Word: beef
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Edith Palmer's Country Inn, Virginia City, Nev. Rich and exotic dishes, ranging from beef Stroganoff to san-juck, an epicurean dish of the Korean upper class, prepared by Owner Edith Palmer Kolodziej. Expensive...
...Milton Inn, Cockeysville, Md. Former coach stop 60 miles from Washington, D.C. Owner Allilio Allori helped in his father's inn in Corsica, now pleases Washingtonians with his baked snapper livournaise, beef bourguignon, and Long Island duckling...
Poor Richard's, Ogunquit, Me. In a 1780 tavern on the King's Highway, now a restaurant specializing in Yankee pot roast cooked in wine, baked lobster in wine sauce, breasts of capon and prime ribs of beef...
...tiny sports plane at treetop level all the way from Budapest. A pair of Rumanians recently hid for three days under a truckload of tomatoes bound for Austria. Another rode into Vienna in a refrigerated railway car, where he spent seven days and nights huddled between two sides of beef, nibbling raw meat for nourishment. One Hungarian even ran a stolen train across the Austrian border at 50 m.p.h. But of all the tight spots escapees get themselves into, no one could match the Rumanian contortionist who folded her self up like a lawn chair and slipped across the border...
Fire & Urine. How accurately the Parsis reflect Zoroaster's own teachings is a matter of much scholarly debate. Many of their religious customs-such as abstention from both beef and pork -appear to have been borrowed from Islam or Hinduism. But in their temples, which nonbelievers are forbidden to enter, the Parsis still worship fire, which was Zoroaster's chosen symbol of divine power. At their marriage feasts, wedded couples ceremoniously sip bull's urine because it allegedly purifies both body and soul...