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Archive for the ‘food’ Category

National Coffee Day, September 29.

This is my favorite drink , black with organic raw sugar. I am drawn to Latin and Central American beans. I like the oil it brews.  I need this stimulate, caffeine, in the morning to get my body moving in the right direction. Also to get my mind focused for daily activities.

I purchase my own beans at Starbucks and make 2-4 cups at various times of the day.

In conclusion, coffee is one of the healthiest beverages on the planet.

Cheap java deals abound for National Coffee Day

What is Coffee?

History of Coffee

13 Proven Health Benefits of Coffee (No. 1 is My Favorite)

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National Eat A Hoagie Day, September 14th, #NationalHoagieDay.

But where did the word Hoagie originated?

Via Sandwich Evolution, Hoagie:

The site of the Philadelphia Navy Yard was once known as Hog Island (the creek that created the island has since been filled in and the area is now the Philadelphia International Airport). Many Italian immigrant workers brought sandwiches overflowing with cold cuts, spices, oil, lettuce, tomatoes, onions, and peppers stuffed into a freshly baked roll to eat for lunch during their shifts making ships for the American Navy. The workers were nicknamed hoggies and the name eventually morphed into hoagie over time. Another variation of this story avers there was a worker at the shipyard named Hogan who asked one of his fellow workers if he could buy one of the delicious sandwiches that the worker’s wife made. The man’s name Hogan got attached to the name of the sandwich and eventually evolved into hoagie over the years.

Philly.com

What about Al DePalma and the “hoggies” he first served in his eatery at 20th and Mifflin Streets in 1931?
If there was a way to patent food, everything would have been OK,”  “But you can’t, so you’re fighting that battle all the time. “But can you prove you started before 1925?”
he added, referring to a photograph on the wall of the shop.

That was the year DiCostanza’s grandfather Augustine and grandmother Catherine opened A. DiCostanza’s grocery store at 1212 W. Third St. in Chester and served the clientele of gamblers and nighttime habitues of Palermo’s bar. The store remained in Chester for 71 years before relocating in December 1996 to Boothwyn.

But notoriety hasn’t spread much beyond the Delaware County border – perhaps, DiCostanza suggested, because nobody wants to think that a sandwich so connected to Philadelphia actually had its beginnings in Chester. Or did it?

So where does DiCostanza’s fit in? According to family lore, the store stayed open well past midnight, which was much appreciated by the gamblers who inhabited Palermo’s bar on the same street in the roaring ’20s.

Well, I love Hoagies.   You can make them fresh but you must have the right rolls, and good lunch meat.  They are not subs, heroes or any other imitator.  They are hoagies. But, I never knew how to properly make a travel hoagie.

PS. I grew up in Philly but you already knew this. But when I want a favorite hoagie I go to Primo Hoagies or Croces in Cherry Hill, NJ.

https://youtu.be/mRlMKexh-bQ

https://i0.wp.com/www.visitphilly.com/m/hoagie/primos.jpg

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National Ice Cream Day, July 19.

Via IDFA

In 1984, President Ronald Reagan designated July as National Ice Cream Month and the third Sunday of the month as National Ice Cream Day. He recognized ice cream as a fun and nutritious food that is enjoyed by over 90 percent of the nation’s population. In the proclamation, President Reagan called for all people of the United States to observe these events with “appropriate ceremonies and activities.”

I scream, you scream, we all scream for ice cream!

My favorite is Ben and Jerry’s  Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough.

https://i0.wp.com/sararylander.se.formecdn.com/2015/05/tumblr-m88shuoglb1qmmumgo1-500-large.png

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National Graham Cracker Day, July 5.

Via Wellness News

The graham cracker was invented in 1829 in New Jersey, by Sylvester Graham. The original graham cracker was made with graham flour, a combination of finely-ground unbleached-wheat flour with the wheat bran and germ coarsely-ground and added back in providing nutrition and flavor. Graham crackers started out as a bland food, unsweetened or mildly sweetened; today they are known as a sugar sweetened baked good, similar to the English term biscuit.

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