Pepperoni Pizza Bread
Recipe: Pepperoni Pizza BreadRecipe Description: This is a simple bread machine recipe for a delicious pizza-flavored bread.Related Recipes:Italian Herb BreadTaco BreadFoodClassics.com Tools:Submit your favorite recipeSearch for a specific recipeBrowse recipes by categorySubscribe to our free recipe newsletterShop for cooking related books
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Added on: Aug 8, 2007 in
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Other News in the Cooks Discussion category |
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Tomato Recipes
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Tuh-MAY-toh or Tuh-MAH-to? Pronunciation doesn't matter when it comes to this fabulous nutritious fruit known as a vegetable. Once considered deadly poisonous, tomatoes are now second only to potatoes in...
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Creamsicle Milk Shake
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Recipe: Creamsicle Milk ShakeRecipe Description: This orange-flavored Creamsicle Milk Shake is delicious!Related Recipes:Fresh Fruit SmoothieLemonade ShakeOrange Sherbet PunchFoodClassics.com Tools:Submit your favorite recipeSearch for a specific recipeBrowse recipes by categorySubscribe to our free recipe newsletterShop for cooking related books
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Papaya Raisin Muffins or Bread Recipe
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Papaya adds moisture and flavor to these easy spiced muffins that begin with a cake mix. The cream cheese frosting adds extra decadence, however you may simply sprinkle the muffins...
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Old Fashioned Sour Cream Muffins
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Recipe: Old Fashioned Sour Cream MuffinsRecipe Description: My grandma used to make these sour cream muffins whenever we would go to visit her.Related Recipes:Sour Cream BiscuitsSour Cream Coffee CakeFoodClassics.com Tools:Submit your favorite recipeSearch for a specific recipeBrowse recipes by categorySubscribe to our free recipe newsletterShop for cooking related books
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Alert! Food Recall!
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The USDA has announced an expanded recall of Castleberry's canned products. Please look carefully at this list and, if you have any of these products in your home, return...
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Food Network stars in the Valley
The Food Network stopped in Gilbert to film its show Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives at Joe's Farm Grill. Guy Fieri, the show's host, was on hand and said the eatery scored high on several factors.
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10 steps to planning your organic garden
These straightforward tips come courtesy of Charlie Nardozzi, senior horticulturist and spokesperson for the National Gardening Association. Follow them and you're sure to have great results this season.
1. Find the Right Spot. Like real estate, a successful organic garden is all about the right location. Find a spot in your yard with full sun (at least 6 hours), well-drained soil, and one that's within easy reach of the house.
2. Beef Up the Soil. Add organic matter such as grass clippings, leaves, compost, manure, hay and straw each fall. In spring, apply a 1/2- to 1-inch-thick layer of finished compost on beds before planting.
3. Raise it Up. Create raised beds (8 to 10 inches high, 3 feet wide) by mounding the soil and flattening the top. Soil in raised beds warms up and dries out faster in spring and is easer to work. You can reform the beds each spring or make the beds permanent by framing them with rot-resistant wood, plastic or stone.
4. Grow What You Like. Although it may seem obvious, grow crops you and your family love to eat. While bush beans, lettuces and tomatoes are some of the easiest vegetables to grow, if your family doesn't enjoy them, why grow them?
5. Select the Right Varieties. Grow varieties of vegetables and fruits adapted to your area. Check with local garden centers and fellow gardeners to find the best varieties to grow.
6. Start With Transplants. For the beginning gardener, purchase as many vegetables as possible as transplants from the garden center. Seeds are necessary for root crops, such as carrots and radishes, but transplants of most other vegetables are more likely to be a success.
7. Design Properly. Design your garden with a mix of flowers, vegetables, fruits and herbs. A mixed planting is less likely to get completely destroyed by insect, animal or disease attacks.
8. Plant Correctly. Follow package directions and plant at the proper spacing and depth. Thin seeded crops to the proper distance. Crowded plants become easily stressed and don't produce well.
9. Mulch. Maintain constant soil moisture and keep weeds at bay by mulching. Mulch cool-season crops such as strawberries, broccoli and lettuce with a 2- to 3-inch-thick layer of hay, straw or grass clippings. Mulch warm-season crops such as tomatoes, melons and cucumbers with plastic mulch to heat the soil.
10. Check for Insects. Inspect plants every few days for any insect activity. Handpick destructive insects and drop them in a can of soapy water.
Text credit: The National Gardening Association
Photo credit: Keeeps
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Hawaiian Pork And Rice Dinner
Recipe: Hawaiian Pork And Rice DinnerRecipe Description: If your baby is a picky eater, adding fruit is a great way to get them to eat meat.Related Recipes:Baby Food DinnerChicken And Broccoli Baby FoodFoodClassics.com Tools:Submit your favorite recipeSearch for a specific recipeBrowse recipes by categorySubscribe to our free recipe newsletterShop for cooking related books
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