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Jan 25 2024
News
These chefs and restaurants from Ohio and Michigan are semifinalists for national awards
The James Beard Awards annually honor outstanding chefs and restaurants around the country in a variety of categories. Multiple chefs and businesses from Michigan and Ohio are semifinalists for the 2024 James Beard Awards, which recognize outstanding places and people for their contributions to the U.S. culinary industry. According to a press release from the James Beard Foundation, the awards
WTOL 11Feb 10 2024
News
Bob Moore, founder of Bob’s Red Mill, dies at 94
Moore founded Bob's Red Mill 40 years ago, which first served only Portland, then spread to become a natural foods powerhouse. Example video title will go here for this video Example video title will go here for this video MILWAUKIE, Ore. — Bob Moore, founder of Bob’s Red Mill, died Saturday, company officials confirmed. He was 94, having celebrated the occasion last February. “Bob’s legacy
KGW 8Feb 10 2024
News
CY Middle School celebrates Chinese New Year
CASPER, Wyo. — Area students rang in the Lunar New Year in style Saturday afternoon at CY Middle School, celebrating Chinese culture, history, food and more. Students from CY Middle School and Paradise Valley Elementary School took part, and delighted attendees with musical and dramatic performances in Chinese. Students also shared projects they’d spent weeks working on. “This year, the theme
Oil City NewsAug 03 2019
News
We must transform food production to save the world, says leaked report
Attempts to solve the climate crisis by cutting carbon emissions from only cars, factories and power plants are doomed to failure, scientists will warn this week.
A leaked draft of a report on climate change and land use, which is now being debated in Geneva by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), states that it will be impossible to keep global temperatures at safe
The GuardianFeb 13 2024
News
Prices rose more than expected in January as inflation won’t go away
Inflation rose more than expected in January as stubbornly high shelter prices weighed on consumers, the Labor Department reported Tuesday.
The consumer price index, a broad-based measure of the prices shoppers face for goods and services across the economy, increased 0.3% for the month, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported. On a 12-month basis, that came out to 3.1%, down from 3.4%
CNBCMay 05 2023
News
The mysterious piles of pasta found in a New Jersey forest likely came from a stockpile of food a man found in his dead mother's home, neighbor says
After about 500 pounds of pasta were found on a riverbed late last week in Old Bridge, New Jersey, there were loads of questions about the mysterious spaghetti's origins. Now, a neighbor says the noodles were likely dumped by a man who cleaned out his mother's home after her death. Neighbor Keith Rost told NBC New York that the man lived in the house with his mother. Upon her death, he put the
Business InsiderAug 22 2015
News
Extreme weather to cause extreme food shortages, task force finds
Food shortages and price hikes caused by extreme weather will be three times more likely over the coming decades, according to a new report.
The U.K.-U.S. Taskforce on Extreme Weather and Global Food System Resilience found that unless better planning, modeling and trade arrangements are put in place, massive disruptions to our food supply — the kind that usually only occur once a
USA TODAYFeb 23 2023
Headline Roundup
As Inflation Pace Slows, Food Prices Keep Climbing
Inflation's overall pace in the U.S. has slowed a bit in recent months. But food prices remain persistently high.
The Details: Prices for food at home rose 0.7% in January compared to the prior month, and were up 11.3% from a year before. That annual figure was nearly 5 percentage points above the overall inflation rate, which is "among the widest gaps since the 1970s," according to
Axios Reuters Fox BusinessSep 29 2021
News
The cold truth about hot lunch: School meal programs are running out of food and workers
Square pizza and chicken tenders suddenly get swapped for meatloaf and zucchini coins. American schoolchildren and lunch ladies grimace. And now the federal government is stepping in to help.
School districts in Kansas can’t get whole-wheat flour, ranch dressing or Crispitos rolled tacos right now. In Dallas, they can’t put their hands on flatware, plates and napkins. In New York,
Washington PostFeb 10 2024
News
Founder of Bob’s Red Mill, Bob Moore, dies at 94
Bob Moore, the founder and bearded face of internationally distributed Bob’s Red Mill food products, died Saturday. Moore launched Bob’s Red Mill in 1978 with the help of his wife, Charlee, after their family embraced a nutritious diet full of whole grains. Bob’s Red Mill today offers more than 200 products — from whole wheat flour to classic granola and grain-free brownie mix. His
The Oregonian