Sentences with phrase «as my berry of»

This one contained the usual chard, avocado, dates, cacao powder, and raw honey (minus the walnut butter today), and I used frozen strawberries as my berry of choice.
Breakfast I started off the day with a Smoothie Bowl... I followed the same recipe I usually do, except I used frozen strawberries as my berry of choice.

Not exact matches

As angel investor and tech - company founder Tim Berry wrote on Entrepreneur, «You can probably cover everything you need to convey in 20 to 30 pages of text plus another 10 pages of appendices for monthly projections, management resumes and other details.
As one of the world's premier experts in clinical trials, Don Berry, told me, «The standard clinical trial is pretty much the only thing in medicine that hasn't changed in the last 70 years.»
In addition to being the CEO of Rebelmouse and a partner at Lerer Ventures, Berry also is officially serving as the CEO of Soho Tech Labs — yet another social startup incubator.
As the parents of three young children, Paul and Milena Berry spend a lot of time thinking about the role of social media in their lives.
Berry's fellow judge is making the move to Channel 4 as part of a three - year deal.
What came out of the six - month experiment was described as flat with hints of honey and berries.
Already featured on the boxes of Kellogg's Special K Red Berries, as well as ads for Hershey's and Nike, she'll also sharing the next Sports Illustrated cover with fellow Olympians Michael Phelps and Katie Ledecky.
Computer workstations abound, but so do toys and stuffed animals, and a cozy canteen offers a neatly arranged cornucopia of berries, nuts, and cereals, as well as an electric massage chair and a cappuccino machine.
As of 2000, there were almost 3 million people in California's Orange County, home of Disneyland, Knott's Berry Farm and a number of Fortune 500 companies.
Holdings in the funds mentioned as a percentage of net assets as of 9/30/2014: Berry Plastics 0.00 %, Cooper Tire & Rubber Company 0.00 %, Devon Energy Corp. 1.82 % in Global Resources Fund, EOG Resources, Inc. 2.13 % in Global Resources Fund, Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company 0.00 %, Royal Dutch Shell 0.00 %, SPDR S&P Oil & Gas Exploration & Production ETF 0.00 %, Tiffany & Co. 0.44 % in Gold and Precious Metals Fund.
A uniquely designed year long program, created in partnership with McPherson Berry and MetLife as the title sponsor, EYE will provide the next generation of minority millennial entrepreneurs who will support the needs of corporate members, MBEs and additional stakeholders.
and I am no moron, i just enjoy watching them get all errr and mad / upset to the point where they insult me for saying silly things such as your mother was a hampster and your father smelt of elder berries!
Most recently, Dr. Peter Lawler of Berry College in Georgia gave an informative, as well as provocative, presentation on trends occurring in society: «Change We Can Actually See (And....
Most recently, Dr. Peter Lawler of Berry College in Georgia gave an informative, as well as provocative, presentation on trends occurring in society: «Change We Can Actually See (And Half - Believe In).»
It is too easy for orthodox Christians to parody and dismiss the more sensationalist popularizers of «creation theology» such as Rosemary Ruether, Matthew Fox, and Thomas Berry.
Berry's presentation of himself as some sort of Christian is a topic that will have to be explored more as his influence grows, and so these sound like promising essays.
Clearly the best collection of essays from a Kentucky farmer - philosopher, this book demonstrates the breadth of Wendell Berry's work, as well as his status as one of the most important commentators of our time on matters of community, land and ecology.
As Wendell Berry said, «The ecological teaching of the Bible is simply inescapable: God made the world because He wanted it made.
As a writer and editor for Time, Conde Nast Portfolio, and Fast Company, he has compiled a portfolio that includes stories on megahit - making Swedish songwriters (a piece for which he went clubbing in Stockholm); James Bond (for which he stood on a Spanish beach and watched Halle Berry emerge from the waves over and over and over); undercover missionaries in the Arab world (he traveled to North Africa and went to church); and the decline of Christianity in Europe (he prayed).
And so began the veritable cavalcade of fruits, berries, and legumes the pregnancy industry has selected as apt representations of the little life growing inside of me.
Teilhard's importance, Berry believes, lies in his comprehensive vision of the universe as a psychic - spiritual as well as a physical - material process, his perception of the human as the consciousness of the universe, and his shifting of the focus of Western religious concern from redemption to creation.
A model of this is the concept of bio-regions, which Berry defines as «identifiable geographical regions with mutually supporting life - systems that are relatively self - sustaining.»
Schumacher's vision of an economics devoted not to consumption but to attaining given ends with the minimum means, and his promotion of what he calls appropriate technologies (such as implements that local farmers and manufacturers can fashion and / or maintain themselves), are fundamental, to Berry's vision of a context for re-inhabiting the earth.
As veteran pastor Eugene Peterson writes, «Wendell Berry is a writer from whom I have learned much of my pastoral theology.
Warren understands that world and understands that which can easily be commodified in the character of Jerry Calhoun in At Heavens Gate, Berry on the other hand presents himself as a naïf (albeit a profitable naïf).
In fact, from the tone of the rest of his writings, such as when he expresses his appreciation for the American farmer and essayist Wendell Berry, one can only conclude that he advocates a far more pastoral ecclessiology than most would prefer today.
Don't get me wrong, I want to defend what Berry defends too, insofar as he is critical of quantatative measures of all elements of human life.
For Warren, it is neither rural community («stickers») nor big city ambition («boomers»)-- as Berry puts it following Wallace Stegner in his Jefferson Lecture — that is at the heart of the trouble of the American soul.
So I might as well say why I find Robert Penn Warren's account of the «agrarian» critique of modern society to be superior to Wendell Berry's.
«92 Grasping generates solution to immediate problem as well as universalization of the images» particularity.93 W. Berry notes with concern that «the most powerful and the most destructive change of modern times has been a change in language: the rise of the image, or metaphor, of the machine.
(See Berry, The Dream of the Earth, [San Francisco: Sierra Club Books, 1988] 120) It is the fundamental self - manifestation of mystery, and our religions should be seen as further episodes in a continuous unfolding of the depths of the cosmos itself.
Our delegation had begun to waver again as we neared the tower of Schuller's Garden Grove Community Church, rising above Disneyland and the Anaheim Stadium and Knott's Berry Farm.
As for the taste, the paper says there is «a hint of honey and berries,» despite only using the grains in the brewing process.
They started with Rachel Carson's Silent Spring (1966); later came titles such as The Fate of the Earth by Jonathan Schell (1982), The Dream of the Earth by Thomas Berry (1988), Earth in the Balance by Al Gore (1993), and The Sacred Balance by David Suzuki (1997).
Would we not be wiser to act out of an acknowledgment of our ignorance, as Berry has suggested, rather than out of hubris, as we too long have done?
People disliked being interrupted, were sometimes rude, and rarely took any interest in the copies of the «Watchtower» with their images of people in 1950s outfits cuddling lions and eating berries as they live on earth with nothing to do for ever and ever.
Once again we find in cosmological approaches such as Whitehead's and Berry's an acknowledgment of the pervasive creativity of nature, whereas existentialist and psychologically based theologies tend to confine creativity to humans (and God) alone.13
That reminds me that one of the most interesting Christian Berryites I met was one who had resolved, under Berry's influence, to return from Virginia back to his Southern California suburban home, the better to be closer to parents and his «roots,» such as they were.
As Berry makes clear, Christians have often failed to acknowledge the spirituality and numinous presence of the earth.
A campaign group has described celebrity chef Mary Berry coming out in support of assisted dying as «deeply depressing».
A campaign group has described celebrity chef Mary Berry coming out in support of assisted dying as «deeply... More
We ain't going back, although there's some reason for nostalgia, as there is, of course, for Wendell Berry's sticky farm.
I have to add, to make sure this isn't viewed as criticism of my home team, that Berry College will be overflowing with good students in the fall.
@NII YOU SOUND LIKE YOU ARE GUILTY AND TALKED ABOUT OTHER FALSEHOOD RELIGION YOU DID NOT LIKE OR UNDERSTAND WHEN YOU WAS LITTLE CHILD OR YOUNGER ADULT OR MID LIFE PERSON.THERE ARE THOUSANDS OF GLOBAL FALSEHOOD RELIGIONS.BUT THIS ONE THING DOES NOT LIE (DNA) Y CHROMOSOME EVEN TOP SUPER SMART BLOND HEAD BLUE EYE PALE SKIN SUPER DNA RESEARCH PROFESSIONALS WITH MULTIPLE PHD DEGREES FROM NORWAY SWEDEN AND FINLAND DENMARK ETC KNOW THAT THE Y CHROMOSOME ALSO KNOWN AS THE ADAM Y CHROMOSOME CAMED OUT OF EAST AFRICA.falsehood religion did not make.the human race WISDOM DID WISDOM WALKED AND TALKED WITH MAN IT WAS WISDOM THAT MADE ADAM AND EVE.THINK ABOUT IT @NII NOW THE MOST DOMINANT DNA BELONGS TOO BLACK PEOPLE NOT EUROPEANS.LOOK AT ALL YOUR MIXED RACE BLACK PEOPLE»S TIGER WOOD»S HALLEY BERRY LENNY KRAVITZ LISA BONET ETC DNA DO NT LIE man made falsehood religion do lie
Many of the pieces in this book originated as a tribute to Wendell Berry, the Kentucky farmer and writer who 25 years ago published The Unsettling of America.
In a larger sense, however, Berry's work must be counted a failure, As in the effort to get Americans to protect the climate, small victories have been overwhelmed by crushing losses, As Berry points out in the opening essay, America now has half the number of farms it had in 1977.
Everyone loves strawberries; they're delicious, so it's not surprising that they're one of the most commonly eaten fruits and the most popular berry in the world — which is awesome as they have some incredible healthy boosting properties!
I'm not sure frozen berries will work as they'll let out too much water but pieces of dried apricots or dates would be delicious!
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