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The Stilton Cheese Makers Association produced a fragrance called Eau de Stilton, which was "very different to the very sweet perfumes you smell wafting down the street as someone walks past you." [33] The search for an unpasteurised Stilton cheese was a plot element of a Chef! episode titled "The Big Cheese", aired on BBC1 on 25 February 1993.
Although most Stilton cheeses have been made with pasteurised milk for many years, until 1989 the Colston Bassett dairy did make one Stilton with unpasteurised milk. However, following an outbreak of food poisoning incorrectly linked to the dairy [ 4 ] and subsequently revealed to be unfounded, [ 5 ] they decided to end production of the ...
The cheese was first made in the 1970s at the Castle Stuart dairy in Inverness, Scotland by Andy Williamson, a cheesemaker who had trained in the making of Stilton cheese in Nottinghamshire. The cheese was first known as 'Inverness-shire Blue' or 'Blue Stuart', but was eventually marketed as 'Shropshire Blue', a name chosen to help increase its ...
A number of subcategories are regularly populated: vehicle manufacturing companies and electronics companies, among others. Jewelry and other 'artisan'-type manufacturers are typically categorized to Category:Design companies established in 1912 due to the singular nature of the goods produced and the design being a tantamount selling point.
Pages in category "Products introduced in 1912" The following 12 pages are in this category, out of 12 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. 0–9.
Elmore Manufacturing Company was a manufacturer of veteran and brass era automobiles and bicycles (1893–97), [1] headquartered at 504 Amanda Street, [2] Clyde, Ohio, from 1893 until 1912. The company took its name from a small parcel of land in Clyde with the name Elmore associated with it where a stave mill was established originally, then ...
Philip Simmons (June 9, 1912 – June 22, 2009) was an American artisan and blacksmith specializing in the craft of ironwork. Simmons spent 78 years as a blacksmith, focusing on decorative iron work. [1] When he began his career, blacksmiths in Charleston made practical, everyday household objects, such as horseshoes. [1]
A significant contribution made by Granville to labor was The Negro American Artisan, written in part with W. E. B. Du Bois and Florence Kelley. The Negro American Artisan was an Atlanta University-sponsored sociological study covered in different Journal issues conducted from 1902 to 1912. The issues are divided into sections.