1
Food
Purple Garlic From the Heart of Spain
The chef José Andrés is importing ajo morado, a milder garlic for gazpacho.Possibly worth the price.
http://cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1017577-best-gazpacho?action=click&contentCollection=Food&module=RelatedCoverage®ion=EndOfArticle&pgtype=article
2
Food
Chocolate With a Buzz
These truffles pair coffee and chocolate deliciously.Yes, I like chocolate.
3
Food
Manresa’s Bread Without a Trip to California
The freshly made farm-to-table loaves now ship nationwide.I bake.
4
Health
Why Gunshot Victims Have Reason to Like Obamacare
The expansion of state Medicaid programs under the health care law has brought coverage, and necessary treatment, to previously uninsured shooting victims.It is cheaper to fix the wounded than for them to suffer.
5
The Upshot
When Having Insurance Still Leaves You Dangerously Uncovered
More Americans are insured, but many are still underinsured — meaning that they are exposed to significant financial risk from out-of-pocket payments.Do the best you can.
6
U.S.
Cities Vow to Fight Trump on Immigration, Even if They Lose Millions
Cities need cheap labor.
7
U.S.
Supreme Court Agenda in the Trump Era? A Justice Seems to Supply One
At an energized conservative legal gathering, Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. suggested that only resolve on the right could rescue free speech, religious liberty and gun rights.That agenda makes me itch.
8
Technology
When A.I. Matures, It May Call Jürgen Schmidhuber ‘Dad’
A researcher who co-wrote a paper in the 1990s on a crucial artificial intelligence technique feels overlooked by today’s stars in the field."1% inspiration and 99% perspiration" Edison
A lack of sweat.
9
Your Money
Stop Spending Based on Other People’s Wealth
Trying to keep up with the Joneses, when the Joneses’ real finances are unknown, is unwise, a financial planner reminds us.Cold water.
In macroeconomics money is a fiction. In microeconomics money is a fact.
Confusing the two is disastrous.
Business is microeconomics. Sovereign governments are macroeconomics.
10
Health
Many in Florida Count on Obama’s Health Law, Even Amid Talk of Its Demise
In a state that Donald J. Trump won, many do not believe he will end a benefit they rely on, posing achallenge for those seeking to scrap the program.
"The mills of the gods grind slowly. They grind exceeding fine."
Trump will try to keep his political promises.
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