Word: sweete
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Show your school pride at the Harvard-Yale game with the Crimson Royale, a versatile quaff equally fit for drinking at a tailgate, pre-gaming for breakfast or celebrating with a victory toast. Enjoy this festive and sweet champagne cocktail all day long. The cranberry and orange flavors are perfect seasonal flavors for the waning fall days. Try any orange-flavored liqueur like Grand Mariner or Cointreau. Cranberry liqueurs, which are mostly produced in North America, are slightly more obscure but well worth the effort. Look for locally manufactured brands. And of course, buy a little extra champagne for celebrating...
...Nicholas Z. Renteria ’03 is totally sweating Jennifer T. Cranter ’05. Correction: Renteria is totally sweating Cranter’s melons. Said the hornball, “God, do I want to get my hands on those sweet twin worlds of pleasure?...
...team with 13 NHL draft picks and significant depth, the undrafted forward with the sweet slapshot is still relied upon in crucial game situations...
...pastry chef and owner, Alia Rejeb, is Tunisian, but the chef de cuisine is Algerian. What does this mean for the diner? The Algerian chef, Krimo Dahim, explained that Algerian food is known for being sweet, not as spicy as Tunisian. When he cooks, he says, he likes to balance all the flavors. And I could taste it in the food. There was a complexity of seasonings, myriad spices melding to make one unique taste, but always with an undertone of sweetness...
...poorest are barely getting by, but wealthier Iraqis are making the most of the Muslim holiday season. Just prior to the iftar meal that marks the end of each day's fast, traffic jams occur outside Baghdad's famous sweet shops. Iraqis in their finest suits and dresses are packing into restaurants like Al Gouta, where they dine on heaping plates of grilled Tigris river carp, shish kebab, hommus and spicy olives. The tab for a family of four runs about $12. That seems like a bargain, but in Baghdad it's the equivalent of a year's salary...