raita in Bengali and Hindi is a portmanteau of the Sanskrit word rajika or the derivative Hindi rai (pronounced "ra-ee") meaning black mustard seed, and tiktaka, meaning sharp or pungent.
Corona, people at a cantus (Dutch drinking and singing party) The Coronas, an Irish rock band "Corona" (song), by The Minutemen; Corona, by Japanese composer Toru Takemitsu; Corona, the circle of clergy or singers who surround the altar, and origin of the term choir; La corona, an opera; Corona Capital, music festival
The coronary sinus (from Latin corona 'crown' [citation needed]) is the largest vein of the heart. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It drains over half of the deoxygenated blood from the heart muscle into the right atrium .
Cottage cheese is a curdled milk product with a mild flavour and a creamy, heterogeneous, soupy texture, made from skimmed milk.An essential step in the manufacturing process distinguishing cottage cheese from other fresh cheeses is the addition of a "dressing" to the curd grains, usually cream, which is mainly responsible for the taste of the product.
The word corona is a Latin word meaning "crown", from the Ancient Greek κορώνη (korōnè, "garland, wreath"). It was applied to the coronary arteries because of a notional resemblance (compare the photos). The word arterie in Anglo-French (artaire in Old French, and artērium in Latin) means "windpipe" and "an artery". It was applied to ...