Word: batch
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...market is bumpier than expected. Consider the case of Joan Allen, 51, a free-lance television producer in Baltimore, Md., who decided to sell her popular dense, mousselike brownies after her job opportunities were severely curtailed during the post-9/11 recession. Faced with creating her brownie large-batch formula, she quickly discovered that she didn't have the slightest clue about how to work with commercial-grade liquid eggs. After that, two arrangements for using commercial kitchens eventually fell apart before she entered into her current agreement with Louise's Bakery in Baltimore. But probably her biggest mistake...
...aims at returning to the original text,” the Eliot interpretation of Streetcar is not entirely orthodox; almost every time that the production strays from convention, however, it’s a good thing. The play’s music, for example—that batch of motifs that Williams fetishized in his stage directions—is nearly nonexistent, but to no great detriment. And the production’s Stanley Kowalski (Simon N. Nicholas ’07) is an interesting interpretation: Williams describes Stanley as a “gaudy seed-bearer” neanderthal...
...it’s one thing this year’s group of freshmen is not, it’s tense. Coming in after a bad season, and as a highly-regarded batch of young talent, the freshman might have felt burdened by high performance demands. But their ebullient nature and breadth of experience has prevented the stress from affecting them...
...fragrance, sending samples of the scent until it is refined to satisfaction. The whole process can take three months or more; prices start around $4,500 and go up depending on the rarity of the ingredients (rose extracts from the Saudi Arabian city of Taif cost $24,000 per batch). Once the perfume has been completed it is registered, and the customer receives a certificate of exclusivity...
...fragrance, sending samples of the scent until it is refined to satisfaction. The whole process can take three months or more; prices start around $4,500 and go up depending on the rarity of the ingredients (rose extracts from the Saudi Arabian city of Taif cost $24,000 per batch). Once the perfume has been completed it is registered, and the customer receives a certificate of exclusivity. If you can't wait three months, then Florentine perfumer Lorenzo Villoresi will conjure up a fragrance in a mere two hours. You choose ingredient by ingredient - the master tests their effect...