
Thought I would begin with an easy dessert recipe that I found, tried and sent to all my friends.
APPLE GALETTE

Yum, yum.

mantra wrote:I rarely eat dessert, but make an exception for a home-made apple pie. That looks tasty Neferti - and an easy version of a Tarte Tatin.
Sixteen years of searching for a wedding ring culminated in an unlikely discovery for a Swedish couple. Ola and Lena Paahlsson found the ring on a carrot in their garden.
"The carrot was sprouting in the middle of the ring," Ola Paahlsson told Dagens Nyheter, a daily newspaper in Sweden. "It is quite incredible."
The ring, set with seven small diamonds, went missing in her kitchen in 1995, Lena Paahlsson told the paper. The couple, who reside in central Sweden, believed Lena's ring fell into a sink and was lost in vegetable peelings that were turned into compost or fed to their sheep.
"I had given up hope," Lena Paahlsson told Dagens Nyheter.
They may have given up hope, but they never completely gave up the hunt. Many years after losing the ring, the couple even removed the tiling off the floor in the hope of finding it.
Their determination finally paid off. Recently as Lena Paahlsson was pulling out a carrot from their garden, she noticed it had something attached to it. It was the ring, relatively unscathed.
"Our daughter Anna was at home at the time and she heard an almighty scream from the garden," Ola Paahlsson told The Local website.
The couple will probably never know how this minor miracle occurred, but that won't stop them from guessing.
"We thought maybe it had fallen into the compostable food bin," Ola Paahlsson told The Local. "Perhaps it ended up in compost that was spread over the vegetable patch later. ... Maybe it had been eaten by the sheep and then ended up in the manure that we then spread over the vegetable patch."
"We're keeping it in a safe place," Lena Paahlsson tells the Dalarnas Tidningar newspaper in Sweden.
Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/world/s ... z2kSkkmCxi" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
http://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/health ... 6762490985David Perlmutter, a renowned neurologist and president of the Perlmutter Health Center in Naples, Florida, says there's a close relationship between lifestyle, our modern diet and dementia.
Dr Perlmutter, who has just released a New York Times best-selling book Grain Brain: The Surprising Truth About Wheat, Carbs, and Sugar - Your Brain's Silent Killers says it's not just unhealthy carbs that should be cut.
He says eating grains can lead to dementia, chronic headaches, depression, epilepsy and other health problems.
"Even healthy ones like whole grains can cause dementia, ADHD, anxiety, chronic headaches, depression, and much more," his website says.
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