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Alphabet Zoo (Paperback)
Pat Chapman; Contributions by Martha Ellis
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R619
Discovery Miles 6 190
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Curry is a perennial favorite, yet many of us feel that we don't
have the time to prepare the delicious Indian dishes we so enjoy.
Instead, we often opt for the local restaurant, take-out, or the
microwave. Now Pat Chapman, author of the popular "The Modern Balti
Cookbook, " shows just how quick it is to cook curries for
ourselves. Here is a dazzling range of easy-to-prepare recipes that
will take no longer than half an hour to create. "The Real Fast
Curry Cookbook" features fantastic salads, soups, and snacks;
traditional meat, fish, and vegetable classics; tips on how to cook
rice variations to perfection; and all you need to know to make
your own chutneys and condiments. A must for the modern curry
lover, "The Real Curry Cookbook" will forever change the way you
view Indian food.
Open area excavation on 14.45ha of land at Cambridge Road, Bedford
was carried out in 2004-5 in advance of development. A background
scatter of Early Neolithic flint, including a Langdale stone axe,
may be related to the nearby presence of the Cardington causewayed
enclosure. Two Early Bronze Age ring ditches sat on a low lying
gravel ridge between the River Great Ouse and the Elstow Brook. A
causewayed ring ditch, 30m in diameter, had a broad entrance to the
southwest, where a shallow length of ditch either silted or had
been filled in. Adjacent to the shallow ditch was a pit containing
three crouched burials, probably in an oak-lined chamber,
radiocarbon dated to the early Middle Bronze Age. A nearby small
round barrow enclosed a deep central grave containing the crouched
burial of a woman, probably within an oak-lined chamber. An
L-shaped ditch to the east, radiocarbon dated to the Middle to Late
Bronze transition, may have been the final feature of the monument
group. It parallels the addition of L-shaped ditches/pit alignments
at other contemporary ring ditch monuments. Shallow linear ditches
formed a land boundary extending north and south from the Bronze
Age ring ditch, and other contemporary ditches were remnants of a
rectilinear field system, contemporary with a scatter of irregular
pits and a waterhole. This phase came to an end at the Late Bronze
Age/ Early Iron Age transition, when a large assemblage of
decorated pottery was dumped in the final fills of the waterhole.
By the Middle Iron Age there was a new linear boundary, comprising
three near parallel ditches, aligned north-south; a rectangular
enclosure and a complex of intercut pits. The pottery assemblage
was sparse, but the upper fills of both the deepest linear boundary
ditch and the pit complex contained some Roman pottery. To the
south-east an extensive Romano-British ladder settlement is dated
to the 1st to 4th centuries AD. Only the northern fringe lay within
the excavated area, comprising successive boundary ditches, along
with pits, a stone-lined well, an inhumation burial and animal
burials. In the early Anglo-Saxon period (5th-6th centuries AD),
there was a loose cluster of three sunken featured buildings with
another to the south. In the middle Saxon period (8th-9th centuries
AD) a small rectangular mausoleum contained a single inhumation
burial, with a second inhumation to the immediate west. Subsequent
land use comprised truncated furrows of the medieval ridge and
furrow field cultivation and post-medieval quarry pits.
A definitive listing of every curry restaurant in the country.
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R398
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Discovery Miles 3 300
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