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  2. Cookware and bakeware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cookware_and_bakeware

    Stainless steel. Stainless steel is an iron alloy containing a minimum of 11.5% chromium. Blends containing 18% chromium with either 8% nickel, called 18/8, or with 10% nickel, called 18/10, are commonly used for kitchen cookware. Stainless steel's virtues are resistance to corrosion, non-reactivity with either alkaline or acidic foods, and ...

  3. Alice (American TV series) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alice_(American_TV_series)

    The Mel's Diner set made changes over the years; in the pilot the diner contained a blue refrigerator, but in the series the refrigerator was a dirty stainless steel, then later was changed to clean and shiny stainless steel in 1979–81 and much later the set featured an even shinier stainless steel refrigerator and better appliances. The rest ...

  4. Gardetto's - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gardetto's

    The Gardetto Family Bakery was founded in 1932 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin by Baptiste and Diane Gardetto and was acquired by General Mills in 1999. [1] According to the packaging, it was at the bakery that Judy Gardetto took the trimmings of breadsticks and mixed them with other snack bits and a blend of special seasonings.

  5. Mel's Drive-In - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mel's_Drive-In

    The first Mel's Drive-In was founded in 1947 by Mel Weiss and Harold Dobbs in San Francisco, California.It later expanded to several other locations. After the last of the original restaurants closed in the 1970s, Weiss's son Steven Weiss and partner Donald Wagstaff opened the first of a new generation of Mel's Drive-In restaurants in 1985. [1]

  6. Mel's - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mel's

    Mel's may refer to: Mel's Diner, the setting for the 1976–1985 TV series Alice; Mel's Drive-In, a restaurant chain; Mel's Hole, an urban legend about a geographic ...

  7. Breadstick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breadstick

    Breadsticks, also known as grissini (sg.: grissino; Piedmontese: ghërsin, Piedmontese: [gəɾˈsiŋ]), are generally pencil-sized sticks of crisp, dry baked bread ...

  8. Mel and Sue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mel_and_Sue

    Mel and Sue gained widespread popularity in March 1997 when they launched a lunchtime chat show on Channel 4, Light Lunch, where celebrity chefs cooked lunch for the duo's celebrity guests. The show returned for a second series in 1998. [3] 1998-1999 The duo moved to a more prime-time evening slot and the show was renamed Late Lunch. [4]

  9. Mel Brooks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mel_Brooks

    Brooks was born Melvin James Kaminsky [3] on a tenement kitchen table on June 28, 1926, in Brownsville, Brooklyn, [4] to Kate (née Brookman) and Max Kaminsky, [5] and grew up in Williamsburg. His father's family were German Jews from Danzig (Gdańsk, Poland); his mother was a Ukrainian Jewish immigrant from Kyiv , in the Pale of Settlement of ...