Openpedia.org > Pomegranate.

http://leahj.blog-city.com [leah in chicago|accidentally jewish] Both of the editors who read this can breath a sigh of relief, I finally looked up the spelling of the lovely fruit I had last night. I probably won't remember, but I will remember that is is specifically mentioned in Exodus and is rumored to have 613 seeds, just like we have 613 mitzvot.

Some related posts from Technorati and Google.

http://estouest.blog.lemonde.fr  Est/Ouest: Mercredi dernier, c’était la technique de la pâte brisée mais faire des tartes avec des fruits en boîte, ce n’est pas encore Lenôtre. D’autant que sous les oreillons d’abricots encore dégoulinants de sirop était une crème pâtissière pâteuse et un peu sèche et que tout en dessous était la pâte brisée qu’on n’avait pas pris la peine de précuire. (via Cosmos)

Beyond Rivalry: Synagogues were especially targeted for vandalism, including desecration of sacred Torah scrolls." About 1,350 synagogues were systematically destroyed, and of those, about 200 were burned to the ground "while local fire departments stood by or simply prevented the fire from spreading to surrounding buildings. About 25,000 Jewish men were rounded up and later sent to Buchenwald, Dachau, and Sachsenhausen concentration camps. (via Cosmos)

http://ingridfoodjournal.blogspot.com  food for stomach: fruit drink popular in the Middle Eastern countries. ASDA also had packs of four available. the label said it's a great snack, can also be an ideal ingredient to make fruit desserts or something like this. more info about the fruit itself can be found here and here. i cut the pomegranate open and tried it immediately. the skin was like that of a melon (thinner and maybe softer - maybe more like a thicker apple). as for the taste, well, as this one here (via Cosmos)

The Perfect Pantry: (Isn't the label beautiful?) Pomegranate molasses, also called pomegranate syrup, is a traditional Middle Eastern condiment made from the sugar in the juice extracted from fresh pomegranates. Though the fruit is native to Iran, most pomegranate molasses are bottled in Lebanon. (via Cosmos)

TEdALOG Lite Home TEdALOG Lite Home: Here's another one: Over twenty years ago one of the trees that the Department of Agriculture was promoting as a preventative for salination was the Tagasate (I think that's how it's spelled) tree which was a prolific water sucker-upper, tolerated mild salination, and which provided stock feed. I think I've seen three or four stands of tagasate in all my travels around WA, and they all seem to have been planted well after salination had set in already. (via Cosmos)

[Aftergrogblog.blogs.com] AFTER GROG BLOG: "Potent South Australian fast bowler Shaun Tait has set a humiliated England up for a torrid mixture of body-battering and clinical dissection that is set to knock the Ashes from its grasp." Conn's all but given up on the Poms, but they aren't that bad. Nor are Australia that good.

http://magneticalliance.blogspot.com [Magneticalliance.blogspot.com] Digital network of smart brands, fresh content and innovative ...: At 00:01:00 Stanford University is mentioned by a main character (Shaun Brumder) for 1 seconds. (Shaun Brumder (played by Colin Hanks) is a senior high school student who dreams of going to Stanford University’s English department.

http://www.firedoglake.com [Firedoglake.com] Firedoglake - Firedoglake weblog » Face the Snark: OT but deeply observant Hadassah and even Bar Mitzvah Boy Gerstein may want, even NEED, to pass this on to her husband Kapo Joe.

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