Pork Fried Rice

Need a gluten free main course? Pork Fried Rice could be a great recipe to try. This recipe makes 2 servings with 352 ca

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California Cobb Salad with Chipotle Avocado Ranch Dressing

Forget going out to eat or ordering takeout every time you crave American food. Try making California Cobb Salad with Ch

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30-Minute Buffalo Chicken French Breads

30-Minute Buffalo Chicken French Breads takes roughly 30 minutes from beginning to end. For $5.23 per serving, this reci

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Chocolate Flan Cake

Chocolate Flan Cake is a side dish that serves 12. One portion of this dish contains roughly 9g of protein, 14g of fat,

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Salmon Ceviche

Salmon Ceviche is a main course that serves 4. For $2.99 per serving, this recipe covers 20% of your daily requirements

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Spicy Black Bean Burger: Vegetarian Victory

If you have about 35 minutes to spend in the kitchen, Spicy Black Bean Burger: Vegetarian Victory might be an outstandin

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Dinner Tonight: Patty Melt

If you want to add more American recipes to your recipe box, Dinner Tonight: Patty Melt might be a recipe you should try

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African Chicken Peanut Stew

African Chicken Peanut Stew is an African recipe that serves 1. One portion of this dish contains about 59g of protein,

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Smothered Green Chile and Cilantro Burritos

The recipe Smothered Green Chile and Cilantro Burritos is ready in roughly 20 minutes and is definitely an amazing glute

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Lactose-Free Macaroni & Cheese

Lactose-Free Macaroni & Cheese takes around 30 minutes from beginning to end. For 47 cents per serving, this recipe cove

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Food Trivia

Cooking food is one of the great revolutionary innovations of history because it not only transformed the way we prepare food, but because it also became a center of cultural communion and organized society.

Food Joke

I tried not to be biased in hiring a handicapped person, but his placement counselor assured me that he would be a good, reliable busboy. I had never had a mentally-handicapped employee, and I wasn't sure I wanted one. I wasn't sure how my customers would react to Stevie. He was short, a little dumpy, and had the smooth facial features and thick-tongued speech of Down Syndrome. I wasn't worried about most of my trucker customers because truckers don't generally care who buses tables as long as the meatloaf platter is good and the pies are homemade. The four-wheeler drivers were the ones who concerned me; the mouthy college kids traveling to school; the yuppie snobs who secretly polish their silverware with their napkins for fear of catching some dreaded "truck stop germ;" the pairs of white-shirted business men on expense accounts who think every truck stop waitress wants to be flirted with. I knew those people would be uncomfortable around Stevie so I closely watched him for the first few weeks. I shouldn't have worried. After the first week, Stevie had my staff wrapped around his stubby little finger, and within a month my truck regulars had adopted him as their official truck stop mascot. After that, I really didn't care what the rest of the customers thought of him. He was like a 21-year-old in blue jeans and Nikes, eager to laugh and eager to please, but fierce in his attention to his duties. Every salt and pepper shaker was exactly in its place, not a bread crumb or coffee spill was visible when Stevie got done with the table. Our only problem was convincing him to wait to clean a table until after the customers were finished. He would hover in the background, shifting his weight from one foot to the other, scanning the dining room until a table was empty. Then he would scurry to the empty table and carefully bus the dishes and glasses onto a cart and meticulously wipe the table up with a practiced flourish of his rag. If he thought a customer was watching, his brow would pucker with added concentration. He took pride in doing his job exactly right, and you had to love how hard he tried to please each and every person he met. Over time, we learned that he lived with his mother, a widow who was disabled after repeated surgeries for cancer. They lived on their Social Security benefits in public housing two miles from the truck stop. Their social worker, who stopped to check on him every so often, admitted they had fallen between the cracks. Money was tight, and what I paid him was probably the difference between them being able to live together and Stevie being sent to a group home. That's why the restaurant was a gloomy place that morning last August, the first morning in three years that Stevie had missed work. He was at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester getting a new valve or something put in his heart. His social worker said that people with Down Syndrome often had heart problems at an early age so this wasn't unexpected, and there was a good chance he would come through the surgery in good shape and be back at work in a few months. A ripple of excitement ran through the staff later that morning when word came that he was out of surgery, in recovery and doing fine. Frannie, my head waitress, let out a war whoop and did a little dance in the aisle when she heard the good news. Belle Ringer, one of our regular trucker customers, stared at the sight of the 50-year-old grandmother of four doing a victory shimmy beside his table. Frannie blushed, smoothed her apron and shot Belle Ringer a withering look. He grinned. "OK, Frannie, what was that all about?" he asked. "We just got word that Stevie is out of surgery and going to be okay." "I was wondering where he was. I had a new joke to tell him. What was the surgery about?" Frannie quickly told Belle Ringer and the other two drivers sitting at his booth about Stevie's surgery, then sighed. "Yeah, I'm glad he is going to be OK," she said, "but I don't know how he and his mom are going to handle all the bills. From what I hear, they're barely getti.

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