Tuesday, November 14, 2017

@13:00 11/14/17

|


1
Food

Maple Syrup With a Ginger Kick


50% fructose

2
Food

What to Cook This Weekend


3
The Learning Network

Sneakers

What are your favorite kinds?

Nike lava dome.

http://www.nicekicks.com/nike-air-lava-dome-returns-2016/

4
Health

Americans Are Putting Down the Soda Pop

Children and adults are downing sugary drinks far less often than they used to, a new study finds.

5
Food

Cabernet Franc and the Finger Lakes: Made for Each Other

With the fresh, spicy character typical of cool-climate viticulture, the red-wine grape shows another face of American winemaking.

Can you drink just one glass?

6
Business Day

Are Honey Nut Cheerios Healthy? We Look Inside the Box

America’s best-selling breakfast cereal has about nine times as much sugar as normal Cheerios. Sugar, brown sugar and honey are among its top six ingredients.

They are not healthy.

7
Food

This May Be the Best Beef at Any Korean BBQ in New York

Cote, a new restaurant in the Flatiron district, styles itself as a steakhouse, with dry-aged beef and a nicely priced menu option.

As convenient.

8
Fashion & Style

Open Thread: This Week in Style News

LVMH’s big management shakeup, the Costume Institute takes on Catholicism — and more.

Fine by me.
I must get a passport.
After that,
Sooner is better.    As soon as you can is best.

9
Opinion

On Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince

Mohammed bin Salman calls in the cavalry.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wahhabism

10
Style

We Lost Our Newborn Baby. Can This Marriage Survive?

Grieving over FaceTime while her new husband waits for his visa, a reader wonders if their love can withstand a devastating early loss.

"One thing that’s vital to realize is that it’s not the sorrow of a child’s death that tears certain couples apart. It’s a sense of isolation within that sorrow. You and your husband should consider it your central goal to share your feelings with one another, even and especially the difficult feelings: ones of helplessness, confusion, guilt, depression and even rage. You don’t have to feel the same things, or mourn in the same way, just commit to being open and honest. Recognize, too, that you need support as a couple: the love of family and friends, the wisdom of other survivors, the guidance offered by therapists — whatever it takes. No two people, even love-struck honeymooners, can get through such rough seas without all hands on deck."

"Broken is" if  mutual efforts fail.
My hope is obvious.
You should not suffer.

|

No comments:

Post a Comment