Word: ketchup
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...city, ours are the size of subway cars, filled with the same kind of really angry people trying to squeeze their carts past one another so they can buy 28 oz. of peanut butter for $6. Selection? Ha. We get chicken noodle and tomato soup, and two sizes of ketchup. Certainly there are the fancy food shops where you can buy one orange for $2 and get incredible cheese and real Italian salami imported from Genoa that costs $4.99 - for a quarter of a pound...
Still, apart from such staples, Café 150 is living up to its name. It never serves tropical fruits, and it has planted lemon and lime trees just outside to ensure local citrus. The restaurant grows many of its own herbs and makes its own ketchup. And last fall Café 150 jarred tomatoes and fruit so that even though it's March, Googlers can get a taste of the local harvest every day. Imagine that: a company as ostentatiously hip as Google canning fruit in its kitchens...
...walls of the gallery kindle nostalgia for the condiment stand at a baseball stadium: ketchup red, mustard yellow, and pickle green...
...rather cold by now, there is a veritable lack of fur on anything. This fact isn’t particularly startling, I suppose. Most people who live in Cambridge wear breathable organic fabrics that are also, somehow, waterproof. Wearing a fur coat seems indulgent, and makes you a walking ketchup-target for one of those hoodlums from the Papercut Zine Library. And ketchup is no fun. On a pragmatic level, however, fur is incredibly warm and incredibly natural. What’s more natural than wearing a dead thing’s skin? Truly, fur is the very best example...
...wrap than the Italian version. The reference to the "shared use of thick tomato sauce as the basis of many dishes" in Italian and Chinese cuisine was also puzzling. Go to any Cantonese restaurant, and you will be hard-pressed to find a dish whose sauce is based on ketchup. Jude K.C. Lam Hong Kong Defining the Crisis Lisa Beyer's analysis of why the Middle East crisis isn't really about terrorism [Aug. 7] was an incisive assessment of the U.S.'s misguided foreign policy in the region. She further explained why that policy is virtually guaranteed to fail...