This recipe is so special to us as it comes from Damien’s Nana Barb, who has since passed away. Most of Damien’s family members make this pie, which is renowned in the Flinders Ranges, home of the urti (quandong).
Discover the beautiful butterflies that visit a garden in East Berlin, Pennsylvania, and learn about the plants they need to thrive.
Drop a ❤️ if this resonates with you! What has helped you to NOT take other people’s behavior personally?🤔 📝Let me know in the comments!. peaceful_barb · Original audio
photos: m&j Aunt Jo & Barb’s Hungarian kiffel cookies were out of this world, as usual – no doubt, due to Grandma “Pieces” family tradition of adding vanilla ice cream to the already super …
When Charles Barkley, the quippy commentator on TNT’s “Contained in the NBA” studio present, grew bored with Draymond Inexperienced’s aggressive on-court
This pulled chicken sandwich has a cult following in the Massachusetts towns of Methuen and Lawrence.
Drop a ❤️ if any of these resonate with you… What’s a hard truth that has helped you grow?🌱🌷 📝Let us know in the comments, so we can learn together… 💖 @michellemaros & @peaceful_barb....
Now this is island living! A Victoria water taxi to Fisherman's Wharf and dining dockside at Barb's Fish & Chips. You can even feed the local seals!
Now this is island living! A Victoria water taxi to Fisherman's Wharf and dining dockside at Barb's Fish & Chips. You can even feed the local seals!
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Open access peer-reviewed chapter
The Noisy Paint Box The Colors and Sounds of Kandisky's Abstract Art By Barb RosenstockIllustrated by Mary GrandPréKnopf Books for Young ReadersISBN: 978-0307978486 2015 CALDECOTT HONOR ORDER NOW:IndieBound | Barnes & Noble | AmazonVasya Kandinsky was a proper little boy, so his family expected him to paint like a proper artist. But when Vasya opened his paint
Jeff Himmelman’s book, Yours in Truth: A Personal Portrait of Ben Bradlee, debuted last month to much fanfare and a certain amount of controversy. Here, the author digs through his files to find his favorite zingers from the mind and pen of his feisty subject. Over the four years that I spent with former Washington Post executive editor Ben Bradlee—often buried in his archives, but also sitting with him in his office or at his dinner table—I always enjoyed his verbal style, which blends the high and the low in a way that only Ben can pull off. As his secretary, Carol Leggett, once put it, “Ben hits the nail on the head.” It’s part of what makes being around him so much fun. Assembled below are some of my favorite moments of his, some of which made the book and some of which didn’t. The best make you laugh and think at the same time. (Leggett’s favorite story: her son met with Ben once for some advice, and after their long meeting was over, Ben told her son, for all of The Post’s seventh floor to hear: “Keep your pecker up.”)
IBM’s personalized e-learning project knocks off one of its 5in5 predictions Barb Darrow, gigaom.com On Monday, IBM, as part of its annual 5 in 5 extravaganza, predicted that cloud-based...