foody.indah.link by Linda Hubbard on July 31, 2022
The Dish Area will be closed to visitors Monday, Aug. 1, through Sunday, Aug. 14,for annual maintenance, and re-opening on Monday, Aug. 15. Information about visiting the Dish Area, including any future updates on the closure, is available on the Stanford Dish Area website.
The Brand Goes Behind-the-Scenes with Rapper Fat Joe and Wife Lorena Cartagena on Their Own Friendly Food Feud to Unlock an Exclusive DoorDash Deal for Fans to Get a Free Pepsi with Their Dish, Their Way
PURCHASE, N.Y., July 29, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Every Hispanic family has their own heated debate on a favorite dish – whether it's the perfect take on arroz con pollo, the right preparation for tacos, a special empanada technique, or what it takes to get the most balanced ceviche. In celebration of this great cultural debate, Pepsi is highlighting the diversity of Latin American cuisine with new content and a reward for fans, to prove that no matter how a signature dish is enjoyed it can be #MejorConPepsi.
To bring the campaign to life Pepsi got behind the scenes of one family's debate, filming as Puerto Rican and Cuban raised rapper Fat Joe and his wife Lorena, of Colombian descent, dove into their own passionate dispute on the "correct" way to make some of their favorite dishes, starting with their most common sources of contention: tacos and arroz con pollo. Fans can tune in to the content to see how Fat Joe and Lorena each enjoy these dishes in their own way.
"I love seeing Pepsi showing up for the culture and highlighting one of the things Lorena and I love the most about it - the cuisine," said Fat Joe. "With my Puerto Rican and Cuban roots and her Colombian ones, there's no hiding the passion and pride we have for the foods we grew up eating. Even if my wife might roll her eyes at my preferences, at the end of the day we both know that no matter where we stand, it's #MejorConPepsi."
In celebration and support of local eats, the brand is also launching an exclusive DoorDash offer for fans to enjoy their own favorite Hispanic dishes. Consumers in New York City, Los Angeles, Miami, Chicago, Dallas and Houston will get $5 off a food order of $15 or more, with purchase of an ice-cold Pepsi or Pepsi Zero Sugar, from select local Hispanic restaurants until August 11, while supplies last.
"This year, the Mejor Con Pepsi campaign is highlighting a cultural truth among many Hispanic families. Our passion for our cuisine is what makes the debates so heated - and fun," said Maria-Teresa Laspisa, PepsiCo Senior Director of Marketing and Innovation. "It's a debate Fat Joe and his wife Lorena could relate to which is why they were the perfect duo to be part of this year's campaign and get the conversation going. We encourage fans to get involved and join the debate by ordering their own local favorites - done their way and #MejorConPepsi."
In its second year, the #MejorConPepsi campaign will highlight key Hispanic dishes from empanadas to arroz con pollo in branded content across TVC, social media, OOH, and retail POS.
In 2020, as part of its Racial Equality Journey Hispanic Initiative, PepsiCo committed $172 million over five years to address issues of inequality and create opportunity for Hispanic Americans within its workforce, business partnerships, and the communities it serves. As part of that, PepsiCo dedicated $50 million to support Hispanic-owned businesses over five years. As a result, PepsiCo launched Juntos Crecemos, a multi-faceted platform aimed at accelerating business recovery for Hispanic small businesses, specifically restaurants, bodegas, and carnicerías disproportionately affected by the pandemic.
About PepsiCo PepsiCo products are enjoyed by consumers more than one billion times a day in more than 200 countries and territories around the world. PepsiCo generated more than $79 billion in net revenue in 2021, driven by a complementary beverage and convenient foods portfolio that includes Lay's, Doritos, Cheetos, Gatorade, Pepsi-Cola, Mountain Dew, Quaker, and SodaStream. PepsiCo's product portfolio includes a wide range of enjoyable foods and beverages, including many iconic brands that generate more than $1 billion each in estimated annual retail sales.
Guiding PepsiCo is our vision to Be the Global Leader in Beverages and Convenient Foods by Winning with PepsiCo Positive (pep+). pep+ is our strategic end-to-end transformation that puts sustainability at the center of how we will create value and growth by operating within planetary boundaries and inspiring positive change for the planet and people. For more information, visit www.pepsico.com.
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July 29, 2022 at 08:00PM
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Pepsi Celebrates the Most Hotly Contested Latin Dishes to Show Fans that No Matter Their Preference, Their Favorite Dishes Are #MejorConPepsi USA - English - USA - PR Newswire
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If dishwashing feels like a revolving door of never-ending dirty dishes and cookware, you’re not alone. More often not, the dreaded task results in a puddle of soapy, food-speckled water pooled on the countertops and a pile of wet rags from all the drying. Gross. That’s why equipping your kitchen with a dish rack that does the job and does it well is pretty darn important. The only issue? Finding a functional, durable, and well-designed dish rack can feel virtually impossible, let alone one that looks good next to the sink. So, when we stumbled across the Tower Two-Tier Dish Rack from Yamazaki, we just had to share our find.
Let’s be honest, it was no surprise to discover such a versatile, useful, and aesthetic rack on their site. The brand is one of the best places to source effective, high-quality, and attractive solutions to all sorts of storage needs — think everything from a do-it-all magnetic storage shelf to towel racks that make space out of thin air.
So, what makes this rack so special? Allow us to explain. As the name suggests, the Tower Two-Tier has two levels to maximize space. The body of the rack is made from sturdy steel, while the removable tray and utensil holder are made of a durable plastic. The best part? The tray can slide beneath either level, depending on what your dish-drying needs are. If you have a small drying job, simply insert the tray beneath the upper level to siphon all the excess water off to the side with the tray’s draining spout (it rotates 360-degrees). Plus, if you plan on using the rack that way, you can easily store something beneath, making it a great storage solution for small kitchen counters.
And if you find yourself cleaning up after a big feast, you won’t have to worry about hand drying. This thing can handle it all. In fact, tons of reviewers were left pleasantly surprised by the streamlined solution’s unexpected capacity: “Its compact size fits more dishes than you expect,” said one. Another customer shared: “I can’t believe I am saying it but this dish rack has literally changed my life.” We’ll take it! They added on, admiring the rack’s hardy construction, “it’s heavy and substantial enough that it won’t tip with heavy things in the top, and it’s compact enough to fit in my tiny kitchen while still allowing me to dry a lot of dishes at once.” Where has this been all our lives?!
Aside from its customizable two-tier design, the rack also comes along with hooks and a utensil holder that clips onto the upper level. Just think about how much extra space you could achieve by hanging spatulas and tongs from the hooks instead of jamming them into the holder with your forks and spoons. “I love the three hooks for measuring cups and measuring spoons,” wrote one reviewer. They praised its space-saving abilities, too: “It’s also a perfect, narrower size to give us a little more counter space. Next to it I have the bottle drier which is great to dry our water bottles, reusable bags and small coffee carafe.” Who wouldn’t want more counter space?
Yet another bonus? It comes pre-assembled, so you don’t have to worry about pulling out a tool kit or fumbling with confusing instructions. The truth is, so many of us have clunky dish racks that take up way too much precious countertop real estate — or worse, a rack that’s not efficiently designed. You’ll be surprised how making the simple switch to this Yamazaki find will instantly upgrade your kitchen.
Take it from this reviewer: “I simply love this dish rack. Amazingly, it has a way of making my small kitchen feel more efficient and organized. Dare I say it makes doing the dishes fun?”
Shares in Comcast and Meta got hammered in early trading today, though the broader stock markets are holding steady despite swirling currents of economic news and signs of a recession.
Comcast, which beat Wall Street expectations in the second quarter, also reported alarming slowdowns in broadband sign-ups and Peacock Premium subscriptions. Its stock, which usually makes modest moves of at most a percentage point or two on a typical day, fell more than 9% to $39.34 this morning. Trading volume was slightly below average, though, indicating something less than an all-out panic.
Meta Platforms, which on Wednesday posted its first year-to-year decline since going public in 2012, is also getting blitzed. Down more than 6% it was at about $159, within sight of its 52-week low of $154.25. The tech sector will see some key data points after the close of the trading day when Amazon, Apple and Roku all report quarterly results. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg called out a “an economic downturn that will have a broad impact on the digital advertising business.”
With Comcast shares declining, the trends revealed in its quarterly report prompted some investors to flee Charter Communications and Dish Network. Charter, which will report its quarterly numbers on Friday morning, declined 8% to $436.37, while Dish pulled back about 4.5% to $17.65.
Although the stock markets have been volatile of late, the major indices were trending positively heading toward mid-day, with the Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq all up a fraction. Traders have been digesting the Federal Reserve’s three-quarter-point interest rate hike on Wednesday afternoon, as well as Fed chairman Jerome Powell’s comments on the economy. While Powell believes that the country has not entered a recession, gross domestic product numbers released this morning indicate otherwise. Because there have been two straight quarters of GDP decline, most economists define the current state of affairs as a recession. For the media and tech sector, a slowdown in advertising (seen in quarterly numbers from Alphabet, Meta, Twitter and other companies) is being caused by supply-chain issues and other challenges. A spike in inflation this year has also put pressure on subscription businesses.
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July 28, 2022 at 10:34PM
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Shares In Comcast, Meta Blitzed After Earnings; Charter And Dish Are Collateral Damage But Broader Markets Move Higher - Deadline
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In this comedic culture-war thriller, B.J. Novak, who wrote and directed, plays an aspiring podcaster chasing a true-crime story in West Texas.
Ben Manalowitz, who writes for The New Yorker (he’s played by B.J. Novak, who has been published in its pages), wants to break into podcasting. “Not every white guy in America needs to have a podcast,” someone tells him, but this white guy sees the platform as a perfect stage for his ambitions and his big thoughts about America.
Ben has a theory about the divided, discontented state of the country. Eloise (Issa Rae), a receptive, well-connected, somewhat skeptical producer, tells him that what he needs is a story. Their brief debate about the relative merits of theories and stories distills a conundrum that will be familiar to journalists and other writers. Are we looking for facts or ideas? Characters or historical forces? Generalities or particulars? These questions are the key to “Vengeance,” which tries to have it both ways by reverse engineering its story about the treachery of storytelling from a theory about the danger of theorizing.
Novak, who wrote and directed the movie, has his own thoughts about America, subtler than Ben’s but not necessarily any more convincing. “Vengeance,” while earnest, thoughtful and quite funny in spots, demonstrates just how difficult it can be to turn political polarization and culture-war hostility into a credible narrative. Its efforts shouldn’t be dismissed, even though it’s ultimately too clever for its own good, and maybe not quite as smart as it thinks it is.
The same could be said about Ben, who is also, at least at the start of the movie, the object of Novak’s most brutal, knowing satire. We first meet him at a party on a terrace with a view of the Brooklyn Bridge, where he and a pal spin elaborate philosophical justifications for their cynical, transactional approach to sex and romance. The way Ben intellectualizes his own shallowness feels so accurate — and so repellent — that you may wonder if the film can redeem him enough to make another 90 minutes in his company anything but insufferable.
But what looks like yet another self-conscious, New York-centric satire of white male media-elite entitlement turns into something else. A few other things, really, including a fish-out-of-water comedy and a twisty detective story, with Ben as both fish and gumshoe.
A late-night phone call dispatches him to West Texas, where an aspiring singer he has hooked up with a few times in New York has been found dead under a pump jack in an oil field. Ben knew her as Abby, though he might not have known that it was short for Abilene. (In haunting, posthumously viewed video clips, she’s played by Lio Tipton.) Ben’s number was in her cellphone, and her family is under the impression that he was the love of her life.
Ben flies out to the funeral, where he is welcomed into Abilene’s big Texas family. There are two sisters (Isabella Amara and Dove Cameron) also named for cities, a no-nonsense mom (J. Smith-Cameron), a salty grandma (Louanne Stephens, who also played a Texas granny on “Friday Night Lights”) and two brothers, the younger of whom (Eli Abrams Bickel) answers to El Stupido.
The older one, Ty (Boyd Holbrook), dragoons Ben into the scheme that gives the movie its title and its momentum. Ty is convinced that Abilene’s death was the result of a shadowy, nefarious conspiracy, and that her killers need to be dealt with. In his feverish ramblings, Ben hears an opportunity for audio gold. True crime. A first-person meditation on American Life. An inquiry into the nature of storytelling and the slipperiness of truth. Eloise agrees — “a dead white girl: the holy grail of podcasting” — and ships him the necessary recording equipment.
The best part of “Vengeance” is the middle, during which Novak humanizes cultural stereotypes — including Ben himself — without losing his sense of humor. It turns out that people are complicated, and that they can surprise you. This is the kind of insight that is easily oversold, since it depends on an assumption that the audience thinks otherwise. But Ben’s superficial self-awareness is replaced by active curiosity (he is a writer, after all), and he comes to feel genuine tenderness for Ty, Granny and the rest. He also meets other local characters who knew Abilene and who aren’t who they seem to be, including a drug dealer (Zach Villa) and a mystical record producer (Ashton Kutcher).
For a while, glib sociology and facile plotting take a back seat to sharp, low-key humanist comedy. Novak, who has published a collection of short stories and a children’s book, is a deft writer and (as we know from “The Office”) a nimble ensemble player. A sitcom version of “Vengeance,” with Ben embedded in Abilene’s hometown, might be worth a few seasons on a streaming platform, and for about 45 minutes the movie functions as a pretty good pilot for that.
Ben develops an appreciation for Whataburger and Frito pie, learns a hard lesson about college football fandom and discovers that rural red-staters and urban blue-staters share certain aspirations (fame, self-expression) and cultural reference points (Anton Chekhov, Liam Neeson) while remaining out of sync on other matters. It’s when dealing — or not — with those matters that “Vengeance” turns coy and skittish. Gun culture and the opioid crisis receive cursory attention, but the movie mostly wishes away the sand in the gears of the American experiment.
Nobody has much to say about politics, race, religion, immigration or any of the other stuff we are always fighting about. Maybe Novak’s point is that, face to face and heart to heart, we don’t really fight as much as our social media avatars and elected representatives do. That’s a comforting idea, but this movie’s sophisticated theorizing and busy storytelling can’t disguise its essential banality.
Vengeance
Rated R. Guns, drugs and digital audio. Running time: 1 hour 34 minutes. In theaters.
You know we love meal kits and meal delivery services here at The Post — we did try 23 of them firsthand, after all — and so our goal is finding the perfect fit for everyone.
EveryPlate does a great job of filling that need, as they are one of the most affordable kits on the market, clocking in at just starting at $4.99 per meal. That is far less than your average fast-casual meal, and obviously much better for you, too.
Wait, did we say $4.99? For New York Post readers like yourself, you can get this meal kit for $1.49 per serving, using our exclusive promo code NYPOST149 at checkout.
What is EveryPlate?
The meal kit company is really simple — just the way they like it.
EveryPlate is an easy-to-use meal kit service that allows you to choose up to five meals per week from their weekly menu, for either two or four people. You can browse them all, or filter by type, with options for veggie-lovers, family-friendly selections and easy meals that take 30 minutes or less. Since meals rotate each week, no one will ever leave the table bored.
How much does EveryPlate cost?
We’re so glad you asked. This meal kit is one of the most affordable kits we’ve found, starting at $4.99 per serving and only $1.49 per serving for New York Post readers with the code NYPOST149. There is also a $9.99 shipping fee, but this only applies once per week, regardless of how many meals you order.
Need to skip a week? No problem, as you can also easily skip deliveries or pause your membership, should you be out of town or planning to eat elsewhere for a while. Just be sure to log on to your account and skip up to 5 days before your delivery is scheduled and you won’t be charged.
If you are feeling fancy, there are also weekly options to add premium meals to your cart, at a small additional cost. Think recipes with steak, scallops, salmon and more, making for a great weekly treat when coming home to cook dinner.
What makes EveryPlate different?
To summarize, EveryPlate is for the everyday person who wants an easy, home-cooked meal without having to break the bank or spend too long in the kitchen.
The company sets itself apart by using less packaging and more streamlined menu offerings to keep prices down, while also placing value on your time with easy-to-prepare recipes.
“Our goal with EveryPlate is to help consumers put simple, filling and delicious dinners on the table at a comfortable price point for everyone to enjoy,” reads the FAQ page. “We continuously strive to apply small adjustments to packaging and menu options that help us pass the savings onto the customer. These minor changes and tighter scoped menus give more households a way to enjoy great dinners at a price everyone can get behind.”
When reviewing this meal delivery option last winter, we also found portions to be generous, despite the price tag, and produce to be exceptionally fresh. It was easy to cook and even easier to eat — really the perfect combination.
SpaceX is pulling out all the stops to prevent Dish and other wireless companies from using the same radio frequencies as its internet-from-space Starlink satellites. Today, in a rare media call with reporters, SpaceX representatives reiterated how damaging they believe it would be for Starlink users if the Federal Communications Commission were to open up the 12GHz frequency band — which SpaceX’s satellites currently use — to other terrestrial uses like 5G.
“Essentially, the band would become unusable,” David Goldman, senior director of satellite policy at SpaceX, said during the press call. “It would potentially end services for customers.”
Dish hopes to use the spectrum to build out its new 5G network and has argued the deployment would be a win for consumer internet access.
SpaceX’s concerns began back in January of 2021, when the FCC opened up the possibility of using the 12GHz band for other uses beyond its current capabilities. SpaceX and other satellite operators, including Dish Network, have been relying on the 12GHz band for years to operate their satellites and, in SpaceX’s case, its Starlink mega-constellation. But when the FCC put out the call, Dish and a company called RS Access, which is backed by billionaire Michael Dell, came up with studies for ways they could use 12GHz for terrestrial 5G use.
Recently, SpaceX has made it abundantly clear the company does not want the FCC to open up the 12GHz band to 5G. The company filed a letter with the FCC arguing that allowing 12GHz for 5G use would cause Starlink users relying on the band to experience harmful interference 77 percent of the time, as well as total outages of the service 74 percent of the time. The company also sent out an email to Starlink users, encouraging them to send messages to the FCC and relevant lawmakers to urge them to stop making any changes to the 12GHz band. SpaceX claims that approximately 100,000 people sent messages after that prompt went out — and the company argues that the lack of public support for Dish means the expanded spectrum isn’t necessary.
“We haven’t seen anything from either Dish or Dell where they’ve been able to get any customers to file in support of their service,” Goldman said. “Likely, that is because they don’t really have a service. This is a spectrum speculation play, and it is not really about providing service. This is about lining their pockets with new spectrum rights at the expense of the people who currently use the band.”
Dish is eagerly looking for more spectrum it can put to use for wireless internet as it builds out a nationwide 5G network. The service, which has launched in 120 cities so far across the US, has to reach 70 percent of the US by June 2023 to comply with obligations to the FCC; otherwise, the company faces steep fines. Its network currently reaches only 22 percent of the population.
SpaceX’s concerns about the 12GHz band are exaggerated and wrong, according to Dish, RS Access, and a consortium of other companies known as the 5G for 12 GHz Coalition. They’ve argued that SpaceX sent a “manipulated filing” to the FCC about the kind of interference Starlink users would experience. “This tactic, which is commonly used by Elon Musk, is not only disingenuous, but it promulgates an anti-5G narrative that is harmful to American consumers who deserve greater competition, connectivity options and innovation,” the Coalition wrote in a statement sent to The Verge.
Fighting against that narrative, SpaceX is arguing that RS Access’ own study found that 5G use of the 12GHz band would cause interference. “Starlink terminals within the 5G coverage area typically suffered an exceedance,” the study said, according to a new SpaceX filing with the FCC. SpaceX claims that this means it is a unanimous technical finding that using 12GHz for 5G would cause disruption.
SpaceX also had multiple prominent Starlink users on today’s media call explain how much the internet satellite service has benefited them. SpaceX says it has more than 400,000 active Starlink users but that the service potentially reaches millions of people.
“We are optimistic that this is going to go our way, and the FCC is going to maintain the existing successful rule,” Goldman said. “But what the technical studies show is that if that were not the case, that would be hugely detrimental to the millions of people who use these services.”
SpaceX is pulling out all the stops to prevent Dish and other wireless companies from using the same radio frequencies as its internet-from-space Starlink satellites. Today, in a rare media call with reporters, SpaceX representatives reiterated how damaging they believe it would be for Starlink users if the Federal Communications Commission were to open up the 12GHz frequency band — which SpaceX’s satellites currently use — to other terrestrial uses like 5G.
“Essentially, the band would become unusable,” David Goldman, senior director of satellite policy at SpaceX, said during the press call. “It would potentially end services for customers.”
Dish hopes to use the spectrum to build out its new 5G network and has argued the deployment would be a win for consumer internet access.
SpaceX’s concerns began back in January of 2021, when the FCC opened up the possibility of using the 12GHz band for other uses beyond its current capabilities. SpaceX and other satellite operators, including Dish Network, have been relying on the 12GHz band for years to operate their satellites and, in SpaceX’s case, its Starlink mega-constellation. But when the FCC put out the call, Dish and a company called RS Access, which is backed by billionaire Michael Dell, came up with studies for ways they could use 12GHz for terrestrial 5G use.
Recently, SpaceX has made it abundantly clear the company does not want the FCC to open up the 12GHz band to 5G. The company filed a letter with the FCC arguing that allowing 12GHz for 5G use would cause Starlink users relying on the band to experience harmful interference 77 percent of the time, as well as total outages of the service 74 percent of the time. The company also sent out an email to Starlink users, encouraging them to send messages to the FCC and relevant lawmakers to urge them to stop making any changes to the 12GHz band. SpaceX claims that approximately 100,000 people sent messages after that prompt went out — and the company argues that the lack of public support for Dish means the expanded spectrum isn’t necessary.
“We haven’t seen anything from either Dish or Dell where they’ve been able to get any customers to file in support of their service,” Goldman said. “Likely, that is because they don’t really have a service. This is a spectrum speculation play, and it is not really about providing service. This is about lining their pockets with new spectrum rights at the expense of the people who currently use the band.”
Dish is eagerly looking for more spectrum it can put to use for wireless internet as it builds out a nationwide 5G network. The service, which has launched in 120 cities so far across the US, has to reach 70 percent of the US by June 2023 to comply with obligations to the FCC; otherwise, the company faces steep fines. Its network currently reaches only 22 percent of the population.
SpaceX’s concerns about the 12GHz band are exaggerated and wrong, according to Dish, RS Access, and a consortium of other companies known as the 5G for 12 GHz Coalition. They’ve argued that SpaceX sent a “manipulated filing” to the FCC about the kind of interference Starlink users would experience. “This tactic, which is commonly used by Elon Musk, is not only disingenuous, but it promulgates an anti-5G narrative that is harmful to American consumers who deserve greater competition, connectivity options and innovation,” the Coalition wrote in a statement sent to The Verge.
Fighting against that narrative, SpaceX is arguing that RS Access’ own study found that 5G use of the 12GHz band would cause interference. “Starlink terminals within the 5G coverage area typically suffered an exceedance,” the study said, according to a new SpaceX filing with the FCC. SpaceX claims that this means it is a unanimous technical finding that using 12GHz for 5G would cause disruption.
SpaceX also had multiple prominent Starlink users on today’s media call explain how much the internet satellite service has benefited them. SpaceX says it has more than 400,000 active Starlink users but that the service potentially reaches millions of people.
“We are optimistic that this is going to go our way, and the FCC is going to maintain the existing successful rule,” Goldman said. “But what the technical studies show is that if that were not the case, that would be hugely detrimental to the millions of people who use these services.”
Cracker Barrel's French toast is the dish that's captured the imagination of some users on Reddit, prompting discussion as to what could be the secret to creating the restaurant's simple but satisfying take on the classic. The discussion was started on the subreddit r/TopSecretRecipes, a community dedicated to sharing, deciphering, and replicating recipes from well-known establishments.
"It really is just simple French toast," one user wrote. "The key is starting with the house brand sourdough bread." Another Redditor suggested it was sourdough from the Bay's Southern Bread, a bakery in Lebanon, Tennessee (per Wilson Post). While the bakery does sell its bread directly to the consumer, if you don't live near Lebanon, you might be out of luck. "You'll never replicate the French toast exactly unless you have their bread," the user writes. However, another Redditor in the thread disagreed, saying you just need a good quality loaf of sourdough.
Commenters generally agreed that the recipe was a simple one, though. Many agreed on nixing the cinnamon you might usually find in a French toast mixture, while one user said the batter was as minimalist as whisked eggs with nothing else added. A copycat recipe from The Simple Parent calls for just milk, eggs, vanilla, sugar, and a little salt to coat your Texas toast.
While no one seems to know the exact secret, it seems the one thing everyone can agree on is that nothing beats Cracker Barrel's French toast.
It’s hot. And turning on the oven feels like torture.
But Livermore’s Rebekah Culp is a master of no-cook cooking. Even when summer temperatures tick above 100 degrees, Culp doesn’t break a sweat, because she gets loads of dinner inspiration from the creative, jewel-like “toastinis” and big, bountiful salads served at her artisan cafe, The Press.
At The Press, which has locations in Pleasanton and Livermore, Culp and her crew use Acme whole wheat sourdough and housemade ricotta to build stunning seasonal toastinis like Peach and Coppa with honey and basil or The Eloté-Ro with local roasted corn, bacon, hot sauce and “summer fairy dust,” which is just Tajin. But we’re calling that chile pepper-lime mixture summer fairy dust from now on.
“You have your carb, add your good fat and protein, sprinkle some garnishes for texture, and it becomes a complete meal,” says Culp, founder and co-owner, with her husband, Marshall, of the popular Tri-Valley cafes.
Culp came up with the open-faced idea back in 2015, after leaving a career in corporate dining to start her own business in Pleasanton. Since then, that tiny cafe on Santa Rita Road has doubled in size. In 2018, the Culps opened their second location on First Street in downtown Livermore, where they serve 10 varieties of toastinis alongside Chromatic Coffee.
“People told me they didn’t want the standard breakfast with heavy pancakes and potatoes,” she says. “So I came up with an avocado and egg toast. And every year, we keep adding more.”
Her tips: Start with a hearty bread sliced thinner than you normally would and toast it at medium heat. Spread the toast with a layer of goat cheese or ricotta and top it with fresh slices of whatever you have on hand — tomato, beets, stone fruits. Add depth with a drizzle of good olive oil or honey, and crunch from microgreens, seeds, bacon crumbles or sea salt. Avocado is wonderful instead of ricotta. And any nut butter works great with fresh fruit.
“They’re just so easy to make and so versatile,” Culp says.
If you’re a planner, like Michelle Tam of Palo Alto, you can get ahead of the heat by cooking extra batches of protein before temperatures start to climb. The Nom Nom Paleo blogger and award-winning cookbook author tests recipes for a living, so she can’t step away from the kitchen even when she wants to.
“If I know the weekend is going to be hot, I’ll throw two flank steaks on the grill instead of one or make an extra batch of ginger-poached chicken,” Tam says. “Both taste good cold and can be used in different ways.”
Her family’s favorite way is in salads brimming with fresh, crunchy vegetables, like carrots, cucumbers and daikon radishes drizzled with sesame ginger dressing. On hot days, Tam stays away from the oven and stove but relies on smaller appliances that don’t heat up the house, like the microwave, Instant Pot or Air Fryer. She cooks whole chicken in her Air Fryer.
Her secret weapon is a piece of microwave cookware called Anyday. Invented by a female Chinese-American and backed by Momofuku chef David Chang, the tightly-sealed and vented glass bowls locks in moisture, steaming meat and veggies in minutes. “It’s pretty life changing — and I promise I don’t work for them,” Tam says, laughing.
When her family of four craves more than salad, Tam favors cold or room temperature egg dishes, like frittatas, or noodles made from kohlrabi or daikon (as a gluten-free eater, she gets zoodle fatigue). “Just remember to blanch the daikon first to reduce its bite,” she says.
At Beth Lee’s house in San Jose, the OMG! Yummy blogger and Jewish cookbook author assembles bowls, mezze platters and charcuterie boards by foraging her fridge.
“You’re usually a little less hungry when it’s hot so just pour a glass of cold lemonade or rosé and pick at those things,” says Lee, author of “The Essential Jewish Baking Cookbook” (Rockridge Press, $17).
Look through the cheese drawer, discover cold cuts, fresh fruit or pieces of fish, Lee says, and never underestimate the power of proscuitto — whether it comes from Eataly or Trader Joe’s. She’s been known to make a meal from crisped-up leftover grains sauteed briefly with herbs or tomatoes and an egg in the middle, á la egg-in-a-hole toast.
On the hottest nights, Lee will put together a platter with store-bought hummus and zhush it up with za’atar and a drizzle of good olive oil. She’ll toast leftover pieces of bread as a vehicle for avocado, canned fish or smoked salmon. Or she’ll marinate extra-firm tofu with soy sauce, sesame oil, rice or black vinegar, chopped green onions and togarashi.
“We love chilled tofu,” she says. “It’s so refreshing. Take out a bag of edamame. Maybe you have some leftover rice. Suddenly, it’s a meal.”
Today, the Associated Press says the main sources of water for the region, the Po and Dora Baltea rivers, are seeing levels that are eight times lower than they should be. "From the river Po, we were supposed to receive a flow rate of 160,000 liters (42,270 gallons) per second, while we currently have an approximate flow rate between 30,000 and 60,000 liters (7,925 to 15,850 gallons) per second," says Stefano Bondesa, who is president of a regional irrigation association.
While The Washington Post says Italy's main agriculture group is expecting to see a 30% drop in harvests, even this appears to be an optimistic assessment. According to France24, One farmer stated his income had dropped by at least 80% to 90% as drought decimate the rice crops which were meant to be flourishing in flooded paddy fields by this time, and said, "At this time of year, the plants would be up to my knees and the rice field would be flooded. Here, they're tiny, because the water needed to irrigate them has never arrived." Another farmer told the Associated Press, "Normally this field is supposed to be flooded with 2 to 5 centimeters (0.8 to 2 inches) of water, but now it seems to be on a sandy beach."
Daiwa Securities Group Inc. cut its holdings in DISH Network Co. (NASDAQ:DISH – Get Rating) by 99.8% during the 1st quarter, HoldingsChannel reports. The fund owned 15,361 shares of the company’s stock after selling 7,498,843 shares during the quarter. Daiwa Securities Group Inc.’s holdings in DISH Network were worth $486,000 as of its most recent filing with the SEC.
A number of other hedge funds have also bought and sold shares of the business. AustralianSuper Pty Ltd increased its holdings in shares of DISH Network by 54.3% during the first quarter. AustralianSuper Pty Ltd now owns 250,606 shares of the company’s stock worth $7,932,000 after purchasing an additional 88,186 shares during the period. CKW Financial Group increased its stake in DISH Network by 61.5% during the 1st quarter. CKW Financial Group now owns 2,100 shares of the company’s stock worth $68,000 after acquiring an additional 800 shares during the period. DekaBank Deutsche Girozentrale raised its holdings in DISH Network by 17.5% in the 1st quarter. DekaBank Deutsche Girozentrale now owns 22,909 shares of the company’s stock valued at $745,000 after acquiring an additional 3,412 shares in the last quarter. Chevy Chase Trust Holdings Inc. lifted its position in shares of DISH Network by 0.3% during the 1st quarter. Chevy Chase Trust Holdings Inc. now owns 150,131 shares of the company’s stock valued at $4,752,000 after acquiring an additional 376 shares during the period. Finally, Dupont Capital Management Corp grew its holdings in shares of DISH Network by 16.7% during the 1st quarter. Dupont Capital Management Corp now owns 2,849 shares of the company’s stock worth $90,000 after purchasing an additional 408 shares in the last quarter. 46.90% of the stock is owned by institutional investors.
Analysts Set New Price Targets
Several equities research analysts recently weighed in on DISH shares. Benchmark cut their price objective on shares of DISH Network from $50.00 to $37.00 in a research report on Monday, May 9th. Raymond James decreased their price objective on shares of DISH Network from $49.00 to $42.00 in a research note on Monday, May 9th. Citigroup lowered their price objective on shares of DISH Network from $46.00 to $34.00 and set a “buy” rating for the company in a research report on Monday, May 23rd. Barclays reduced their target price on DISH Network from $25.00 to $19.00 and set an “underweight” rating on the stock in a report on Thursday, July 7th. Finally, Deutsche Bank Aktiengesellschaft dropped their price objective on DISH Network from $67.00 to $61.00 in a research report on Monday, May 9th. Two research analysts have rated the stock with a sell rating, three have given a hold rating, seven have assigned a buy rating and one has given a strong buy rating to the stock. Based on data from MarketBeat, DISH Network currently has an average rating of “Moderate Buy” and an average price target of $41.08.
DISH Network Stock Performance
DISH Network stock opened at $18.70 on Monday. The business has a 50 day moving average of $19.25 and a 200-day moving average of $26.69. The company has a debt-to-equity ratio of 1.12, a current ratio of 0.66 and a quick ratio of 0.59. DISH Network Co. has a 1 year low of $16.20 and a 1 year high of $46.31. The company has a market capitalization of $9.91 billion, a P/E ratio of 5.36, a P/E/G ratio of 1.26 and a beta of 1.95.
DISH Network (NASDAQ:DISH – Get Rating) last announced its quarterly earnings results on Friday, May 6th. The company reported $0.68 earnings per share (EPS) for the quarter, missing the consensus estimate of $0.69 by ($0.01). The business had revenue of $4.33 billion during the quarter, compared to analyst estimates of $4.39 billion. DISH Network had a net margin of 12.49% and a return on equity of 14.81%. The company’s revenue was down 3.8% compared to the same quarter last year. During the same quarter last year, the company posted $0.99 earnings per share. On average, equities research analysts predict that DISH Network Co. will post 2.5 earnings per share for the current year.
Insider Buying and Selling
In related news, Director James Defranco purchased 400,000 shares of DISH Network stock in a transaction on Thursday, May 12th. The shares were purchased at an average price of $19.27 per share, for a total transaction of $7,708,000.00. Following the transaction, the director now owns 1,661,428 shares of the company’s stock, valued at approximately $32,015,717.56. The purchase was disclosed in a legal filing with the SEC, which is available at this hyperlink. 53.30% of the stock is owned by corporate insiders.
DISH Network Corporation, together with its subsidiaries, provides pay-TV services in the United States. The company operates in two segments, Pay-TV and Wireless. It offers video services under the DISH TV brand; and programming packages that include programming through national broadcast networks, local broadcast networks, and national and regional cable networks, as well as regional and specialty sports channels, premium movie channels, and Latino and international programming packages.
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On the latest episode of the Ducks Dish Podcast we opened up the mailbag to answer YOUR questions on Oregon Football and recruiting.
There was plenty to talk about ranging from the next recruits I think will commit to Oregon as well the potential of this year's linebacker core, which is loaded with talent like Noah Sewell, Justin Flowe, Jeffrey Bassa and Jackson LaDuke just to name a few players.
We also dug in to wide receiver Jurrion Dickey's reported transfer to Mater Dei, and how that could help Oregon on the recruiting trail moving forward considering the strong pipeline they've built to one of the nation's premier programs dating back to 2017 with Austin Faoliu.
Will Dante Moore start as a true freshman? What's Oregon's quarterback room look like looking ahead to 2023?
That answer depends on who leads this year's offense for Kenny Dillingham. While all signs on the surface are pointing to Auburn transfer Bo Nix, we should know for sure in just about a month before the season kicks off against Georgia.
You can find the most recent episode in both audio and video form using the links below.
Scroll to Continue
Make sure to like, subscribe, review and share the Ducks Dish Podcast wherever you find us and thank you for listening!
On the latest episode of the Ducks Dish Podcast we opened up the mailbag to answer YOUR questions on Oregon Football and recruiting.
There was plenty to talk about ranging from the next recruits I think will commit to Oregon as well the potential of this year's linebacker core, which is loaded with talent like Noah Sewell, Justin Flowe, Jeffrey Bassa and Jackson LaDuke just to name a few players.
We also dug in to wide receiver Jurrion Dickey's reported transfer to Mater Dei, and how that could help Oregon on the recruiting trail moving forward considering the strong pipeline they've built to one of the nation's premier programs dating back to 2017 with Austin Faoliu.
Will Dante Moore start as a true freshman? What's Oregon's quarterback room look like looking ahead to 2023?
That answer depends on who leads this year's offense for Kenny Dillingham. While all signs on the surface are pointing to Auburn transfer Bo Nix, we should know for sure in just about a month before the season kicks off against Georgia.
You can find the most recent episode in both audio and video form using the links below.
Scroll to Continue
Make sure to like, subscribe, review and share the Ducks Dish Podcast wherever you find us and thank you for listening!
By Rae Ann Varona (July 22, 2022, 8:25 PM EDT) -- A Vermont-based telecommunications company told the D.C. Circuit that it did not need to reopen a $3.3 billion license fraud lawsuit against Dish Network Corp. and its alleged shell companies, saying a circuit panel correctly held a "government-action bar" inapplicable.
Dish and two Dish-controlled companies, Northstar Wireless and SNR Wireless, had asked the panel to rehear its arguments that Vermont National Telephone Co. was prohibited from suing them under the False Claims Act's government-action bar on grounds that the Federal Communications Commission, as a government agency, had the authority to conduct civil proceedings against them. The bar prohibits lawsuits against parties that...
ENGLEWOOD, Colo.—Dish Network has announced the nationwide launch of TelevisaUnivision’s ViX+ on Dish TV and Sling TV, which will allow customers to subscribe to Spanish-language streaming service ViX+ directly through its platforms for $6.99 a month.
ViX+, which is the premium tier of ViX, features more than 10,000 hours of entertainment programming and 4,000 hours of premium live sports coverage in the U.S. in its first year.
It launched nationwide on July 21 directly to consumers and is also available on Amazon Prime Video Channels.
ViX+ is the only Spanish-language streaming service in the U.S. with coverage of the UEFA Champions League, Europa League, and Conference League matches, the companies said.
Subscribers also will have access to more than 70 ViX+ original series and movies in the first year, which represents, on average, at least one new original per week.
"We're excited to expand our robust Spanish-language content offering with the addition of ViX+ available now on Dish and Sling," said Alfredo Rodríguez, vice president, DishLATINO. "Offering consumers a broad range of content has long been a core Dish tenet and the launch of ViX+ to both satellite and streaming customers builds on our longstanding tradition of being the leading provider of Spanish-language programming with more Spanish channels than anyone else."
Dish TV offers ViX+ subscriptions through internet-connected Hopper and Wally devices for $6.99 per month.
ViX+ is available as a stand-alone streaming service through the Sling app on all supported devices including Roku, Amazon, LG, Vizio and more for $6.99 per month.
Pineapple & Pearls' bedazzled handcuffs. Photograph by Aaron Silverman.
Chef Aaron Silverman’s recently reimagined Pineapple & Pearls aims to be more fancy party than formal dinner with its canopy of sea green balloons and pull-your-own buttered popcorn soft-serve. But the clearest cue that this isn’t your average fine-dining experience: the pair of bedazzled handcuffs that come with one of the menu’s star dishes.
The dish in question is a duo of beggar’s purses—delicate beet- and saffron-tinted crêpes stuffed with caviar and crème fraîche, then gratuitously topped with gold leaf and more caviar. The one-biters are presented atop heavy glass pedestals (technically upside-down candlesticks) and meant to be picked up with your lips, not your fingers.
It’s an ode to the signature dish of the Quilted Giraffe, an ’80s-era New York hotspot famous for its excess and celebrities. At one point, it was the most expensive restaurant in the country and earned a rare four stars in the New York Times. Silverman has become kind of obsessed with the place and its legacy of fancy-fun dining. During the pandemic, Pineapple & Pearls’ kitchen designer introduced him to its former chef/co-owner Barry Wine, and the two became fast friends, initially chatting over Zoom.
Back to the dish: Quilted Giraffe’s caviar-stuffed beggar’s purses were likewise intended as finger-free morsels. To ensure proper consumption—or just to be a little kinky—the restaurant would famously handcuff diners. Wine, who was really into photography at the time, rarely left the kitchen without his camera and took countless photos of famous people like Yoko Ono and Warren Beatty eating the dish.
Pineapple & Pearls didn’t initially have its own handcuffs when it reopened in May after a pandemic hiatus. “We would tell this story, and people would be like, ‘Wait, are you going to handcuff us?’ And we’re like, ‘No,'” Silverman says. Then the chef asked one of his managers if maybe they should get some cuffs. “She’s like, ‘They’re already ordered on Amazon.'”
The restaurant now has two bedazzled pairs, which they bring out at random, often on a silver platter. “If somebody says something about them, we’ll bring them out,” Silverman says. “It’s about creating pleasure for people, and not everyone’s going to find that pleasurable.”
Wine has also gifted the restaurant with some of his original snapshots of diners eating the dish, including celebs like Yo-Yo Ma and a young Bobby Flay. You can see them in the bathroom … just leave your handcuffs at the table, please.
Food Editor
Jessica Sidman covers the people and trends behind D.C.’s food and drink scene. Before joining Washingtonian in July 2016, she was Food Editor and Young & Hungry columnist at Washington City Paper. She is a Colorado native and University of Pennsylvania grad.