Charlotte food: last word

Posted by admin | Posted in News Now | Posted on 25-04-2010-05-2008

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NJ woman wins $1 million in national bake-off
(The Associated Press) Simple ingredients and a dash of luck made amateur baker Sue Compton’s dessert recipe the winner of the 44th Pillsbury Bake-Off Contest and earned her a mention on “The Oprah Winfrey Show.”

The company announced Wednesday that Compton, of Delanco, N.J., won $1 million in prize money and a line of kitchen appliances for her “Mini Ice Cream Cookie Cups.”

Guide to Pick Your Own farms in the Charlotte region
(Data presentation by Ted Mellnik, tmellnik@charlotteobserver.com)

Creamery comes into its own
(By Andrea Weigl, andrea.weigl@newsobserver.com) On a late-winter Saturday at the Carrboro farmers’ market, people gathered around the Chapel Hill Creamery table despite the chill.

Next to a sign that read “Farmhouse cheese – Jersey Dairy with intensive rotational grazing” were rows of cheese: fresh and smoked mozzarella, paneer, Asiago, “Pheta,” a Camembert-style cheese called Carolina Moon, a younger version called New Moon, a young tangy cheese called Dairlyand Farmers’ Cheese, and Hickory Grove, the creamery’s Muenster-like signature cheese.

Thanks to Conservatove Rumblings Blog for this update and story. Providing great iinsight at http://ianessling.com/blog/.

Around Charlotte NC This Week

Posted by admin | Posted in News Now | Posted on 25-04-2010-05-2008

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MCC Career/Job Fair to be held Wednesday, April 21
MCC Career/Job Fair to be held Wednesday, April 21

Securities fraud case continued
MOORESVILLE, NC – The case of a Mooresville man, accused of operating a Ponzi-style scheme, has been continued.

Man charged with robbery
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Computer classes at Mooresville library Thursday
A pair of free computer classes will begin soon at the Mooresville Public Library. The first – “Internet Basics: Emailing and Searching” – will teach you how to use the Web’s search functions. It’s April 15 from 6:15-8:15 p.m. Register at http://tinyurl.com/y8sah8j

Thanks to Conservatove Rumblings Blog for this update and story. Providing great iinsight at http://ianessling.com/blog/.

Steak & Ale’s Hawaiian Chicken Recipe

Posted by admin | Posted in News Now | Posted on 25-04-2010-05-2008

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Steak & Ale’s Hawaiian Chicken Recipe
Steak & Ale’s Hawaiian Chicken Recipe

Serving Size: 4

Ingredients:

6 boneless chicken breasts
2 cups pineapple juice
2 tablespoons Worcestershire Sauce
1/4 cup soy Sauce
2 tablespoons sugar

Cooking Directions:
In a bowl combine all ingredients except for chicken.
Stir.
Using a fork, poke about 5 to 8 sets of holes in each chicken breast.
Put chicken in marinade, making sure it is covered in the mixture.
Add more pineapple juice if necessary.
Cover and refrigerate for 24 hours.
Grill.

Restaurant Recipes at http://secretrecipes.blogspot.com

The Quick 10: Paddington Bear

Posted by admin | Posted in News Now | Posted on 25-04-2010-05-2008

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q10

Don’t tell Winnie the Pooh, but he’s not the only big shot on the children’s book Bear Market – Paddington Bear has been charming children and adults alike since 1958. And he has a much cooler wardrobe than Winnie, if you ask me. Here’s how Paddington came to be (and what he’s been up to in the past few years).

1. Have you ever seen a neglected toy abandoned on a store shelf or tossed aside, unwanted, and felt oddly sorry for it? That’s exactly how Paddington Bear came about. Author Michael Bond was roaming a department store on Christmas Eve in 1956 looking for a gift for his wife (tsk, tsk) when he came across a lonely teddy bear all alone on a shelf. Even the last-minute shoppers didn’t want him. He felt sorry for the bear and “adopted” him, but the idea of the abandoned bear stuck with Bond. He began writing stories about it mostly for his own amusement before he realized he might have something children would be interested in.

2. Paddington isn’t this beloved bear’s real name. He has a Peruvian name but tells his adoptive family that no one would be able to understand it (we find out much later that it’s “Pastuso”). They decide to call him Paddington, which is the name of the railway station where he was discovered. The bear Bond took home from the department store on Christmas Eve received the same name because Bond and his wife lived near Paddington Station at the time. In fact, they still live in the vicinity.

3. Originally, Paddington wasn’t going to be from Darkest Peru. First drafts had Paddington calling “Darkest Africa” home. But after Bond got an agent, the agent informed him no bears exist in Africa. Peru, however, does have spectacled bears.

4. It took about seven years from the time the first book was published in 1958, but eventually the sales of Paddington books allowed Bond to retire from his job as a cameraman for the BBC.

5. I should say he’s doing well in retirement: Paddington books have sold more than 35 million copies and have been translated into over forty languages, which surprises Mr. Bond. “I am constantly surprised by all the translations because I thought that Paddington was essentially an English character,” he said. “Obviously Paddington-type situations happen all over the world.”

6. There’s a little statue of Paddington Bear at Paddington Station. He’s just the size you would expect him to be. When you’re done snapping a photo with him, you can march yourself over to the shop at the station that sells nothing but Paddington Bear gear.
7. Poor Paddington faced a rather grown up situation in 2008. When P.B. goes to report his stolen shopping cart, the police discover that he’s in London illegally from Darkest Peru and immigration issues ensue. Bond denies that he was trying to make any particular statement; he says he was just trying to bring Paddington up to date with the times for his 50th anniversary.

8. Of course Paddington adores marmalade, and no reason is ever given for that (“Bears love marmalade” is all we get). But in 2007, he decided to give Marmite a try instead. Although he had been enjoying marmalade for the 49 years prior (always keeping an emergency sandwich under his hat, just in case), it was apparently the right time to try something different and finds a Marmite and cheese sandwich to be “rather good.” But don’t expect Paddington’s favorite fare to be replaced in the books anytime soon – it was a one-time advertising promotion and won’t be introduced into Paddington canon.

9. Paddington’s famous Wellies weren’t that famous until the plush version of him came out in 1972. The owner of a small business called Gabrielle Designs decided to make a Paddington stuffed animal for her children because none were on the market yet. Although the bear had received a pair of Wellington boots in 1964’s Paddington Marches On, he wasn’t necessarily known for them. The Wellies were placed on the stuffed bear’s feet just to help him stand upright, and he became known for his colorful boots when the toy became a commercial success.

10. Speaking of Paddington’s clothes, here’s where the rest of the famous outfit came from: The blue duffle coat was purchased for him by the Browns soon after he went to live with them. After all, you can’t have a bear running around naked, can you? The old hat was handed down to him from his uncle, who is still in Darkest Peru with Aunt Lucy. Aunt Lucy is the one who placed the “Please Look After This Bear” tag around his neck.

I have to say, I totally forgot about how much I once loved Paddington until I started writing this. I’ll definitely be adding these to our library soon.

Enjoy your weekend! If you want to celebrate in true Paddington style, make yourself some cocoa and a marmalade sandwich sometime this weekend.

8 Shameless Abuses of Diplomatic Immunity

Posted by admin | Posted in News Now | Posted on 25-04-2010-05-2008

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Diplomatic immunity may be intended to keep diplomats from running afoul of local authorities while serving abroad, but some workers take it as a license to act like jerks. While the Vienna Conventions on International Relations of 1961 outline a series of safeguards that protect diplomats from being unfairly punished should tempers flare between their country and their host nations, more than a few diplomats have taken advantage of their privileges in an irritating way. Here are just a few annoying little liberties diplomats have taken.

1. Park Wherever You Want

The most common manifestation of this inconsiderate behavior involves diplomats’ parking. Just ask New Yorkers; diplomats at the United Nations apparently view Manhattan as their private parking lot. Back in 1996, diplomats racked up 143,508 parking summons, which would have cost them $15.8 million if not for diplomatic immunity. Russia alone was responsible for 32,000 of those fines.

2. Or Clear a Spot for Yourself

A few hundred thousand unpaid tickets look like downright responsible behavior when compared to former Afghan diplomat Shah Mohammad Dost’s antics behind the wheel. In 1987, Dost was accused of intentionally running a woman over in order to get a parking spot during a trip to an air conditioner store in Queens. According to the victim, her boyfriend was backing into the spot when Dost rolled up and demanded they cede the space to him because he was an Afghan diplomat. When they refused, Dost threw his Lincoln into gear and ran the woman over, sending her to the hospital.

3. Become a Doggie Diplomat

Here’s a case where diplomatic immunity didn’t work out quite as well as a diplomat had hoped. In 1975, a U.N. delegate from Barbados claimed that diplomatic immunity extended to his pooch, who had bitten several people. The delegate warned police officers of “possible international consequences” if they tried to contain the aggressive German shepherd. Nice try, but Fido’s not exactly negotiating trade treaties.

A Mexican diplomat got the same rude awakening in 1984. Military attaché Enrique Flores was keeping a pack of 10 basset hounds at his Virginia home in violation of local zoning laws. Even though the laws stated Flores could only have four hounds at once, he appealed to the State Department for diplomatic immunity. The State Department turned him down. Guess they’re cat people.

4. Lose Your Immunity in the Divorce

In 1989, Mozambique’s representative to the United Nations wanted to divorce his American wife, so he waived his diplomatic immunity in order to take the matter to court. Unfortunately for the diplomat, Antonio Fernandez, he didn’t fare well in the case; he ended up losing the couple’s $5 million estate in the decision. Whoops.

Fernandez didn’t suffer from any shortage of gall, though. After losing the decision he attempted to invoke his diplomatic immunity privileges to keep from paying his ex-wife. Fernandez took his case all the way to the Supreme Court, but in the end his former love got the couple’s Greenwich, Connecticut, estate.

5. Light Up on a Plane

Just two weeks ago, a Qatari diplomat ran into trouble on a Washington-to-Denver flight when he decided to have a smoke in the plane’s lavatory. To make things worse, Mohammed Al-Madadi also made a joke that some passengers and flight personnel perceived to be a terrorist threat. Air marshals sounded various alarms, and in the end two F-16 fighter jets escorted the flight to its final destination. While diplomatic immunity kept Al-Madadi from being charged with any crimes, the Qatari government sent him home to help smooth things over.

6. Stop Cutting Your Lawn

In 2008, the residents of New Rochelle, New York, found themselves with a common problem: one house in the community had become a real eyesore. It had sat vacant for years as weeds had overgrown the yard, the paint had gone bad, and the property found itself in an ugly state of decay. New Rochelle had a problem, though: the dilapidated house had a sort of diplomatic immunity that enabled it to be that run-down. Somalia owned the house, which it occasionally used to house United Nations diplomats. Since the vacant house was exempt from taxes, the town couldn’t use liens or other penalties to force the Somalians to do a little landscaping. The lesson here: if you want to stop mowing your lawn, join the Foreign Service.

7. Stop Paying Your Rent

A word of advice to landlords out there: if diplomats want to rent one of your properties, you might want to get a hefty security deposit. Just ask some of Manhattan’s biggest landlords. A 1996 New York Times story illustrated the difficulty of renting to diplomats; landlords really don’t have any legal mechanism through which they can collect delinquent rent or evict diplomatic tenants. At the time the article was written, one West African country was over $20,000 behind in its rent checks for a pair of luxury apartments in midtown Manhattan.

If you or I pulled a stunt like that, we’d be out on the streets. Fortunately for diplomats, though, they also enjoy a special kind of immunity known as “inviolability,” which states that the private residences of diplomats can’t be entered by the host country’s agents without the visiting country’s consent. In short, the only way you can evict foreign diplomats is if their own country gives you the thumbs-up first.

8. Slaughter a Sheep

Nobody ever said all diplomats were gentlemen. In 1984, six Iranian diplomats caused a stink in London by taking a sheep from a house and cutting its throat in the street. The ritual public slaughter of an animal is generally frowned upon, but since the men had diplomatic immunity the British authorities were powerless to charge them with violating animal cruelty laws.

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