Sweet Grass Dairy

Location: Thomasville, GeorgiaSelection of Cheeses: Thomasville - unpasteurized cows’ milk. Buttery, tangy with a creamy/crumbly texture Sevenwood - unpasteurized cows’ milk with a rind rubbed down in Balsamic vinegar Green Hill - pasteurized Camembert style cheese Holly Springs - Firm goats’ milk covered in rosemary and basilThe Cheesemakers: Sweet Grass Dairy was founded in 2000 by seasoned dairy owners Al and Desiree Wehner. Their daugher and son-in-law joined in on the cheesemaking and now run Sweet Grass Dairy. Their goal is "handcrafting unique old-world style cheeses".

Feta and Spinach Appetizer

At every party I’ve ever been to Spanakopita is the appetizer that disappears the fastest. People can’t resist the buttery, flaky pastry and creamy feta. Making Spanakopita is easier than you think with this Spanakopita Recipe. If you’re nervous about using phyllo dough, follow this quick phyllo-folding tutorial.

Spanakopita Recipe makes approx. 25 triangles

Prep Time: 45 minutesCook Time: 35 minutesIngredients:1 stick unsalted butter1 lb. frozen chopped spinach1/3 lb. feta, crumbled1/2 tsp nutmeg10 sheets phyllo dough (approximately 1/2 a package)Preparation:

Preheat oven to 375

In 1/2 Tbsp butter, saute frozen spinach until soft, about 5 minutes. Put the spinach in a colander over sink and press out excess liquid with a large spoon. Let cool.

In a large bowl, mixed cooled spinach, feta and nutmeg. Add salt to taste.

Melt the remaining butter. Unroll the sheets of phyllo dough and cover with a damp towel. This will prevent the phyllo from drying out while you work.

Take 1 phyllo sheet out from under the towel and set it in front of you so the longest side is parallel to you. Brush the dough with melted butter. Lay another sheet on top and brush this one with butter as well. With a pizza wheel or knife cut phyllo into 5 to 6 strips, crosswise.

In the corner of one strip, put a heaping teaspoon of spinach. Fold the dough over the filling at an angle so it forms a triangle. Keep folding over the triangle shape (like folding up a flag) until you reach the end of the strip.

Put the triangle on a cookie sheet, with the flap facing down. Brush the top with butter.

Bake triangles until browned, approximately 25-30 minutes. Serve warm or at room temperature.

Tourtiere Recipe

Monday December 1, 2008

This tourtiere recipe originated in Quebec and is frequently enjoyed in the winter months, particularly during the holidays. There are no absolute rules for making this meat pie. Some variations can include root vegetables, veal, or seafood in the filling.

The pastry itself is even up to individual interpretation; classic paté brisee is the most widely-known version, but some cooks swear by a seasoned mashed potato topping. Any way you make it, this French Canadian meat pie is a delicious way to warm up on a cold evening. Bon appetit!

Virtual Cookie Exchange

It just wouldn’t be Christmas in Eastern Europe without Kolaczki. These flaky cookies start with a buttery cream cheese dough that’s filled with fruit or sweet cheese filling. - From our Guide to Eastern European Food

These big, fat, chewy Chocolate Chip Cookies were given 5 stars by a panel of the toughest critics I’ve ever faced: my kids and six of their friends. Try them and see why! - From our Cooking for Kids Guide

A Profile of Tchaikovsky

Monday December 1, 2008 Tchaikovsky was one of the great composers of the 19th century. Having composed the Nutcracker Ballet, Swan Lake, Symphony Pathetique, as well as his famous violin concerto, Tchaikovsky enjoyed many successes. However, his personal life was filled with many neuroses, self doubt, nervousness, and an extreme dislike of social intercourse. Learn about the life of Pyotr Tchaikovsky in this profile.

Find a Parking Space

Holidays mean shopping. And when everyone is shopping the parking lot is full. There will be enough lines and frustration once you are inside the stores. You don’t need to fight with them in the parking lot. Use this ergonomic strategy to find a parking place fast and efficiently.

Don’t bother looking for a prime spot. Chances are you won’t find one, you’ll just get frustrated looking. It will also take more time to look than it will to walk from the back of the lot. The trick is knowing where to go and when to give in.

Gauge the Traffic

If traffic is moving briskly you can afford to search for a prime spot. If it is congested you are better off parking in the back and walking.

Third Down

When entering the lot do not take the first entrance or lane. Do not make a bee line for the last one either. That is what the majority of people do. Instead go one third of the way down and head down a lane.

One & Done

You probably have about a 5% chance of getting a prime parking spot during the peak shopping time. It is not worth the effort to hover around the front of the lot trying to score one of them. Then again the back of the lot can be quite a hike.

If traffic is moving well take one loop down the lane you entered then back up a lane three spots over. Park in the first spot you find. Don’t hope for a better one closer. Take your winnings and get out before you go bust.

Post a Look Out

Have a quick footed person in the passenger seat. There job is to scan the lanes next to the one you are driving in. That’s why you skip three lanes when you drive back up. If they see a spot they hop out and stand guard over it until you arrive.

Give Up Early

If no spots were available on your loop of the parking lot, then head straight to the back for an open spot. On average you’ll get into the store much quicker if you just park and walk. Of course you’ll probably pass five prime spots as you walk, but that’s Murphy’s Law, not ergonomics, working there. More Ergonomics Quick Tips

Gypsies and the Porajmos

The Gypsies of Europe were registered, sterilized, ghettoized, and then deported to concentration and death camps by the Nazis. Approximately 250,000 to 500,000 Gypsies were murdered during the Holocaust - an event they call the Porajmos (the "Devouring").

A Short History

Approximately a thousand years ago, several groups of people migrated from northern India, dispersing throughout Europe over the next several centuries. Though these people were part of several tribes (the largest of which are the Sinti and Roma), the settled peoples called them by a collective name, "Gypsies" — which stems from the one time belief that they had come from Egypt.

Nomadic, dark-skinned, non-Christian, speaking a foreign language (Romani), not tied to the land - the Gypsies were very different from the settled peoples of Europe. Misunderstandings of Gypsy culture created suspicions and fears, which in turn led to rampant speculations, stereotypes, and biased stories. Unfortunately, too many of these stereotypes and stories are still readily believed today.

Throughout the following centuries, non-Gypsies () continually tried to either assimilate the Gypsies or kill them. Attempts to assimilate the Gypsies involved stealing their children and placing them with other families; giving them cattle and feed, expecting them to become farmers; outlawing their customs, language, and clothing as well as forcing them to attend school and church.

Decrees, laws, and mandates often allowed the killing of Gypsies. For instance, in 1725 King Frederick William I of Prussia ordered all Gypsies over 18 years of age to be hanged. A practice of "Gypsy hunting" was quite common - a game hunt very similar to fox hunting. Even as late as 1835, there was a Gypsy hunt in Jutland (Denmark) that "brought in a bag of over 260 men, women and children."1

Though the Gypsies had undergone centuries of such persecution, it remained relatively random and sporadic until the twentieth century when the negative stereotypes became intrinsically molded into a racial identity, and the Gypsies were systematically slaughtered.

The Gypsies Under the Third Reich

The persecution of Gypsies began in the very beginning of the Third Reich - Gypsies were arrested and interned in concentration camps as well as sterilized under the July 1933 Law for the Prevention of Hereditarily Diseased Offspring. Yet, in the beginning, Gypsies were not specifically named as a group that threatened the Aryan, German people. This was because under Nazi racial ideology, Gypsies were Aryans.

Thus, the Nazis had a problem: how could they persecute a group enveloped in negative stereotypes but supposedly part of the Aryan, super race?

After much thinking, Nazi racial researchers found a "scientific" reason to persecute at least most of the Gypsies. They found their answer in Professor Hans F. K. Günther’s book Rassenkunde Europas ("Anthropology of Europe") where he wrote:

The Gypsies have indeed retained some elements from their Nordic home, but they are descended from the lowest classes of the population in that region. In the course of their migrations, they have absorbed the blood of the surrounding peoples, and have thus become an Oriental, western-Asiatic racial mixture, with an addition of Indian, mid-Asiatic, and European strains. Their nomadic mode of living is a result of this mixture. The Gypsies will generally affect Europe as aliens.2

Pop!Tech Gives Social Innovators a Boost

The annual conference trains nonprofit leaders, who often lack entrepreneurial knowhow, in branding, impact, and making connections

Pop!Tech Fellow Brian McCarth founded the organization PFNC (Por Fin Nuestra Casa), which has developed a process to recycle abundant shipping containers into affordable, modular, housing units. Kris Krüg

By Jessie Scanlon

Melanie Edwards had worked for JPMorgan Chase (JPM), AT&T (T), and the U.N. But none of those jobs exactly prepared the 45-year-old to run Mobile Metrix, a nonprofit market-research firm she founded in San Francisco in 2006 to collect data on the estimated 20 million "invisible" inhabitants of Brazil’s ghettos. At an autumn retreat in Maine, Edwards picked up some of the business basics she had been missing.

Edwards was among 18 social innovators chosen from among more than 110 applicants from 33 countries for the inaugural Pop!Tech Social Innovation Fellowship. The leaders of Pop!Tech, an annual conference about ideas shaping the future, saw the fellowship, which is funded by the gathering’s $3,500 ticket price, as a way to support social innovation. "We chose high-potential leaders whom we thought could make transformational impact," says Andrew Zolli, Pop!Tech’s curator, who develops programs for Pop!Tech Institute. "This is about giving them the nuts-and-bolts training they need to build successful organizations."

For four days in mid-October, the fellows shared a conference room at the Point Lookout Resort and Conference Center in Northport, Maine. Originally built as a corporate retreat for MBNA America Bank (now part of Bank of America (BAC)), the hilltop resort had an appropriately "we rule the world" view: a tree-covered landscape, ablaze in reds and golds, sloping toward the coast with the Atlantic stretching out beyond. The workshops covered everything from how to write a mission statement and appeal to investors to how to handle pesky reporters. Sessions leaders included Cheryl Heller, chief executive of branding firm Heller Communications Design; Robert Fabricant, executive creative director at frogdesign; venture capitalist John Balen of Canaan Partners; and social entrepreneur Paul Polak.

passion, but no training

It was almost a weekend executive MBA seminar for these social innovators, who work in 10 different sectors—education, health care, law, and human rights, to name a few—and span the for-profit/nonprofit divide. (See more photos of the workshops by Pop!Tech’s Kris Krüg.) While their missions varied wildly, most shared a couple of traits: They had passion, which had taken them this far. But, like Edwards, they lacked entreprenuerial training. This became immediately apparent in the first session, Good Brand Camp, led by Heller. To kick it off, each fellow stood to give the elevator pitch for his or her organization, although most would have needed a ride to the top of the Sears Tower to get the idea across.

"I used the same pitch I always use, thinking it was very effective—only to learn through feedback that what I was saying was confusing, not concrete, and begged more questions than answers," says Heather Fleming, the 29-year-old founder of Catapult Design, a Menlo Park (Calif.) engineering and design firm that works with global nonprofits. "Brand Camp was an eye-opening experience."

A second lesson emerged on Day 2: how to make an impact. Entrepreneurs tend to focus first on business models, while nonprofit founders don’t think enough about them. But social innovators—and all entrepreneurs, really—need to step back and think about what structure will enable them to make the biggest splash.

the biggest impact

These days people talk a lot about the triple bottom line: profits, environmental performance, and social impact. But Kevin Starr, who runs the Mulago Foundation, a venture fund that specializes in seeding health, conservation and development initiatives in the Third World, told participants that there’s only one bottom line: impact. "Whether you are a for-profit or not-for-profit should be determined by what will give you the biggest impact," said Starr. "My job is to buy impact. To get the biggest bang for my philanthropic buck."

Participants seemed surprised. Nathan Sigworth and his partner, Taylor Thompson, both barely out of college, are launching PharmaSecure, a startup that they hope will halt global pharmaceutical counterfeiting. "We’d been focusing on metrics for financial success, but we hadn’t thought about metrics for social impact," Sigworth conceded after Starr’s session.

Finally, the fellowship proved the value of connections. After the workshops concluded, the 18 participants moved down the road to Camden, Maine, to attend the Pop!Tech conference, an annual gathering of 600 people from across the economy. There they had the chance to rub shoulders with venture capitalists and possible partners. "I had conversations with six to eight potential funders," says fellow Tevis Howard, the 24-year-old founder of a profitable microforestry enterprise in Kenya called Komaza. Another participant was connected through the Pop!Tech network with a defense agency interested in his software.

‘Invisible’ Market

"I know that at least 40 percent of the fellows have fundraising or development meetings planned, and that’s a low estimate," says Zolli of Pop!Tech. "Most of the fellows are going to have a very busy few months."

Nearly a month after returning from Maine, Edwards is still following up on her connections. "Thanks to the fellows program, I gained new insight into how to reach more people, faster," she says. "Our mission remains the same, but it became clear that our market could extend to 4 billion ‘invisible’ people, so we’ve got loads of work ahead. Trustworthy partnerships will be key."

Five Copywriting Materials

If you’re new to copywriting, you may feel overwhelmed by all of the advertising mediums you’re learning to write. Whether you’re searching for a job as an ad agency copywriter or a freelance copywriter, these five advertising basics give you an introduction to copywriting.

1. Print Ads
Spend some time learning about print advertising. When you understand what makes a print ad effective, you can move into learning about other print mediums like flyers, yellow pages ads and newsletters. Writing print ads is also an easy way to create samples for your portfolio.

2. Brochures
Don’t just sit down and try to write a brochure. Learn the fundamentals such as how the brochure fits into the buying process, if the brochure will stand alone or be tied in with other ad mediums and what the selling points will be. Get to know the five types of brochures and you’re on your way to creating a powerful brochure.

3. Direct Mail
Writing direct mail expands upon your new knowledge of writing brochures. Direct mail is not one specific package of materials. In other words, not every direct mail package is the same. Some may include a sales letter and response card. Others may include a sales letter and brochure. Getting familiar with direct mail helps expose you to a side of advertising that some agencies specialize in exclusively. This can be invaluable knowledge to have if you discover you enjoy writing direct mail.

4. Commercials
Television commercials help you learn how to write audio to match video. Creating a :30 TV commercial script is an excellent lesson in copywriting. Your script has to time out perfectly, you incorporate audio and video with your copy and you also learn about the use of fonts, graphics and other effects in the commercial. This is also a good time to learn about radio commercials while you’re in commercial mode. You can easily use both TV and radio commercials as writing samples for your portfolio too.

5. Websites
Learning how to write copy for websites is a must for copywriters. Even companies that don’t sell products online need a website so having and maintaining a website is something every company should be doing already. This is where you, as a copywriter, come in. You can also use website copy as a SPEC AD for your portfolio.

Don’t stop now. These five aren’t the only advertising mediums you should learn how to create. They’re just a good primer to get you started.

NCAA 06 PS2 Codes

Unlock the Pennants in NCAA Football 06 PS2

Enter these codes at the to unlock the corrosponding effect.

1st and 15 Pennant; opponent gains 15 yards for first down: THANKS 2004 Alabama All-time team: ROLL TIDE 2004 All-Americans pennant: FUMBLE Arkansas All-time team: WOOPIGSOOIE Arkansas Mascot team: BEAR DOWN Auburn All-time team: WAR EAGLE Baylor ratings boost: SIC EM Blink Pennant; ref spots ball short for opponent: FOR Boing Pennant; opponent drops passes more: REGISTERING Clemson All-time team: DEATH VALLEY Colorado All-time team: GLORY Crossed The Line card: TIBURON Cuffed card: EA SPORTS Florida All-time team: GREAT TO BE FSU All-time team: UPRISING Georgia All-time team: HUNKER DOWN Georgia Tech Mascot team: RAMBLINWREC Illinois ratings boost: OSKEE WOW Iowa All-time team: On Iowa Iowa State mascot team: RED AND GOLD Kansas mascot team: ROCK CHALK Kansas State All-time team: VICTORY LSU All-time team: GEAUX TIGERS Miami All-time team: GREAT TO BE Michigan All-time team: GO BLUE Michigan State mascot team: GO GREEN Minnesota mascot team: RAH RAH RAH Mississippi State All-time team: HAIL STATE Miss Mascot team: HOTTY TOTTY Mizzou mascot team: MIZZOU RAH NC State mascot team: GO PACK Nebraska All-time team: GO BIG RED Notre Dame All-time team: GOLDEN DOMER NU mascot team: GO CATS Oklahoma All-time team: BOOMER Ohio State All-time team: KILLER NUTS Ole Miss Mascot team: HOTTY TOTTY Oregon All-time team: QUACK ATTACK OSU All-time team: GO POKES Penn State All-time team: WE ARE Pittsburgh All-time team: LETS GO PITT Purdue All-time team: BOILER UP Quarterback Dud pennant: ELITE 11 South Carolina Mascot team: GO CAROLINA Stiffed pennant: NCAA Syracuse All-time team: ORANGE CRUSH Take Your Time pennant: FOOTBALL Tennessee All-time team: BIG ORANGE Texas AM All-time team: GIG EM Texas All-time team: HOOK EM Texas Tech ratings boost: FIGHT UCLA All-time team: MIGHTY UGA All-time team: HUNKER DOWN UK Mascot team: ON ON UK UNC All-time team: RAH RAH USC All-time team: FIGHT ON UVA All-time team: WAHOOS VT All-time team: TECH TRIUMPH Wake Forest Mascot team: GO DEACS GO Washington All-time team: BOW DOWN What A Hit pennant: BLITZ Wisconsin All-time team: U RAH RAH WSU mascot team: ALL HAIL WVU mascot team: HAIL WV More general tips to come.

Essay

Definition: A critical, analytic, or expository piece of prose that is usually much shorter than a formal dissertation or thesis and is based in the author’s point of view, rather than extensive research. Early essayists include Cicero, who wrote on the pleasantness of old age, and Seneca, on anger. More recently celebrated essayists include Joan Didion who lately writes of her native California, and Calvin Trillin, a food-essayist.

More Literary Terms Defined