Word: yogurt
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...town. Two of China's biggest dairies, Mengniu and Yili, have headquarters in the area, and buy milk from thousands of farmers who raise dairy cows in their front yards. There are more than a million cows around Hohhot; the bustling city is plastered with garish advertisements for yogurt and ice cream, and nearby farming villages have developed de facto affiliations with whichever dairy buys their milk. By offering the farmers more money for milk than they earn for crops, the dairies have helped breathe life into Inner Mongolia's struggling economy...
...tablespoons peanut butter, 4 scoops ice cream, and 1 cup of milk. 6. Dessert Panini Take two slices of bread and place peanut butter, honey, cinnamon, sugar, and marshmallows between them. Place on the panini grill for about 45 seconds, and then top off with whipped cream or frozen yogurt. Concepts courtesy of Francesca T. Gilberti ’10, a Crimson magazine editor, and Rachel A. Strauss ’09, a Crimson photographer...
...biology PhDs, the hypothesis was deceptively simple: a locally owned natural-style frozen yogurt shop, modeled on Pinkberry stores in California, would prove wildly popular in Boston. The experiment of post-doctorates Pok “Eric” K. Yang and Matthew A. Wallace officially commenced September 16 with the opening of their first store, Berry Line, at One Arrow Street in Cambridge. “When people taste it for the first time, they’re like whoa,” said Yang. “It tastes like real yogurt,” Wallace added. Yang...
...Lebanon - which makes about 6 million bottles of wine a year - is one of the world's smallest producers. But its wines are smooth and tasty, and a few of the country's dozen or so commercial labels are internationally renowned. For a recent dinner of frogs legs, thick yogurt, and saut?ed liver, Ramzi invited a TIME correspondent to drink a Massaya classic red, not one of his fanciest, but one that best reflects the region, with a peppery taste and smells of mint and thyme. The humble cinsualt grape he uses doesn't have a strong personality...
Just by looking at him, you can tell Chertoff is a man who exercises tremendous self-control. (Blogs have nicknamed him Skeletor.) He can get through the day on a couple of pieces of toast for breakfast, a PowerBar for lunch, and yogurt and an apple for dinner. When he was head of the criminal division at the Justice Department, subordinates remember, he would put a quarter down on the office counter for every personal fax he made...