Word: sweete
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...admit that some of the matches are kind of sweet. In one “Vows” column, an heiress fell in love with a man who led foraging tours in Central Park, instructing people which wild plants were and weren’t edible. Asked if he ate the dandelion roots served at their wedding, the heiress’s father quipped, “Listen, I worry about the salad at Le Cirque, never mind what comes out of my own lawn...
...Asian fare benefits from bubbles. Dishes shouldn't be too spicy, oily or sweet, and you should match the food's complexity with that of the beverage. On that score, it's helpful to know that vintages are more complex than nonvintages and that all wines, like most people, grow more complex with age. Now that you've opened up your options, go celebrate by opening a bottle of your favorite champagne...
...mutability, uncertainty and entrapment. Dramaturg Gideon Lester’s program notes highlight the scene in which Titania embraces Bottom, and points out that the tenderness of her gesture is undercut by her language, with its images of destructive nature: “So doth the woodbine the sweet honeysuckle / Gently entwist; the female ivy so/ Enrings the barky fingers...
...Bonne ’04 had a heaping helping of hot sex delivered fresh to his door on Valentine’s Day but he sent it back when he discovered that the sides of warm cuddling and sweet pillow talk were left out of the order. La Bonne’s thesis-writing girlfriend, Jill N. Bernard ’04, tried to skimp on the Valentine’s festivities by skipping the foreplay, so she could get back to finishing her most recent chapter, but La Bonne would have none of it. Says La Bonne...
...sole cashier has flipped through the nearby copies of US Weekly and People and is in the process of rearranging a Valentine’s Day candy display. “Sweet Caroline” comes in over the radio, and the store settles down to relative silence for the night...