The recipe is based on a few I found online, but
with a lot less oil.
Not exact matches
If you're talking about a new project
with no significant investment already deployed, building a new mine if you expect today's prices to hold in the long term is a tough call — a 50 - year
oil sands project is a
lot of risk for
less than a 10 % rate of return — but even there, you can see the impact of the lower Canadian dollar and the hedge provided by a royalty regime which lowers rates when prices are low.
If you're talking about a new project
with no significant investment already deployed, building a new mine if you expect today's prices to hold in the long term is a tough call — a 50 year
oil sands project is a
lot of risk for
less than a 10 per cent rate of return — but even there, you can see the impact of the lower Canadian dollar and the hedge provided by a royalty regime which lowers rates when prices are low.
You could try using slightly
less oil if you prefer, although it's filled
with lots of healthy fats!
Challah, or egg bread, is a
lot like brioche in that it is a slightly sweet bread enriched
with both eggs and fat, except challah uses
oil instead of butter, and
less of it, while using more eggs.
Normally they are baked
with lots of olive
oil, wheat flour and parmesan cheese, we have made a little healthier version of this recipe from the lovely blog The Italian Dish, by using
less olive
oil, rye flour and goat cheese.
Rennie: The economic challenge is of course that basically all of these kinds of biofuels are ultimately in competition
with regular old gasoline that you would have to pump and for as long as
oil is really, really cheap, which, you know, for most part we are sort of happily in the situation that's it is a
lot less expensive than it was a couple of years ago.
As an example, in the hot summer you could possibly feel finest on a
lesser fat diet
with a great deal of raw vegetables, while in a cold climate you could possibly want more substantial, warm, cooked foods
with a
lot of healthful fats, like olive
oil, coconut
oil, ghee (clarified butter), cheese, and nuts and seeds.
So in nutshell I calculate I burn about 1800 Cal a day and I am 55 years old and my weight is lets say 65 kg and I get max 2200 Cal a day (sometimes
less)
with little carbs (healthy ones like oats), minimum of sugar and meat and
lots of veggies and fruits, no real fat intake other then olive
oil with salads
To make it fit, I stretched spring ring a
lot until it got
less thickness, then the
oil ring
with the spring ring could fit and the piston could get into the cylinders (it needed some blows
with the back of a hammer, but when spinning for tests, I don't see the cylinders being scratched or marked)
If the
oil was changed every 3k miles
with a new filter, it's a
lot less likely to happen.
I don't know what's «industry standard practice» for fine art galleries these days, regarding pricing works on paper vs. works on canvas, but my suspicion is that the reason for the * historical * difference between the two is that works on paper are perceived to be
less «serious» (after all, watercolor started out as a quick way for
oil painters to sketch out drafts), and
less long - lasting (historically, a
lot of watercolors were fugitive, and tended to fade
with time, unlike varnished
oil paintings).
It's never poured, I prep a tin in which I mix up a couple of tubes of
oil paint
with a
lot of turpentine, a
lot or a little
less depending on what I want to do.
This de Kooning, which sold for $ 772,500, bears a strong painterly kinship
with Richter's
Lot 25 and to a
lesser extent
with the untitled painting by Jean - Michel Basquiat (1960 - 1988),
Lot 24, a 1982 work of acrylic, spraypaint and
oil - sticks on canvas that is 72 by 48 inches and is highlighted by a horned skull
with floating arrows above an undefined surge of black and pink.
Although
less than 25 percent of the
lots are by women artists, some significant works by women are for sale: «Roots,» a poignant color screen print by Catlett that the gallery says has not been seen at auction in 20 years (shown above); «March on Washington,» 1964 (
oil on canvas), a beautifully rendered painting by Alma Thomas (1891 - 1978); Faith Ringgold's 1974 «Night: Window of the Wedding 8,» touted as the first of her fabric paintings to be offered at auction (shown below); and «Still Life
with Grapefruit,» 1928, described on the frame backing as Lois Mailou Jones's first painting, completed a year after she graduated from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston.
If they included all the imported good, manufactured in the third world
with coal, and then shipped to them, using
oil, their own emissions would be a
lot less significant.
We might replace
oil — we have choices; some better than others (PS if we reduced our usage a
lot, we could use small amounts for a longer period of time
with less negative consequences).
It is a fantasy designed to get the support of Senator Graham and other fuzzy - minded Senators
with visions of
lots of new nuclear plants, billions for technology to capture and store carbon dioxide emissions from coal - fired power plants,
less dependence on imported
oil, and tariffs to protect American manufacturing jobs in energy - intensive industries.