Home-grown herbs can complement a cook’s favorite ethnic cuisine.

The News Review:

- Home-grown herbs can complement a cook’s favorite ethnic cuisine.
- Family Style: Mama’s Kitchen a home-grown option for eating out
- Local hero wants plenty of noise
- Seeds of discontent
- Editor’s Notes: Israel’s challenge at 59
- Musical “I Love You” heralds Broadway invasion
- Bombers Defy Security Push, Killing at Least 158 in Baghdad

Home-grown herbs can complement a cook’s favorite ethnic cuisine.
Free with registration – Chicago Tribune – AccessMyLibrary.com – Apr 19, 2007
“If you’re successful with marigolds, petunias or geraniums, you can be successful with herbs,” Yardley said. “It’s not any more demanding. “People don’t realize many things can be grown in the back yard. They can have a fresh supply of rosemary or lavender. ” Italian herbs, such as oregano, and Mexican herbs, such as cilantro, tend to be the main attractions for Midwestern herb gardeners, she said. Lemon grass and lemon verbena (with its bold lemony flavor) are two herbs winning over local gardeners and cooks. And herbs that star in Asian and French menus are no more difficult to obtain or grow… And herbs that star in Asian and French menus are no more difficult to obtain or grow. Even chefs accustomed to the best of the best agree nothing beats homegrown flavor from their personal gardens. Both are in the midst of a big remodel, and Satkoff is looking forward to a spacious roof garden. Chef Roland Liccioni of Le.

Family Style: Mama’s Kitchen a home-grown option for eating out
Monitor – Apr 19, 2007
I personally would prefer that the restaurant serve its food with real plates and non-plastic cutlery. Overall though, Mama’s Kitchen is the type of restaurant I could easily adopt as my “I don’t feel like cooking today restaurant. ” The portions are heaping, it’s inexpensive and the waitress makes you feel at home. ———

Paige Lauren Deiner covers features and entertainment for The Monitor. You can reach her at (956) 683-4425. For this and other local stories, visit www.

Local hero wants plenty of noise
Harlow and Bishop's The Citizen – Apr 19, 2007
That spurs the boys on. Manager Alan Curbishley believes Noble has a special relationship with supporters because of his Canning Town upbringing. He said: “Fans at every club have an affinity with home-grown talent. Mark’s a local boy and he demonstrates that affinity. You can see how much West Ham means to him. “He got the crowd up in the first minute in the Spurs game and epitomised what we needed, and he got them up again in the first minute against Arsenal at the Emirates because of the way he goesabout it. Noble had to wait for the chance shine for the Hammers this season after a loan spell at Ipswich… “But as I’ve got to know him, I’ve found out a bit more and for the fans, he is one of them. “He understands what it’s about. “That home-grown talent isn’t there at a lot of clubs now because there are so many foreign players in the Premiership, or people signed from other sides in England. “When you do find one or two, it’s great.

Seeds of discontent
Guardian Unlimited – Apr 19, 2007
By any measure, an eye-popping profit hike. On paper, British extra virgin rapeseed oil has a lot going for it. It fits in with the zeitgeist of home-grown local food and fewer food miles. A stroke of luck for farmers who cultivate it is that what was once regarded as a bulk commodity destined for refining, bleaching and deodorising into anonymous cooking oil and margarine appears to have a healthy nutritional profile, containing more vitamin E and fewer saturated fats than its traditional extra virgin olive oil competition. The marketing pitch coming from its promoters is ambitious. “The future is golden,” says Cambridgeshire producer Munns on its website. “The popularity of cold-pressed rapeseed oil is set to soar as more people come to recognise the health benefits and quality when compared with olive oil.

Editor’s Notes: Israel’s challenge at 59
Jerusalem Post – Apr 19, 2007
Understandably unimpressed by the prospects for the well-being of the Jewish nation without a Jewish state, we are evidently prepared to pay the highest of prices to protect it. Too much of the international community, meanwhile, is not merely unfair and unbalanced when it comes to Israel, it is also short-sighted and self-defeating when it comes to the dangers of extremist Islam. For instance Britain, hit already by home-grown Islamic terror and a rallying base for extremists who then set out to murder overseas, remains stubbornly obtuse. The Arab world is gradually acknowledging the danger. Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak is not losing sleep about Israel. He’s worried about the Muslim Brotherhood at home, determinedly destabilizing his regime, with Iran as the instigator in chief. The pattern repeats itself in Jordan, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia and the Gulf.

Musical “I Love You” heralds Broadway invasion
央视国际 – Apr 19, 2007
com
04-19-2007 08:34. The Chinese production which opened in Beijing on Tuesday is just known as "I Love You". It’s a testing of the waters for a planned Broadway invasion of China’s theatres in the coming months. The show, which has been running since 1996, is a slick revue of songs and sketches about the trials and tribulations of love in the modern world. Anyone worried that the Chinese version might be a pale imitation of the original, will realize they are in safe hands from the beginning of the opening number "Cantata for a first date".

Bombers Defy Security Push, Killing at Least 158 in Baghdad
Washington Post – Apr 19, 2007
Now Bush is saying the horror of Va. Tech as 33 people died not by terrorist but by home grown enemy. Photo ops and lip service is all we get. Bush pushes forward for the money its all about the money not the death of people. The media is pushing front page news with Cho and his video, there by keeping the Gonzales lies out of the headlines. As long as the American people keep allowing the US to be controlled by the Axis of Evil more senseless deaths will happen in the United States.

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