The Columbus Board of Public Works on Wednesday approved a resolution to donate Taser cartridges and batteries to a neighboring police department. Continue reading at The Republic News.
What should you do with opened tins, cut avocados and egg yolks that weren’t required in your recipe? Chefs and food experts tell allAttention home cooks: do you, like me, have half a lemon, perhaps encased in a beeswax wrap or clingfilm, sitting in your fridge? Half a cucumber, going dry at one end? Or maybe an open jar of capers, barely used, but well past the two-week recommended refrigeration period? So often, a recipe requires just half an onion, or a third of a block of tofu – especially...
Researchers from Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore), have created a method that extracts more than 80% of the available protein in grain leftovers from brewing beer, commonly known as brewers' spent grain.
Wake up tired tortillas and leftover chicken by adding your favourite Mexican-inspired toppings to create the classic Mexican ‘toastie’Leftover roast meat makes a glorious tostada topping. Combined with your favourite Mexican-inspired ingredients, just 150g is enough meat for about six tostadas, to serve as a snack for six or a huge feast for two. Tostadas are also a great way to give old tortillas new life.Chicken tinga is a classic Mexican dish usually made from shredded chicken spiced with...
This New Orleans home is on the cover of a national magazine.
Ukraine is relying on unused artillery shells left behind by Russian troops as it faces a munition shortage and further aid from the West remains in limbo.Soldiers like Max Polyukhovich scour through Ukraine's eastern front, searching for undetonated mines and artillery shells that will be repurposed for Ukraine's dwindling munition supply, The Wall Street Journal reported.Polyukhovich — known by other troops as "Mad Max" — told the newspaper that he estimates supplying brigades with at least...
The property on Huntwick Crescent in Featherstone was targeted by police on February 21, who forced entry and found more than 100 plants growing inside. The house was then boarded up after police had cleared the property, Leeds Crown Court heard. But having heard about the raid, Liam Holden then attended the property in broad daylight two days later. The landlord was contacted at around 12.40pm and was told that a man was holding a crowbar and could be seen kicking the wooden board across the...