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  2. How To Store Homemade Bread So It Lasts - AOL

    www.aol.com/store-homemade-bread-lasts-142600332...

    If baking homemade bread has become a regular part of ... use paper or cloth bread bags to help maintain their crispy texture. ... 14 wicked-good deals from L.L. Bean's End Of Season sale. Show ...

  3. Ticking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ticking

    Ticking is a type of cloth, traditionally a tightly-woven cotton or linen textile. [1] It is traditionally used to cover tick mattresses and bed pillows. [2] The tight weave makes it more durable and hinders the stuffing (straw, chaff, hair, down feathers, etc.) from poking through the fabric. [1]

  4. Wise Foods - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wise_Foods

    Wise Foods, Inc. is a company based in Berwick, Pennsylvania, that makes snacks and sells them through retail food outlets in 15 eastern seaboard states, as well as Vermont, Ohio, West Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, and Washington, D.C. Best known for its several varieties of potato chips, Wise also offers Cheez Doodles, bagged popcorn, tortilla chips, pork rinds, onion rings, Dipsy Doodle ...

  5. Tick mattress - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tick_mattress

    A tick mattress, bed tick or tick is a large bag made of strong, stiff, tightly-woven material [1] . This is then filled to make a mattress , with material such as straw, chaff , horsehair , coarse wool or down feathers , [ 2 ] : 674–5 vol1 and less commonly, leaves, grass, reeds, bracken, or seaweed. [ 3 ]

  6. Breadbox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breadbox

    They are usually made of metal, wood or sometimes pottery (pottery breadboxes are also called bread crocks). Old breadboxes can be collectible antiques . Breadboxes are most commonly big enough to fit one or two average size loaves of bread—up to about 16 inches wide by 8 to 9 inches high and deep (40 cm × 20 cm × 20 cm).

  7. Buehler's Fresh Foods - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buehler's_Fresh_Foods

    Buehler's Fresh Foods, also known as Buehler's, is a grocery store chain founded in 1929 in New Philadelphia, Ohio, US, by Ed and Helen Buehler. In 1932, Buehler's opened its second location in Wooster, Ohio. [3] Buehler's is the largest purchaser of local Amish produce at the Mt. Hope Auction.