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  2. Cheesecloth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheesecloth

    Cheesecloth is a loose-woven gauze-like carded cotton cloth used primarily in cheesemaking and cooking. [1] The fabric has holes large enough to quickly allow liquids (like whey) to percolate through the fabric, but small enough to retain solids like cheese curds. [2]

  3. Cooper's Hill Cheese-Rolling and Wake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cooper's_Hill_Cheese...

    A race on 27 May 2013. This ceremony originally took place each Whit Monday, but was later moved to the Spring Bank Holiday.The first written evidence of cheese rolling is found in a message written to the Gloucester town crier in 1826; [1] even then it was apparent that the event was an old tradition, and it is believed to be at least six hundred years old.

  4. Care cloth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Care_cloth

    Engraving depicting the marriage of the Duke of Bourbon and Mademoiselle de Nantes at Versailles in 1685, with a nuptial veil held over the couple. The nuptial veil, which is also referred to as the care cloth, carde clothe or wedding canopy, is an ancient Christian wedding tradition where a cloth is held over the heads of the bride and groom during the Nuptial Blessing.

  5. Why one woman proudly shows off her $130 wedding ring - AOL

    www.aol.com/article/lifestyle/2016/12/02/why-one...

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  6. Wedding customs by country - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wedding_customs_by_country

    The civil ceremony in France is free of charge. Traditionally, the wedding guests gathered at the fiancée's home and went to the church in a procession. The procession was led by the bridegroom and his mother, followed by the bride's mother and bridegroom's father, the witnesses, grandparents, brothers and sisters with their spouses.

  7. Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthony_Bourdain:_No...

    Bourdain visits Tuscany, Italy, where he samples the local wine and cheese and encounters the world's most famous butcher, "The Butcher of Panzano", Dario Cecchini. He also clashes with the episode's director, the Italian auteur Vincenzo Tripodo, who dreams of making the episode an homage to Dante's Inferno.