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Price: $8.95 Prices subject to change.Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Binding: Misc. Brand: The Prepared Pantry Country: united-states-of-america Ingredients: Yeast included. Label: The Prepared Pantry Manufacturer: The Prepared Pantry Publisher: The Prepared Pantry Studio: The Prepared Pantry Editorial Review: Like a true San Francisco sourdough, it has that tangy, distinctive flavor of true sourdough. It's crustier and chewier than other breads made in your bread machine. It even looks like an authentic sourdough bread with its split white top. * This package contains two sourdough bread mixes. Each mix makes a large loaf--aproximately two pounds. * SAF yeast packets are enclosed. You provide only water. * Directions and tips for perfect bread are included. Try this bread for breakfast. Sourdough bread makes excellent, crunchy toast reminiscent of English muffin bread. When we think of sourdough bread, we think of crusty, chewy bread with that wonderful sourdough flavor. Now you can make it in your bread machine. Your family and friends will be amazed. For a crusty bread: This sourdough bread naturally forms a more chewy crust than other mixes and a ''medium'' crust setting will be adequate in most bread machines. To maintain a chewy crust, store your bread in a paper bag, not plastic. (In plastic, the bread sweats and softens the outer crust.) If you bake it in your oven: In your bread machine, this mix forms a very moist dough ball--too sticky to handle. You'll want to reduce the water by a couple tablespoons. You can make a wonderful sourdough bread in your oven but it takes a little patience. With less water, this is a slow riser. Allow at least a couple hours for it to rise on your counter. ' Features:
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Delta has mid-air reversal on filtering Web content: Delta said it wouldn't filter its in-flight Internet system (not yet launched), but now says it will have a short list of inappropriate sites that no one would disagree were inappropriate. That might work. While filtering is impossible to enforce on a broad scale, choosing a small list of sites the airline feels are off limits, that might balance some basic interests.
Wi-Fi attraction for students: Nearly half of students surveyed would prefer Wi-Fi over beer at school. Three-quarters think Wi-Fi makes helps them get better grades. Take that, Lakehead University!
MetroFi antennas won't fall like autumn leaves: Portland, Ore., must wait until April 2009 to declare MetroFi's Wi-Fi nodes abandoned and take them down. While MetroFi gave the city a deposit, it will cost the Oregon metropolis $36,000 of its own cash to remove them, although the city's wireless go-to guy says they'll try to recover cash from MetroFi. To my knowledge, MetroFi has not filed for bankruptcy, even though the company no longer has working phone lines and hasn't returned comments.
I've heard it said by Dave Winer and many many others: if only Dean had reinvested half the money raised into the Internet, then ...
OK, so you're the Dean Campaign Chief Information Officer in August 2003. The money starts to roll in. $20 million over six months, $2-4 million per month.
What would you spend the money on?
How do you spend in consonance with the campaign strategy?