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#national prime rib day
doctorfriend79 · 1 year
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😋  Happy National Prime Rib Day!  😋
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duranduratulsa · 1 year
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Happy National Prime Rib Day! #food #foodporn #beef #primerib #NationalPrimeRibDay
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murderousink23 · 1 year
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04/27/2023 is Lapu Lapu Day 🇵🇭, National Babe Ruth Day ⚾️🇺🇲, National Drug Take Back Day 💊🇺🇲, National Prime Rib Day 🇺🇲, National Tell a Story Day 🇺🇲, National Support Teen Literature Day 🇺🇲, National Poem in your Pocket Day 🇺🇲, National Take Our Daughters and Sons to Work Day 🇺🇲
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ami-ven · 2 years
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Happy National Prime Rib Day!
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topnews24online · 2 years
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দিবসের ঘনঘটা: পর্ব ৬
দিবসের ঘনঘটা: পর্ব ৬
হাবিবা সুলতানাঃ মানুষের জীবনের প্রতিটি মূহূর্তই গুরুত্বপূর্ণ, তাই প্রতিটি মূহূর্তকেই উদযাপন করা উচিত। কিন্তু কখনও কখনও কাজের চাপে, সময়ের অভাবে উদযাপন করা সম্ভব হয় না। তাই বিশেষ মূহূর্ত উদযাপনে নির্বাচন করা হয় বিশেষ দিন বা দিবস। তবে আপনি জানেন কি? আমাদের আশেপাশে, এই পুরো বিশ্বজুড়ে, প্রতিটি দিনকে ঘিরে আছে কতশত দিবস? এসকল দিবস নিয়েই আমাদের বিশেষ আয়োজন, ‘দিবসের ঘনঘটা’। জেনে নেই আজ ২৭…
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lokilickedme · 5 months
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The pure cuddly joy of spending a cold Colorado morning sending Instagram cat reels back and forth with the love of your life because he's in Utah for the week and you're not
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jesses-life-updates · 5 months
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people tend to think trans people are special snowflakes who get pampered by society so here's being trans from the perspective of a transgender 14-year-old who has no adult support in his life. please boost this message to transphobes, it might not change their minds but it could at least make them consider the real children they're hurting.
• when I came out at 13 I was yelled at by my parents until I cried
• according to transphobes it's somehow my fault that I was born with a female body
• people at school ask me what my pronouns are as an insult and call me slurs and nobody does anything about it, not even teachers care
• I came out to these people I thought I could trust and their response was to push me out of their circle of friends and harass me, constantly calling me a lesbian even though I'm not even a girl
• life seems to have lost its colour and I can't remember the last time I felt actual strong emotions
• actual grown ass adults complain about trans people on the internet just for clout and argue with each other about whether or not we deserve rights, as if that isn't the most dehumanising shit
• I've been told that my feelings don't matter by a teacher at my school because "people in countries at war have it worse"
• the prime minister of my country was on national television spreading hate speech about my people and everyone is acting like he's a saint for it, completely ignoring the other bad things he's done for this country because "he hates trans people and that's good"
• I have to stand idly by while trans people my age are committing suicide and I am so scared I will end up adding to that statistic
• there's bad apples in every group of people and just because I'm trans I have to be grouped in with every bigoted/hateful trans person when I'm just trying to keep myself alive and I'm not bothering anyone
• I am too scared to bring up my queer identity around anyone because I don't want them to think I'm shoving it in their face, it might as well be a secret even though I've been out for over a year
• i sometimes forget that I'm not physically a boy but then it hits me again when I see how much taller/deep voiced my male peers are
• I had to resocialise myself as male and change so many things about my behaviour that it's constantly at the forefront of my mind
• my chest constantly feels tight, I can't breathe deeply, my breathing is shaky and I get random rib pains every few hours
• I'm told that my gender is a "protected characteristic" but adults are doing a piss poor job at protecting me, I feel like I'm in danger because of being queer
• people at school harassed me so much for being trans that I practically forced myself back into the closet by telling them I don't care what they refer to me as (I most definitely do care)
• my identity is so normal to me but it's not normal for anyone else, I'll be talking about a girl crush I have thinking what I'm saying is normal but someone chimes in with "oh are you a lesbian?" and it brings me back to the harsh reality that being queer isn't normal
• I used to feel so much pride as a queer kid but now I just hate everything about being queer and I wish so badly that I could be just like everyone else
• more and more laws are being put in place against my people and one day I might not even be able to get gender affirming treatment
• the chemical imbalance in my brain is considered a political stance rather than just a rare condition a group of people have that shouldn't be a big deal
• I, a 14 year old boy, am more mature about gender than ACTUAL GROWN ADULTS who go on PUBLIC TELEVISION TO COMPLAIN ABOUT ME WHEN I AM JUST TRYING TO EXIST IN PEACE
• I keep being hit with the realisation that I still need to wait four years just for the chance of merely beginning to transition, which will cost me thousands of pounds and probably take more than ten years to fully transition, whereas my peers are just handed it at birth
• trans people are seen by society as "annoying" and "shoving it down people's throats" and "looking for an excuse to be special" for some fucking reason
• I have to juggle all this shit with trying hard in school and balancing life, all while my brain is not even fully developed yet. my cognitive and emotional processing skills aren't even close to being developed but i have to deal with suicidal thoughts, media pushing the idea that I'm mentally ill, internalised transphobia, constant harassment, transphobia from almost every single person in my life, feeling like a fucking freak for a chemical imbalance in my brain, and yet I STILL have to deal with normal teenage things like feeling ugly or struggling in school, and further yet I CANT TALK TO A SINGLE ADULT ABOUT MY SITUATION BECAUSE NOBODY BELIEVES ME OR SUPPORTS ME
• the cherry on top: there is absolutely nothing I can do about my situation until I turn 18, my only option is to suck it up and deal with it until either get actual help or end up killing myself
if you're an adult who thinks trans people are groomers/snowflakes/annoying/criminal, think about how your actions are impacting youth who are just trying to stay alive. you are not protecting children by making us wait longer for treatment or shielding us from supportive outlets. grow the fuck up. you're an adult, act like it. find something else to do with your life than attack an astronomically small minority of people.
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beardedmrbean · 7 months
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Every time I see someone wanting to ban specific dogs breeds I die a little inside. Especially from people who are extremely pro second amendment. Wanting to ban dogs because some might be violent is no different than wanting to ban guns because some people use them to rob and murder. And most people who want to ban pitbulls can't even correctly identify one anyway, they're the dog equivalent of assault rifles, a meaningless buzzword meant to fearmonger.
I can't think of any 2A-OK people that run with the thought that any dogs should be banned. Admittedly I haven't paid much attention so it could be fairly widespread and I just don't know it.
Most understand that it's not the dog it's the person who has the dog, there are some that are likely far more easy to get to be dangerous than others, can't imagine a goldie or samoyed ever being violent feels like something that would take effort, even still there's no bad dogs just bad owners.
Gotta say this comes at a wild time because when I read the first bit I thought you were talking about the UK.
Up and down the UK, news headlines have been dominated by seemingly endless terrifying dog attacks in recent months.
In Surrey, a professional dog walker died when her own pet turned on her. In South Yorkshire, police reported four separate dog attacks on children in two days. In Birmingham, an 11-year-old girl was attacked in the street. And in Staffordshire, a man died last week, with grisly video footage of the attack emerging and horrifying the nation.
So what do all these attacks have in common? They are all believed to be the doing of the American Bully XL breed, an increasingly popular and hard to define sub-breed of the American Bulldog.
Now, with the attacks capturing attention at the highest levels of Government, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has called American Bully XLs a “danger to our communities”, and vowed to add the breed — once it has been established in law — to the list of dogs banned in the UK.
1. Pit Bull Terrier
The breed that spurred dozens of sub-breeds, the Pit Bull Terrier (PBT) was bred for blood sport — and can be devilishly hard to define. 
According to DEFRA guidelines, authorities should use a checklist to identify PBT characteristics in dogs they think might fit the breed, including the shape of its head, shoulders, muzzle, eyes and rib cage. 
Traditionally bred for fighting, a spate of fatal attacks in England and Wales by PBTs between 1981 and 1991 led to the introduction of the Dangerous Dog Act, and the breed was banned. 
There are numerous sub-breeds which are not banned, however, like the Staffordshire Bull Terrier and the American Bully XL. 
2. Japanese Tosa
The Japanese Tosa or Japanese Mastiff is a breed of fighting dog that was crossbred with large and giant breeds including the Great Dane to produce enormous results. 
Spookily, Japanese dog fighting rules (the practice is still permitted in some parts of Japan and almost all fighting dogs are Tosas) declare that dogs mustn’t be noisy in the pit, so the Tosa is able to fight in complete silence. 
According to experts, if the Tosa isn’t properly trained it can be very aggressive towards strangers and other animals, earning it a place on the banned breeds list. 
3. Dogo Argentino
This Argentinian working dog was bred to hunt big game in packs. It is known for being highly intelligent, protective and ruthless, and should never be handled by anyone other than a breed expert — which is why it’s on the list in the UK and several other countries.
4. Fila Brasileiro
Also known as the Brazilian Mastiff, Brazilian Bloodhound, Cao de Brasil, Cao de Fila, and the Fila, this breed — originally used for hunting and working —  is known for being very nervous of strangers and surprisingly agile for its size. 
The Fila has a better reputation in Brazil, where it is praised for its loyalty, but its intelligence, strength and aggression have led to bans in the UK,  Australia, New Zealand, Norway and Denmark, among others. 
5. To be banned by 2024: American Bully XL
The American Bully XL is the largest variation of the American Bulldog breed, which also oncluides the pocket and standard variation. 
It is thought to have been developed from cross-breeding with other breeds — including the banned Pit Bull Terrier. They are known for their heavy bone structure and strong, stocky build. 
The American Bully XL is set to be the first added to the list since the introduction of the law in 1991 — but there are complexities. It is not an officially recognised breed, so it’s difficult for officials to determine which dogs should be outlawed, and which should be added to the list. 
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First and last ones are the only ones I'm familiar with, also the prime targets nearly every time talk of a ban comes up.
#3 there is the only one I might have reservations about and there's gonna be ways to train them to behave too.
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handeaux · 2 months
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While The Wright Brothers Toiled, Cincinnati’s Flying Machine Fanatics Tanked
Ohio license plates proclaim the Buckeye State as the “Birthplace of Aviation.” Had fate turned out differently, that sobriquet could have applied to Cincinnati. Over the years, several Cincinnati tinkerers tried unsuccessfully to loft a heavier-than-air craft.
As far back as 1834, a Cincinnati resident named Albert Masson constructed a vehicle he described as an “aerial steam boat.” According to a writer signed only as “J.L.” (possibly John Laughlin, secretary of the Ohio Mechanics Institute), in the Liberty Hall and Cincinnati Gazette newspaper [3 July 1834]:
“The boat is about ten feet long; the ribs being covered in silk, in order to render it very light. – The engine, of two horse power, is placed in the middle, and turns four vertical shafts projecting over the bow and stern, into each of which are fixed 4 spiral silken wings, which are made to revolve with a sufficient velocity to cause the vessel to rise.”
According to “J.L.”, the entire apparatus weighed about 60 pounds and Mr. Masson intended to fly the contraption on July 4 – the very next day. At the time of publication, the aerial steam boat was on display “on Race street, nearly opposite the old Lath Factory, below Third street.”
Mr. Masson did not go airborne on Independence Day and, in August, his flying machine was on earthbound display at the Commercial Exchange. The Daily Cincinnati Republican reported, “There is nothing of the balloon principle connected to the apparatus.” and that it was “a beautiful and ingenious piece of mechanism.”
As beautiful and ingenious as it was, the aerial steam boat appears not to have ever achieved flight and all references to it cease after 1834. Tom D. Crouch, curator of aeronautics at the National Air and Space Museum and a former chief of education for the Ohio Historical Society, has researched Masson’s invention extensively, publishing his findings in the Journal of the American Aviation Historical Society [Spring 1974]. According to Mr. Crouch:
“If we are to believe the articles published in the Cincinnati papers, and there seems no reason to doubt them, then Albert Masson was the first person in history to produce a heavier-than-air craft, powered by a prime mover, that was actually intended to fly.”
Although Mr. Masson vanished into the mists of history, between 1840 and 1902, Cincinnati newspapers printed at least 404 articles with the phrase "flying machine." Some of these reports featured home-grown Cincinnati aeronauts.
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Cincinnatians awoke on 27 Oct 1889 to learn that a local man, one Ferdinand W. Randall of Main Street, had built a flying machine. In fact, this inventor had quite a surprise for the scientific community. As related by the Cincinnati Enquirer:
"He not only has a flying machine, but claims to have discovered perpetual motion."
The newspaper goes on to relate that Mr. Randall's inventions have "something lacking." That "something" was, of course, money.
Mr. Randall, approximately 35 years in age at the time, was a photographer. His workshop was on Main Street. His flying machine was described as a "peculiar-looking sail-boat" suspended by a wire from the ceiling. It was basically a boat hull, with a screw propeller and rudder at the rear, four wheels and an "intricate mass of fans and wire cables." Two black wings, wider and longer than the boat, were suspended above. According to the Enquirer,
"The beauty about Mr. Randall's machine is that it can move on land, in the water, or in the air."
Randall told the Enquirer he had read every book available on aeronautics and is "undoubtedly well posted on the subject." Well posted or not, Mr. Randall joined the roster of inventors whose aircraft never left the ground.
Curiously, just 18 months later, the Cincinnati newspapers found yet another potential flying machine. This one was created by a mechanic named John Randall, of 322 Vine Street, who had built a flying machine remarkably similar to the airship unveiled by Ferdinand Randall - a boat 18 feet long with a mass of wires attached.
Similar flying machines and identical names? Not a coincidence. The Randalls were brothers who had operated Randall Brothers Outdoor Photographers for several years. The younger brother struck out on his own and got work as a mechanic and electrician.
Ferdinand apparently gave the flying machine to his brother because the machine described in 1891 is almost identical to the 1889 machine with one exception. John replaced the two black wings atop Ferdinand’s machine with a large canvas balloon. In other words, it was no longer a heavier-than-air machine, but only a mechanically propelled lighter-than-air craft. Not the same thing at all.
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Had another local man succeeded, Kennedy Heights or Norwood might be known as the birthplace of manned flight. Alas, Charles M. Mallory did not succeed. In fact, he failed again and again and again. Sometimes spectacularly.
In August 1902, the 40-year-old Mallory, a pattern maker with the Bullock Electric Manufacturing Company, announced that he would launch a new flying machine into the air from a vacant lot in Kennedy Heights. With a large crowd observing, he rolled out a contraption described by the Cincinnati Enquirer:
"It was as if two monster Mexican hats had been inverted and joined together by a framework that had wings on either side. At one end was a rudder."
With a squad of volunteers tugging away, Mallory's monstrosity "scudded along the scaffolding for a few feet and then toppled over on one side."
Mallory tried again in November 1902 at the grounds of the old Norwood Inn. This time, instead of human volunteers, Colonel James E. Fennessy, a local theatrical impresario, volunteered to tow the contraption aloft with his automobile. Col. Fennessy got bored waiting for Mallory to prepare his flying machine and drove home. Fennessy sent a chauffeur out to Norwood with another automobile, but he, too, lost patience.
When Mallory was finally ready, no automobiles could be found, despite messengers and phone calls. While waiting in vain for another runabout, Mallory agreed to pose for photographs in his machine, hoisted to the top of a derrick. The wind caught the contraption and dashed it to the ground from a height of 25 feet. Although Mallory was unhurt, his flying machine was in tatters.
Mallory attempted another flight in August 1903 off Lookout Mountain in Tennessee but, again, the wind dashed his contraction to flinders. Interestingly, Mallory told the Cincinnati Post at that time that he had achieved an 80-foot flight in Norwood, a feat suspiciously unseen by any other witness.
Four months later, the Wright boys grabbed the prize.
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howldean · 1 year
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yo wtf my birthday is national prime rib day. ok
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ketrinadrawsalot · 2 years
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Happy National Prime Rib Day!
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fatehbaz · 2 years
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Imperial dispossession in Greenland and islands of the Pacific; making new suburbias; exporting US domestic lifestyles; Indigenous resistance
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Within the Western popular imagination, places like the RMI [Marshall Islands] and Greenland are often used as mirrors or -- perhaps more accurately -- as bellwethers: an example of what could be (or what will become of) the so-called First World [...]. They are rarely made meaningful on their own. Instead, reports published in major news outlets describe a “melting” Greenland and a “disappearing” Marshall Islands by translating their loss through symbolic forms deemed more legible to the average American. [...] [N]uclear photography endeavored to “take the place out of the landscape” so as to replace public concerns around ethics instead with awe [...], [undertaken simultaneously as] movement of peoples necessary to, first, produce terra nullius -- a space emptied and made available [...] -- and second, to mark that space as distinctly American through the installation of miniature suburbias in the form of military bases and bunkers [...]. Social, geographical, and material practices of division -- split atoms, nuclear family units -- reflect what Aimee Bahng has referred to as “settler colonial… constructions of enclosure” [...]. [There was an] extension of heteronormative American domestic life onto and into Indigenous territories cleared for Cold War projects: a manifest destiny for the nuclear age. [...]
[A] “homemaking project” that once collapsed the “here” and “there” of US empire now envisions a difference that overlooks American complicity in apocalyptic climate futures upon Indigenous lands across North America, Oceania, and the Arctic. It is, in part, because of the presumed insignificance of the Marshall Islands and Greenland (and by extension their people) that these two places became pulled into the crosshairs of atomic geopolitical warfare. [...]
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As Marshallese activist Darlene Keju-Johnson recalled, “in 1946, a U.S. Navy officer came to Bikini Island and told Chief Juda, ‘We are testing these bombs for the good of mankind, and to end all wars’… the naval officer did not tell the chief that the Bikinians would never see their home again” [...]. Moved to first Rongdrik (Rongerik), then Ānewetak, then Kuwajleen (Kwajalein), and then Kōle (Kili), ri-Pikinni struggled to survive as the United States tested sixty-seven nuclear bombs on Pikinni (Bikini) and other nearby sites between 1946 and 1958. [...] These ideologies were exported in the form of US military installations like the US Army Garrison Kwajalein Atoll and Greenland’s Camp Century, constructed in midcentury. [...] Historian Lauren Hirschberg’s analysis of the suburbanization of Kuwajleen highlights how the heteronormative nuclear family structure became central to the remaking of the atoll as both a space of exception and “a colonial technology for marking the island as a familiar domestic national space” [...].
Through a major partnership with Bell Telephone Laboratories, the US military promoted life on Kuwajleen as a space of supreme comfort and leisure through the publication of welcome guides that boasted salons, prime rib dinners, and department store shopping [...]. Meanwhile, Marshallese day laborers who provided janitorial, housekeeping, and groundskeeping services commuted from Epjā (Ebeye), where they lived both segregated from and economically beholden to the base [...].
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Just as Marshallese were displaced from Pikinni and other atolls, Inuktun were moved to accommodate American military operations. [...] One of the largest military bases ever constructed by the United States, Thule served as a key strategic location [...] and, simultaneously, distracted from undisclosed nuclear activity at nearby Camp Century, a “city under the ice” that housed an arsenal of six hundred nuclear missiles [...]. [P]lans for Thule’s expansion in May 1953 included the forced removal of eighty-seven Inuktun and the demolition of their homes [...].
Newsreels about Camp Century similarly highlighted features designed to replicate American suburban life “under the ice.” Created by the United States in 1960, Camp Century operated as a cover for Project Iceworm, which used a network of subterranean tunnels burrowed under the Greenland ice sheet as a nuclear arsenal. The camp, which operated only until 1966, comprised living quarters, research facilities, and a portable nuclear reactor for the stated purpose of better understanding military effectiveness and operations in Arctic conditions. In the minds of Americans, who came to know this “city under the ice” through maps, photographs, and live footage circulated by the US government, it functioned as a kind of ultimate fantasy fallout shelter that promised to keep the American way of life secure and safe [...]. The US Department of Defense 1961 short film Big Picture: City under the Ice is one example of the substantial media production surrounding Camp Century, which reveled in the engineering used to build closed-system facilities for maintaining American lifestyles amid what is frequently referred to as “barren” and “lifeless” landscapes. In it, the narrator lists items representing domestic comforts: prefabricated houses, hot showers, and “even ice cream” as a subtle underscore of the hermetic barrier between the bunker and the glacier [...].
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As Anne Spice points out in their analysis of Indigenous resistance to oil pipelines as “critical infrastructures” of the settler state, long-standing “binaries of civilized/savage and culture/nature” continue to inform theorizations of the built environment as marks of modernity. The role that infrastructure plays in state-building projects has a capillary function, pumping power in the form of oil, electricity, water, people, and capital into Indigenous territories in ways that, in turn, obscure Native presence. Tracing a substantial anthropology of infrastructure that locates transportation systems like pipelines, railroads, and highways as “settler colonial technologies of invasion,” Spice reveals how these material networks naturalize settler presence as seemingly stable, inevitable, and permanent [...]
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Text published by: Hi’ilei Julia Hobart. “Atomic Histories and Elemental Futures across Indigenous Waters.” Media + Environment 3 (1). 2021. [Bold emphasis and some paragraph breaks/contractions added by me. Italicized first paragraph/heading in this post added by me.]
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smile-today-because · 2 years
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April 27th:
Today is national prime rib day! Go eat some prime rib :)
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nobertsales · 2 years
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It’s National Prime Rib Day! The “prime” in prime rib refers to the origin of the cut, not the USDA grade. The prime rib is from the primal rib, the area behind the shoulder, but above the lower back.  It is one of the eight primal cuts of beef and includes some of the most tender muscles on the entire animal. This cut can be comprised of 2 to 7 ribs and comes from ribs 6 through 12. A standing rib roast is a prime rib consisting of SEVEN ribs, and is actually roasted in a standing position A scooped & tied standing rib roast will have the bones taken off and then tied back on. A rib eye roast is a boneless prime rib. The prime rib offers a generous amount of marbling, which contributes to its juiciness and flavor. #NationalPrimeRibDay #PrimeRib 🥩 #FoodConsultant #FoodService #FoodServiceSolutions #FoodSales #Food #FoodDude #WeKnowFood #NobertSales @NobertSales (at Germantown, Tennessee) https://www.instagram.com/p/Cc2r2F9u3Nk/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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bestmessage · 24 hours
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National Prime Rib Day Messages and Quotes
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This day celebrates one of the eight prime cuts of the beef which is full of flavors. Wish your family and friends with National Prime Rib Day greetings and wishes. Share with everyone around quotes and sayings drafted for National Prime Rib Day.
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constructionss · 4 months
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Culinary Delights: Exploring Foodiea Gems in Surat and Broken Bow
When it comes to travel, the adventure doesn't solely lie in exploring scenic landscapes or historical monuments. For many, the journey is a culinary exploration, a quest to savor the diverse flavors a destination has to offer. Surat, a bustling city in India, and Broken Bow, a charming town in the United States, may seem worlds apart, but they share a common thread – a rich tapestry of culinary delights that captivate the senses. Let's embark on a gastronomic journey, discovering the things to do in Surat and Broken Bow that will satisfy every foodie's cravings.
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Things to Do in Surat: A Feast for the Senses
Surat, located in the Indian state of Gujarat, is not only known for its vibrant culture and textile industry but is also a haven for food enthusiasts. The city's culinary landscape is a melting pot of flavors, offering a unique blend of traditional Gujarati cuisine and international influences.
1. Savor Street Food Delights:
To truly immerse yourself in the local food scene, start with Surat's iconic street food. Begin your day with a visit to Sarasiya Khau Galli, a bustling street that comes alive with the aroma of delectable snacks. Indulge in the city's famous Locho – a savory steamed snack that will leave your taste buds tingling. For those with a sweet tooth, Ghari and Surti Undhiyu are must-try desserts that showcase the culinary prowess of the region.
As you navigate through the narrow lanes, make a pit stop at Kansar Kathiyawadi, a local eatery known for its authentic Kathiyawadi cuisine. From the fiery flavors of sev tameta nu shaak to the comforting goodness of bajra rotla, each dish tells a tale of Gujarat's culinary heritage.
Things to do in Surat are not limited to just indulging your taste buds. The city offers a diverse range of experiences, from exploring historical sites to vibrant markets, ensuring there's something for everyone.
Things to Do in Broken Bow: A Culinary Adventure in Nature's Lap
Switching continents, we find ourselves in Broken Bow, a picturesque town nestled in the heart of Oklahoma, USA. Known for its serene landscapes and outdoor activities, Broken Bow surprises visitors with its burgeoning culinary scene.
1. Explore Farm-to-Table Dining:
In recent years, Broken Bow has embraced the farm-to-table movement, and local restaurants have capitalized on the abundance of fresh, locally-sourced ingredients. Begin your culinary journey at Abendigo's Grill and Patio, where the menu is a celebration of Oklahoma's agricultural bounty. The grilled peach salad and the hickory-smoked ribs are local favorites that showcase the region's flavors.
For a more intimate dining experience, head to Moon Tower Bar & Grill. Set against the backdrop of the Ouachita National Forest, this hidden gem offers a menu that combines classic American dishes with a Southern twist. The catfish po'boy and the blackened prime rib are not to be missed.
2. Indulge in Lakeside Dining:
One of the unique things to do in Broken Bow is to enjoy a meal with a view of the pristine Broken Bow Lake. Visit Rolling Fork Takery, a lakeside eatery that specializes in gourmet tacos and artisanal sandwiches. The outdoor seating provides the perfect ambiance to savor your meal while surrounded by the natural beauty of the lake.
Whether you're a nature enthusiast or a culinary connoisseur, things to do in Broken Bow encompass a wide array of experiences. From hiking trails to water activities, the town offers a perfect blend of adventure and relaxation.
Conclusion: A Global Gastronomic Sojourn
In the world of travel, where memories are often etched in the flavors of a destination, Surat and Broken Bow stand out as culinary gems waiting to be discovered. As we wrap up our exploration of the delectable offerings in these diverse locales, it's essential to highlight the shared essence of these seemingly disparate places.
Surat, with its vibrant street food culture and rich history, beckons travelers to embark on a sensory journey through its bustling markets and aromatic alleys. Meanwhile, Broken Bow, nestled in the lap of nature, surprises visitors with a culinary scene that seamlessly blends farm-to-table freshness with breathtaking lakeside views.
In both destinations, the food isn't merely sustenance; it's a cultural expression, a narrative of the people, history, and geography. Surat's street vendors, with their skillful hands and secret spice blends, tell tales of a culinary heritage passed down through generations. On the other side of the globe, Broken Bow's chefs, inspired by the bounty of local farms and the serene beauty of their surroundings, craft dishes that are a testament to the region's evolving gastronomic identity.
As we conclude our global gastronomic sojourn, it's evident that the joy of travel lies not just in the sights we see but in the flavors we savor. Whether you're strolling through the lively streets of Surat, sampling the diverse street food, or relishing a lakeside meal in Broken Bow, each bite is a chapter in the story of your journey.
So, fellow travelers and food enthusiasts, as you plan your next adventure, consider these culinary havens. Let the streets of Surat and the landscapes of Broken Bow be your guide, promising not only breathtaking views and cultural immersion but a feast for your taste buds that transcends borders. Indulge in the unique culinary offerings, and let the flavors of these destinations become a part of your own travel story. Your global gastronomic adventure awaits, one plate at a time.
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