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...twenty years as manager, the store’s reputation has made it one of the Phantom Gourmet’s eight picks for favorite candy stores in New England. If you are having trouble finding authentic Italian baking ingredients—like hazelnut flour, Calabrese licorice or whole candied fruit for your Christmas panettone—look no further. And on the off chance that your favorite condiment isn’t in stock, Reilly will import it straight from Italy. Even the fudge flavors are rotated seasonally—it’s too late for pumpkin right...

Author: By Diana E. Garvin, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: To Market, To Market | 4/29/2004 | See Source »

...twenty years as manager, the store’s reputation has made it one of the Phantom Gourmet’s eight picks for favorite candy stores in New England. If you are having trouble finding authentic Italian baking ingredients—like hazelnut flour, Calabrese licorice or whole candied fruit for your Christmas panettone—look no further. And on the off chance that your favorite condiment isn’t in stock, Reilly will import it straight from Italy. Even the fudge flavors are rotated seasonally—it’s too late for pumpkin right...

Author: By Diana E. Garvin, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: To Market, To Market | 4/28/2004 | See Source »

...lentils and lamb or chicken, is another favorite. Many restaurants also now serve African dishes such as pap or mealie meal (maize-meal porridge) and umngqusho, made of crushed dried maize kernels, sugar beans, butter, onions, potatoes, chilies and lemons. Also good with pap, or with dumplings made from flour and water, is morogo, a type of African spinach eaten in many parts of the continent. For the more adventurous there's mogodo, a stew of tripe and vegetables. With 3,600 km of coastline, South Africa boasts fantastic seafood, both fresh (try snoek, a Cape fish often barbecued...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Fusion of Flavors | 4/11/2004 | See Source »

While the specifics of the recipe could not be revealed, the staff could reveal the general process of creating the beloved rolls. Cano starts by mixing flour, soy oil, yeast, sugar and salt. His dough is refrigerated at 39 degrees for up to 12 hours. To make rolls from the dough, he lets chilled dough rise at room temperature for an hour and a half before dipping balls in cornmeal and baking them at 375 degrees for 15 minutes...

Author: By Rebecca M. Myerson, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Favorite Square Recipes Revealed | 3/4/2004 | See Source »

...that is forbidden is snobbery. Lee, who was forced to cook for her four younger siblings at the age of 9 because their mother was seriously ill, has since used trial and error to make quick fixes taste better. She'll add cream cheese, sugar and flour to store-bought slice-and-bake cookies to make them tastier--while making life easier so that "even Mom, when she doesn't have time because she's working her little tushy off, can roll it out with the kids and enjoy the fun part." At a time when we are judged more...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Who Will Be The Next Domestic Diva? | 2/16/2004 | See Source »

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