Search Results for: Bananas
ziplock bag until well coated. sprinkle over the top of the cake, then serve generous slices as a delicious dessert. source: in cakes , gluten-free comment peanut butter chocolate chunk banana bread march , martha collison something that might surprise a few of you: there is only one food i won't eat. bananas
. ever since i was a young child, they are the only food my body can't handle. i've tried many a time to rekindle our relationship, attempting to eat bananas in many guises, but it never worked. banana bread, however, i've always admired and longed to enjoy. soft, squidgy and sweet, it's all the things...
http://www.bakingmartha.co.uk/blog/
enormous but are still good. traditional parsnips are grown from crown cuttings and produce a bundle of roots. but so far tomatoes, which like at least hours of full sun, are not too great and need a lot of care, and artichokes only bud if they are dying. of course, there are the perks, like mangoes, bananas
indigenous stuff here grows in tree form or perennial form, with little effort, while the stuff i crave, like tomatoes, from my nothern home, is barely worth the effort. potatoes grow in wild profusion in the higher, cooler areas, but stay tiny in my warm, rocky soil. i use yams as ground cover for my bananas...
https://www.smilinggardener.com/introduction/where-to-grow-your-garden/
kenya. part way through the assignment, working in remote african villages, i could no longer button my pants. i was 20 weeks pregnant. the nausea and exhaustion were gone, my energy had returned and i was eating regularly, though careful to avoid harmful bacteria, which meant a diet of bread, rice, bananas
told me to just bring cipro, the pharmaceutical elixir of choice for many of us, which basically microwaves the body free of bacteria. i still hadn't told my colleagues that i was pregnant and so shouldn't take cipro. nothing would happen in a few days, i reassured myself, especially if i ate only bananas...
https://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/01/magazine/what-can-a-pregnant-photojournalist-cover-everything.html