I used
white spelt so if you're using wholemeal spelt, bear in mind it might be a bit heavier and nuttier but should still be delicious.
Not exact matches
I didn't have
white whole wheat,
so I made it with two cups
spelt flour and one cup
white flour (I doubled the recipe).
So I substituted rye and hard red wheat flour for their
spelt and
white flour combo, and, duh, blueberries + appropriate spices instead of cherries.
The original dough is obviously not made with buckwheat or
spelt, but normal
white flour, but
white flour isn't really nutritious,
so whole - wheat it is.
I made this cake and made a few tweaks to it, but unfortunately it didn't come out as expected: — LRB - Instead of using whole wheat and all purpose flour i used
white spelt flour (i always substitute all purpose with
white spelt, there have been no problems
so far), and replaced the natural cocoa powder with melted 70 % chocolate.
I was out of maple syrup and a.p. flour,
so I used a nice local honey and
white spelt flour instead.
The 28 - year - old left Spurs over four years ago after a stellar
spell at
White Hart Lane, with the club only now over the last two years or
so moving on from that after failing to see the desired results with the money initially reinvested in the squad from his sale.
im 5» 8 and im a
white caucasion if thats how yo
spell it lol i weigh 235 pounds ii have hazel to green eyes i just started tanning and i dnt know what else to say
so just ask me if you hae aquestion.
The pairing of act and music isn't
so much farce as inane fodder for ensuring The House's removal from anything resembling genuine social commentary, but it also indulges the laziest form of cultural fantasy, where the awkward, middle - aged
white couple is allowed to engage in cultural appropriation for a
spell before returning to their dull middle - class lives, and all without consequence.
It is that revelatory moment when
white, middle - class Westerners finally understand what the rest of humanity has always known — that there are places in this world where the safety net they have spent
so much of their lives erecting is suddenly whipped away, where the right accent, education, health insurance and a foreign passport — all the trappings that
spell «It Can't Happen to Me» — no longer apply, and their well - being depends on the condescension of strangers...
AS THE LAWRENCE WEINER RETROSPECTIVE at the Whitney Museum fades to
white under multiple coats of Kilz and latex paint, and his various exuberant ephemera take up residence at LA MoCA before wending their way back to their rightful property owners; as Tate Modern and the ICA London emerge from momentary
spells of whispered headlines, random sketching, streams of consciousness, and face slapping; as New York's New Museum concludes its vestigial assault on the Work of Art, not to mention the etiquette of proper spacing, and as visitors to the new building experience the worst case of buyer's remorse since the reopening of the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; as the Metropolitan Museum's Dutch paintings readjust to the staid organizing principles of artist's name, date, and genre rather than hanging according to who bought what from whom (on whose advice) and resold it to
so - and -
so, who then donated it to the Met; and as the scent of modesty - prosaic, charcoal filtered, crystalline - emanates from the 2008 Whitney Biennial, now is as good a time as any to talk about money.
The neon
spells «America» in large letters and the glowing
white tubing has been painted black on the front but not the back,
so that the letters appear backlighted by
white light.
-- CREDO calls State Dept's EIS on Keystone XL «coward's logic» in statement: «The State Department's environmental assessment is a vehicle for the
White House to test the waters to see if the public will buy its false and cynical argument that the Canadian Tar Sands are going to get burned anyway, and
so the government's chief climate scientist's assertion that Keystone XL will
spell «game over» for the climate may be true but is essentially irrelevant,» said Becky Bond, political director at CREDO.
So I would highly recommend you checking your local laws as that could
spell it out black and
white what you are and aren't required.
Okay,
white spells clean, crisp and hygienic but it can be
so predictable.