An international bestselling cookbook offering fresh takes on classic recipes, as well as innovative ideas for healthy, hearty, and satisfying salads. This beautifully illustrated book offers simple recipes and endless inspiration for exploring the delectable variety of salads. Whether as tempting side dishes, light and easy meals, or impressive dinner party fare, it’s easy to create delicious, eye-catching salads all year round. From cabbage, bean, and beetroot creations to rich, savory salads featuring meat and fish, Best Salads Ever is arranged by main ingredient and offers a wide range of possabilities, like light Summer Slaw or more substantial dishes like Pasta with Mussels and Saffron. Additional chapters cover creams and dressings, many of which are fat-free, as well as meal plans, including desserts! So whether you’re treating yourself to a comforting pasta salad on a winter evening, looking for a refreshing springtime entree, or hoping to impress guests with a crisp appetizer or tantalizing side dish, the recipes in Best Salads Ever will rise to every occasion. “This inspiring books extols the salad as a satisfying meal, which not only excites the eye and delights the taste buds, but fulfills today’s drive to eat more healthily by combining intriguing and seasonal ingredients.” —Oxford Times
An international bestselling cookbook offering fresh takes on classic recipes, as well as innovative ideas for healthy, hearty, and satisfying salads. This beautifully illustrated book offers simple recipes and endless inspiration for exploring the delectable variety of salads. Whether as tempting side dishes, light and easy meals, or impressive dinner party fare, it’s easy to create delicious, eye-catching salads all year round. From cabbage, bean, and beetroot creations to rich, savory salads featuring meat and fish, Best Salads Ever is arranged by main ingredient and offers a wide range of possabilities, like light Summer Slaw or more substantial dishes like Pasta with Mussels and Saffron. Additional chapters cover creams and dressings, many of which are fat-free, as well as meal plans, including desserts! So whether you’re treating yourself to a comforting pasta salad on a winter evening, looking for a refreshing springtime entree, or hoping to impress guests with a crisp appetizer or tantalizing side dish, the recipes in Best Salads Ever will rise to every occasion. “This inspiring books extols the salad as a satisfying meal, which not only excites the eye and delights the taste buds, but fulfills today’s drive to eat more healthily by combining intriguing and seasonal ingredients.” —Oxford Times
How can you best help children with autism reach their full potential? Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) present a perplexing challenge for parents and school professionals. This essential resource was developed to respond directly to the difficulty school professionals and families face in selecting and applying appropriate interventions and treatments for the children in their care. The information is presented in a straightforward format, practical for finding answers to complex questions, and includes: A description of the intervention or treatment Reported benefits and effects associated with its use A synthesis of how the outcomes relate to individuals with ASD Potential costs and risks
The grand duchy of Luxembourg was created after the Napoleonic Wars, but at the time there was no 'nation' that identified with the emergent state. This book analyses how politicians, scholars and artists have initiated and contributed to nation-building processes in Luxembourg since the nineteenth century, processes that – as this book argues – are still ongoing. The focus rests on three types of representations of nationhood: a shared past, a common homeland and a national language. History was written so as to justify the country's political independence. Territorial borders shifted meaning, constantly repositioning the national community. The local dialect – initially considered German variant – was gradually transformed into the 'national language', Luxembourgish.
This book brings together new and leading scholars, who demonstrate the importance of research with children and from a child perspective, allowing for a fuller understanding of the meaning and impact of health and illness in children’s lives. Demonstrates the importance of research with children and research from a child perspective, in order to fully understand the meaning and impact of health and illness in children’s lives Encourages critical reflection on contemporary health policy and its relationships to culturally specific ways of knowing and understanding children’s health Brings together new and leading scholars in the field of children’s health and illness Moves the highly important issue of children’s health into the mainstream sociology of health and illness
Today, writing by hand seems a nearly archaic process. Nearly all of our written communication is digital—our letters are via email or text message, our manuscripts are composed using word processors, our journals are blogs, and we sign checks to pay bills with the push of a button. Sonja Neef believes that what we have lost in our modern technological conversation is the ductus—the physical and material act of handwriting. In Imprint and Trace Neef argues, however, that handwriting throughout its history has always been threatened with erasure. It exists in a dual state: able to be standardized, repeated, copied—much like an imprint—and yet persistently singular, original, and authentic as a trace or line. Throughout its history, from the first prehistoric handprint, through the innovations of stylus, quill, and printing press, handwriting has revealed an interweaving, ever-changing relationship between imprint and trace. Even today, in the age of the digital revolution, the trace of handwriting is still an integral part of communication, whether etched, photographed, pixelated, or scanned. Imprint and Trace presents an essential re-evaluation of the relationships between handwriting and technology, and between the various imprints and traces that define communication.
Drei Frauen in Dänemark: Marly hat Eheprobleme, weil ihr Mann zum Sexmuffel mutiert ist, Svenja wird von ihrem Ex gestalkt und Diana hat schon lange nichts mehr von dem Mann gehört, der angeblich eine Beziehung mit ihr will. Dafür klammert sich aber ihre Mutter an sie ... Ein Urlaub auf der malerischen Insel Tristø soll ihnen die nötige Erholung bieten. Doch Probleme tauchen schon bald auf: Diana nimmt ihren Hund mit, den Svenja nicht leiden kann, Marly ihren Laptop, was Diana nicht leiden kann und Svenja ihren Stalker, was niemand leiden kann. Dann entbrennt auch noch ein Konkurrenzkampf um den attraktiven Handwerker der Ferienhausvermittlung ... Auch Sabine und Sascha aus "Ein Urlaub in Dänemark" haben einen Gastauftritt. Bodil Madsen spielt auch wieder eine wichtige Rolle in dieser Geschichte.
Teil eins der Fortsetzung zu "Johanniskraut und Schokolade und "Ein Urlaub in Dänemark". Drei Freundinnen, noch immer viele Probleme: Lorenas Tochter hat ihren Vater ausfindig gemacht, kümmert sich aber nicht um einen Ausbildungsplatz, Maja lebt mit einem zwielichtigen Gesellen zusammen und hat sich selbst völlig aufgegeben, Cecilia vertieft ihre Beziehung mit Florian - leider viel zu schnell. Von Hagen kommt sie nicht los und muss sich auch noch um Maja kümmern. Dafür vernachlässigt sie jedoch ihre Karriere. Sabine genießt es, auf einer malerischen dänischen Insel zu leben und zu arbeiten. Aber ihr Sascha fängt an, sich zu langweilen. Die ohnehin nicht sehr stabile Beziehung beginnt zu kippen...
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.