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On a hot summer night in 1939, an enormous meteor blazednorthward over Lake Erie before erupting in a ball of fire seenacross the Northeastern seaboard. At the same time, millions in Europe struggled in a world as frightening as blazing meteors, the blaze of the advancing German armies and Hitler’s quest for worlddomination.
Geographically, Minnesota appeared to be sheltered from these winds of war; however, they felt anything but isolated from the tempest over taking the world. Many Minnesotans had familiesstill living in countries invaded by the Nazi maniacs and letters from home held frightening news.
The effect of Hitler’s European war crept slowly into theMinnesota economy, but after Pearl Harbor, newspapers of the timereflected the “let’s get down to business” attitude that washed over the nation and our fair state.
Waging a world war demands much and a major problemfacing the US War Production Board was how to allocate thenation’s resources plus implement the massive organization that was required. In the end, one third of all war production needs went to the nation’s 10 largest manufacturers with General Motors alonegetting more that $14 billion in contracts.
Not to be left out, Minnesota established an office inWashington that helped secure significant subcontracting and research contracts from prime defense contractors.
Honeywell made sofisticated airplane controls andproximity fuses for bombs and shells. Mineapolis Moline producedartillary shells, and Crown Iron Works developed parts for bridges and steel for ships. The Owatonna Tool Company made thousandsof massive gear pullers and mammoth wrenches for use on ships.
Even larger Minnesota companies contributed to the war effort. 3M produced large quantities of adhesive tape and sheetingfor airplane wings. American Hoist and Derrick built gargantuan cranes, hoists and derricks for the shipyards. Northern Ordinancebuilt gun mounts and hydraulic equipment for naval destroyers.
Iron ore needs for steel plants doubled during the war and 66% of that ore came from Minnesota’s Mesabi range.
Two huge federal munition plants were also built, one inNew Brighton (Arden Hills) and the federally run Gopher Ordinace works that spread across thousands of acres in Rosemount. Someunsung heros of the war were farming families who sold their land and moved their families close to these munition plants.
Duluth shipbuilders manufactured every type of oceangoing vessel, from oil tankers to submarine chasers. NorthwestAirlines, one of the nations oldest, had 5000 employees designingand equiping bombers under top secret projects.
Our own Mayo clinic developed the “G suit” that preventedpilots from being knocked out during high speed turns and dive bomber pullouts.
Let’s not forget Spam, just one of the products from theAustin MN based Hormel company that helped feed the free world’s armies. The Pillsbury company even developed floating sacks offlour that could be dropped into the ocean where the tide would take them to servicemen on the beaches. General Mills, in addition tosupplying many food products, helped to win the battle of Guadacanalby developing torpedo directors for the US Navy and the little knownFaribo Woolen Mills produced over a quarter of a million olive drabarmy blankets.
There were many more, but maybe the point is that if thenation, it’s citizens and business leaders could pull together to win thewar to end all wars, why can’t we now pull together, as a people tobattle our potential economic demise.
Let’s stop using every idea that our leaders come up withfor political polarizing and “get back down to business”.
On Sept 12th 1922In what would become a major change in the marriage ceremony, the House of Bishops of the United States Protestant Episcopal Church voted 36-27 to delete the word obey from the marriage service.
On Sept 14th, 1814 Francis Scott Key wrote his poem "Defense of Ft. McHenry," that was later re-named Star Spangled Banner.
On Sept. 16, 1620, the Mayfl ower sails from Plymouth, England, bound for the New World with 102 passengers. The ship was headed for Virginia, but stormy weather and navigational errors forced the Mayfl ower off course. On Nov. 21, the “Pilgrims” arrived in Massachusetts.
On Sept. 13, 1936, 17-year-old Cleveland Indians pitching ace “Rapid” Robert Feller strikes out 17 batters in a
game, setting a new American League record. Feller allowed just two hits to help his team to a 5-2 victory over the Philadelphia AÕs.
On Sept 17th, 1862 the Civil War Battle of Antietam (Sharpsburg) Maryland; the single bloodiest day in American history occurred.
On Sept. 14, 1964, writer John Steinbeck is presented the U.S. Medal of Freedom. Steinbeck had already received numerous honors and awards for his writing, including the 1962 Nobel Prize, and the 1939 Pulitzer Prize for “The Grapes of Wrath.” He also wrote “Tortilla Flat,” “East of Eden” and the novella “Of Mice and Men.”
On Sept. 18th, 1793 president George Washington laid the cornerstone of the United States Capitol building.
On Sept. 22, 1598, English playwright Ben Jonson is indicted for manslaughter after a duel. He was very nearly hanged, but his ability to read and write saved him. He claimed “benefi t of clergy,” which allowed him to be sentenced
by the lenient ecclesiastical courts. Jonson was as famous in his time as Shakespeare.
On Sept. 21, 1866, H.G. Wells, pioneer of science fi ction, is born in Bromley, England. In 1895, he published his classic novel “The Time Machine,” about a man who journeys to the future. The book was a success, as was “The War of the Worlds”.
On Sept 18th, 1970 singer James Marshall "Jimi" Hendrix died in London at the age of 27 from the overdose of barbiturates and alcohol.
On Sept. 20, 1881, Chester Arthur becomes third president to serve in one year. The year began with Rutherford B. Hayes in offi ce. Hayes served out his term and turned over the reins to James A. Garfi eld. Four months later, Garfi eld was shot by an assassin but did not die until Sept. 19. Vice President Arthur was then sworn in as president.
On Sept. 24, 1890, faced with the eminent destruction of their church and way of life, Mormon leaders reluctantly issue the “Mormon Manifesto” in which
they command all Latter-day Saints to uphold the laws of the nation and abandon polygamy.
On Sept. 23, 1944, President Franklin D. Roosevelt is forced to defend his dog’s honor and his own reputation. Critics had circulated a story claiming that Roosevelt had accidentally left Fala behind while visiting the Aleutian Islands earlier that year. They accused the president of sending a Navy destroyer, at taxpayer expense of up to $20 million, to go back and pick up the dog.
On Sept. 19, 1957, the United States detonates a 1.7 kiloton nuclear weapon in an underground tunnel in Nevada. The test was part of a series of 29 nuclear weapons and nuclear weapons safety tests known as Operation Plumbbob.
On Sept. 25, 1981, Sandra Day O’Connor becomes the fi rst female U.S. Supreme Court justice in history when she is sworn in by Chief Justice Warren Burger. After graduating from Stanford law school in the early 1950s, no law fi rm in California would hire her because she was a woman.
(c) 2011 King Features Synd., Inc.
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• At holiday time, many Norwegians fi x a traditional dish known as Smalahove. This yummy dish is prepared fi rst by torching the skin and fl eece of a sheep’s head, removing the brain, then boiling the head for about three hours. Arrange some rutabagas and potatoes around it on a platter, and there you have your Christmas feast!• You’re not getting dessert when you order black pudding after a meal. Rather you’ll be served a sausage made up of animal blood, fat, rolled oats and spices. Depending on where you live, that blood could come from a pig, cow, sheep, duck or goat. Some recipes add chestnuts, sweet potato or barley to the mix. A yummy Asian snack, the pig’s blood cake, combines blood with sticky rice, fries it and serves it on a popsicle stick. • The process of making Polish blood soup is a tricky one. The head of a live duck must be chopped off and its blood collected in the cooking pot. Throw in some vinegar, onions, celery, parsley, sugar and some dumplings, and there you have it! Some cooks like to add dried fruit, such as prunes, pears or apples. • When folks down South talk about eating chit’lins, they are referring to chitterlings. This lip-smacking dish is the small intestines of pigs, boiled for several hours, then battered and fried and served with vinegar and hot sauce on the side. • Ask for a plate of menudo, and what you’ll get is an order of beef tripe, made from the rubbery lining of the stomach of a cow, sheep, goat, pig or deer. Your favorite Mexican restaurant might garnish it with jalapeno peppers. • No matter what you call them — Rocky Mountain oysters, cowboy caviar, Montana tendergroins or bull fries — it doesn’t change the fact that they are bull testicles, coated in fl our and deep-fried. The people in some states love this “appetizer” so much, they hold entire festivals around them, such as Eagle, Idaho’s “World’s Largest Rocky Mountain Oyster Feed” and Montana’s “Testicle Festival.” • Not all tacos are created equal! Lengueta de la vaca are tacos made with cow tongue, while Tacos de Cabeza include all parts of the cow’s head, including eyes and lips. • The French have a beautiful name for a particular variety of hot
deli sandwich —langue de vache. That doesn’t change the fact that it’s cow tongue. • If you order geoduck off the menu, don’t expect to get an exotic poultry dish. It’s actually the largest burrowing clam in the world and is considered a delicacy in Asian countries, selling for as much as $30 per pound. It’s one of the animal kingdom’s longest-living creatures, at an average of 146 years, contributing to the amazing quantity of eggs produced by the female during her lifetime — fi ve billion! The geoduck has a long meaty siphon it uses to suck in plankton when feeding. That portion of this mollusk is usually cooked fondue-style and dipped in soy or wasabi sauce.• Folks in Sardinia, Italy, may change the way you think about cheese. Their casu marzu starts with a sheep’s milk Pecorino cheese but with one variable. Whole cheeses are left outside so that the Piophila casei or “cheese fl y” can lay its eggs inside the cheese, as many as 500 eggs at one time. Once the eggs hatch, the larvae eat their way through the cheese, and their acidic digestive juices break down the cheese’s fats, resulting in a very soft cheese. There are usually thousands of little white worms in a casu marzu cheese ready for the market. It’s up to the individual diner whether to scoop out the maggots before eating. • If your plate is fi lled with the Bosworth, Falstaff or Bedford Fillbasket varieties, you’ll soon be eating one of the most disliked vegetables, the Brussels sprout. This vitamin-rich cruciferous veggie belongs to the same family as the cabbage, collard greens, broccoli, kale and kohlrabi. Brussels sprouts were fi rst brought to North America by French immigrants settling in Louisiana around 1800. • The Scottish regularly cook up a dish called haggis, which is a sheep’s stomach stuffed with a mixture of the liver, heart, lungs, rolled oats and a variety of spices. Some fast-food restaurants in Scotland even have this item on their menu, deep-fat fried or as a burger on a bun. For those who don’t care to eat it, there are contests for “haggis hurling,” a sport that has a place in the Guinness Book of World Records. The current record-holder threw a 1.5-pound (.68-kg) haggis a distance of 180 feet, 10 inches (55.12 m).
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● Plant deciduous trees (trees that lose their leaves in the fall) strategically in order to reduce your heating and cooling costs. Their leaves emerge in the spring to block summer’s heating rays, but when winter comes, they fall off to let the sun in, warming things up a bit.
● Keep nail-polish bottles easy to open by rubbing a little bit of petroleum jelly inside the cap of the bottle.
● M.C. in Arizona would like to know some alternative uses for hair conditioner. Here goes: as a shaving lotion for legs or face; a makeup remover; ouch-free bandage removal; to soften makeup brushes or paintbrushes before storage; to get knots out of doll hair or costume wigs; washing delicates (think silks and pantyhose); rub on a shower rod to help curtain glide effortlessly; and lastly, soak a shrunken sweater in a conditioner/water
solution to soften the fi bers, then gently try stretching the sweater back to size. ● Use an empty paper towel roll to store plastic grocery bags. Just stuff to capacity. These “bag sticks” are easy to store in a drawer or even be mounted on the side of a trash can with double-stick tape.●When cleaning glass tabletops or chrome fi xtures, try using newspaper instead of paper towels or rags. There is no lint left behind, and newspaper gives a better shine.
Seared Steak with Minted WatermelonInspired by the exotic fl avors of China, this dish is packed with watermelon, cucumber and mint, which provide a cool
contrast to savory grilled steak.8 ounces thin rice noodles1 1-pound) boneless 1-inch-thick beef sirloin steakSalt, Pepper / 1 shallot, fi nely chopped1 stalk lemongrass, yellow and pale green part only, fi nely chopped
1 teaspoon sugar1/4 cup fresh lime juice1 tablespoon lower-sodium fi sh sauce1/2 small (3 cups) watermelon, rind removed, cut into 1/2-inch cubes1/2 seedless (English)
cucumber, cut in half and thinly sliced1/2 cup packed fresh mint leaves, fi nely chopped
1. Prepare outdoor grill for covered direct grilling on medium.
2. Prepare noodles as label directs. Drain, rinse under cold water and drain again.3. Season steak with 1/4 teaspoon each salt and freshly ground black pepper. Place steak on hot grill; cover. Cook 12 to 13 minutes for medium-rare or until desired doneness, turning once. Transfer steak to cutting board; let rest 10 minutes.4. Meanwhile, in large bowl, stir shallot, lemongrass, sugar, lime juice and fi sh sauce until sugar dissolves. Thinly slice steak across the grain. Add to bowl, along with watermelon, cucumber and mint. Toss gently until well mixed.5. Divide noodles among serving plates. Top with steak mixture and accumulated juices. Serves 4.Each serving: About 430 calories, 8g total fat (3g saturated), 75mg cholesterol, 435mg sodium, 64g total carbohydrate, 2g dietary fi ber, 26g protein.
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I had some free time over the weekend and I made a trip to a local book store. I wasn’t in the market for anything in particular. I was just browsing and found myself in front of the metaphysical section. Because I wasn’t in a hurry and also because I wasn’t looking for anything in particular I was able to really notice what was there.
My first observation was that this section had grown very large. There were books on topics I’d never heard of. And there were many more on topics that had been around forever. And I got to wondering – who and what do you believe?
Let’s take the current popular topic of 2012. There were many books on the shelf regarding this topic. Each seemed to have a diff erent take on it and yet they all claimed to be the truth. And that’s where common logic and being in touch with your inner self come in handy.
Not too long ago I was getting my nails done and my tech, who knows that I’m a psychic, asked me if it was true that the world was going to end in 2012. I told her no. Her relief was obvious. She had read something or heard something on the radio and been truly scared. If she had taken the information she’d heard and spent a
little time with it, really feeling for its honesty, her guides would have let her know that it was false information.
We have been given guides to help us figure out life and which direction we should be going. If you are having a difficult time connecting with your guide or don’t know how, consider taking a class on basic psychic development. Connecting with your guide is the same thing as following your gut instinct. One way sounds like hocus pocus and the other sounds like good common sense. The truth is they are diff erent ways of saying the same thing.
Fall classes on Psychic Development and the Law of Attraction will be starting again soon. Consider signing up and exploring something new.
If this topic interests you please contact me for a reading or perhaps a class. Thank you for your interest and attention. Till next time, stay in touch with yourself, with your life, and with those loved ones who have moved on.
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“Is a Heart Attack or Stroke in Your Future?” Part 1By Dr. Greg Fors, DC / Board-certified NeurologistHeart disease is the leading cause of death in the United States
and a major cause of disability. Every 25 seconds, an American willhave a heart attack, and every minute someone dies from it.. Heart disease is the leading cause of death in men and the first symptomof any heart disease in over half of these men is death itself. Over ¾of a million Americans will suffer a stroke this year. Most of thesestrokes could be prevented through proper risk factor identificationand management.
Most Americans believe that heart disease is caused by highcholesterol or the bad cholesterol LDL and if they take a cholesterollowering drug you can prevent a future heart attack. If you are one ofthose individuals you may be surprised to hear about a recent studyfrom the prestigious UCLA School of Medicine. They found that75% of patients hospitalized for a heart attack had low levels of the“bad” cholesterol LDL, below 130 mg/dl, easily within the safe range.Also 21% were taking a statin cholesterol-lowering drug. Even moreshocking was that 50% of those suffering a heart attack had optimallylow levels of LDL, less than 100 mg/dL! Most scientists now agreethat heart disease and heart attacks are not caused by cholesterolbut brought on by chronic inflammation and oxidative stress. Thesetwo factors almost always appear together in the body and must bedefended against. Cholesterol is one of the most important nutrientsin the body; we make hormones from it and repair ourselves with it. Cholesterol also acts as a primary antioxidant just like vitamin C andas an anti-inflammatory. Therefore cholesterol levels rise in responseto inflammation and oxidative stress in the body’s attempt to put out the fire and repair the damage. When because of dietary and lifestylefactors arterial inflammation persists and cholesterol loses the battle,the oxidized LDL cholesterol gets the blame. It’s a bit like blaming thefiremen’s water for an uncontrolled fire!
So if chronic inflammation is the source of the problem howcan you tell if it’s a problem for you? One of the best biomarkers forthis process is an inexpensive blood test called “high-sensitivity” CRP.More than a dozen major studies demonstrate that “hsCRP” levels arehighly predictive of future risk of heart attack, stroke, sudden cardiacdeath, and the development of peripheral arterial disease. Individualswith elevated levels are 3 times more likely to develop heart diseaseand elevated levels can also predict the risk of developing type IIdiabetes.
Another important inexpensive biomarker to have measuredto predict problems with chronic inflammation is a protein synthesizedin the liver called Fibrinogen. It circulates in the blood and plays a vitalrole in blood clotting. Elevated levels of Fibrinogen do play a role in the risk for blood clots in heart attacks and strokes. Fibrinogen levelsincrease with tissue inflammation or tissue destruction. A large-scale2002 European study showed that “fibrinogen is a powerful predictorof stroke” - including fatal and nonfatal strokes, first time strokes, andhemorrhagic and ischemic strokes. So where is the help?
A nutritional orientated doctor knowledgeable in runningand analyzing these tests as well as other vascular biomarkers canhelp you predict future risk of heart attack and stroke. Furthermoredoctors knowledgeable in functional medicine and wellness care canhelp formulate dietary changes and nutritional supplements to helpnaturally lower these risk factors so you can live a healthy life without the disability and death that comes with heart attacks and strokes.
At what age should you begin? It is a good idea to run thesetests when you’re over50.,however, there is good evidence that“hsCRP” levels in your teens and 20s are very predictive of levelslater in life. Elevated CRP levels can predict risk over the next 30 to40 years. Therefore it is never too early or too late to start!
In part two we will examine other risk factors for heart attacksand strokes and what you can do to not become a victim of these all too common disorders.Want to know more? attend my FREE SEMINAR! See notice below,Dr. Greg Fors, D.C. is a Board-certified Neurologist (IBCN), certified in Applied Herbal Sciences (NWHSU) and acupuncture. Trained through the Autism Research Institute he is a registeredDefeat Autism Now! Doctor. As the clinic director of the Pain and Brain Healing Center in Blaine Minnesota he specializes in a natural biomedical approach to fibromyalgia, fatigue, depression, insomnia and autism. If you have any questions or comments regarding this article you can contact Dr. Fors at 763-862-7100 He is a sought after international lecturer for various post graduate departments and state associations. Dr. Fors is the author of the highly acclaimed book, “Why We Hurt” available through booksellers everywhere.
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♦The
wor
ld’s
mos
t pop
ular
fru
it is
the
bana
na. I
n th
e U
nite
d St
ates
, pe
ople
con
sum
e m
ore
bana
nas
than
ap
ples
and
ora
nges
put
toge
ther
.
♦Tho
mas
Jef
fers
on w
as a
n in
vent
or a
s w
ell
as a
st
ates
man
, but
he
refu
sed
to ta
ke o
ut p
aten
ts o
n an
y of
hi
s ide
as. H
e be
lieve
d th
at in
vent
ions
shou
ld b
enefi
t al
l of
hum
anity
, not
just
him
self.
♦Acc
ordi
ng to
thos
e w
ho st
udy
such
thin
gs, t
he a
vera
ge
Am
eric
an b
elie
ves t
he id
eal a
ge --
that
is, t
he b
est y
ear
of h
is o
r her
life
-- is
32.
And
whe
n 30
-som
ethi
ngs
are
aske
d w
hen
old
age
begi
ns, t
he m
ajor
ity o
f m
en s
ay
it’s
in th
e la
te 6
0s, w
hile
mor
e w
omen
bel
ieve
old
age
be
gins
in th
e 70
s.
♦Tha
t ico
nic
sym
bol o
f the
Old
Wes
t, th
e Po
ny E
xpre
ss,
was
bas
ed o
n th
e m
ail
syst
em u
sed
thro
ugho
ut t
he
Mon
gol
Empi
re i
n th
e 13
th c
entu
ry.
How
ever
, th
e M
ongo
l rid
ers
ofte
n co
vere
d 12
5 m
iles
in a
sin
gle
day,
w
hich
was
fas
ter
than
the
best
rec
ord
held
by
a Po
ny
Expr
ess r
ider
.
♦Unl
ess
you’
re fr
om C
entra
l Flo
rida,
you
’ve
prob
ably
ne
ver h
eard
of t
he s
mal
l tow
n of
Oco
ee. S
o yo
u m
ight
be
sur
pris
ed to
lear
n th
at d
urin
g W
orld
War
II,
Oco
ee
earn
ed th
e di
stin
ctio
n of
send
ing
mor
e m
en, p
er c
apita
, to
serv
e in
the
mili
tary
than
any
oth
er to
wn
in th
e U
nite
d St
ates
.
♦It w
as th
e 37
th p
resi
dent
of t
he U
nite
d St
ates
, Ric
hard
M
. Nix
on, w
ho m
ade t
he fo
llow
ing
sage
-- an
d so
meh
ow
appr
opria
te --
obs
erva
tion:
Sur
e th
ere
are
dish
ones
t men
in
loca
l gov
ernm
ent.
But
ther
e ar
e di
shon
est m
en in
na
tiona
l gov
ernm
ent t
oo.
♦Pas
ta h
as b
een
arou
nd s
ince
5,0
00 B
.C.,
and
it w
as
inve
nted
in C
hina
, not
Ital
y.
♦If y
ou're
pla
nnin
g a
visi
t to
the
Uni
ted
Kin
gdom
, you
m
ight
wan
t to
keep
in m
ind
this
rath
er o
bscu
re s
tatu
te:
It's
illeg
al to
sta
nd w
ithin
100
yar
ds o
f th
e re
igni
ng
mon
arch
if y
ou d
on't
have
sock
s on.
♦A g
roun
dhog
can
mov
e 70
0 po
unds
of d
irt in
a s
ingl
e da
y.
♦Whe
n th
e tw
o-an
d-on
e-ha
lf-ho
ur fi n
ale
of
the
grou
ndbr
eaki
ng te
levi
sion
sho
w M
*A*S
*H a
ired
on
Feb.
28,
198
3, a
dver
tiser
s pa
id a
hef
ty $
450,
000
for a
si
ngle
30-
seco
nd sp
ot. T
hat w
as $
50,0
00 m
ore
than
the
sam
e sp
ot c
ost a
t the
Sup
er B
owl t
hat y
ear.
♦In
the
early
18t
h ce
ntur
y, n
ewsp
aper
s wer
e no
t che
ap,
but t
he s
torie
s pu
blis
hed
ther
ein
wer
e of
ten
peop
le's
only
link
to th
e ev
ents
of
the
day.
Sin
ce th
ey w
ere
so
cove
ted,
new
spap
ers w
ere
ofte
n br
ough
t as a
gift
whe
n a
gent
lem
an w
as c
allin
g on
a la
dy fr
iend
, muc
h as
can
dy
or fl
ower
s mig
ht b
e br
ough
t in
a di
ffere
nt e
ra.
(c) 2
011
Kin
g Fe
atur
es S
ynd.
, Inc
.
Issu
e 6
50OV
ER 4
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LION
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ers W
eekly
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onwi
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ublis
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an@
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bits
.com
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S® H
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kidn
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liver
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pan
crea
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gla
nds.
• W
hen
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hear
th
e w
ord
“sw
eetb
read
s,” d
on’t
thin
k ba
nana
or p
umpk
in
brea
d. I
t’s a
ctua
lly t
he c
ulin
ary
term
for
the
th
ymus
gla
nds
of a
lam
b, p
ig o
r ca
lf, lo
cate
d in
the
thro
at a
nd n
eck.
Mos
t ofte
n, th
e gl
ands
ar
e so
aked
in sa
lt w
ater
, the
n po
ache
d in
milk
, af
ter w
hich
they
are
frie
d.
• H
ead
chee
se i
sn’t
real
ly c
hees
e at
all,
but
ra
ther
a m
ixtu
re o
f the
mea
t and
tiss
ue fo
und
on a
pig
’s sk
ull,
set i
n ge
latin
. •
Rem
embe
r th
e ol
d ad
verti
sing
ph
rase
, “T
here
’s a
lway
s roo
m fo
r Jel
l-O”?
How
abo
ut
a ge
latin
mol
d m
ade
with
mea
t st
ock?
Add
co
ld p
ork,
chi
cken
, har
d-bo
iled
eggs
and
som
e ve
geta
bles
, and
you
’ll en
d up
with
a co
ncoc
tion
know
n as
asp
ic.
Alth
ough
som
e co
oks
add
unfl a
vore
d ge
latin
to th
e mix
for a
fi rm
er m
old,
tra
ditio
nal
aspi
c us
es t
he c
oagu
late
d br
oth
rem
aini
ng a
fter
boili
ng a
n an
imal
’s h
ead
and
bone
s. •
Ano
ther
pla
ce y
ou’ll
see
slim
y ge
latin
co
verin
g a
chun
k of
mea
t is w
hen
you
open
up
a can
of S
PAM
. Thi
s litt
le ti
n co
ntai
ns ch
oppe
d po
rk s
houl
der a
nd h
am m
eat,
henc
e th
e na
me,
Sp
iced
Mea
t And
Ham
. Firs
t man
ufac
ture
d in
19
37, t
he lu
nche
on m
eat w
as a
pop
ular
sta
ple
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sold
iers
dur
ing
Wor
ld W
ar I
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nce
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inve
ntio
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ore
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illio
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