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Food and Drink

“There are many restaurants owned by different nationalities along this street, but we are the only one subjected to these kinds of incidents,” said Amsterdam owner Daniel Bar-On.
Amid an arctic freeze, members of the Lone Star State opened doors to friends without power, cooked meals, arranged for medication pickups for the homebound, and, in one extreme case, mobilized to ensure that hundreds of doses of coronavirus vaccines would not go to waste.
An online investment conference was driven by the objective of assisting the Gulf state in meeting one of its central challenges, which came to light even more so amid the coronavirus pandemic.
Dor Pintel, 33, partnered with a friend (a farmer and owner of a natural-food store) on a new venture that is keeping him busy during these once-in-a-century times.
Yaakov Berg, who owns the Psagot Winery with his wife, expresses his hope that “peace with the Emirates will change our relationship with Palestinians.”
The E.U. court’s ruling in support of the ban “threatens Jews’ freedom of religion across Europe,” writes Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in a letter to his counterparts in Europe.
Flights will feature kosher food available for pre-order and kosher wine.
Granit’s Paris eatery, Shabour, opened a year-and-a-half ago, and became a hit with both customers and critics.
An 18-month trial began in 2017 at the Nuclear Research Center Negev in Dimona, Israel, when 294 workers in their 50s with abdominal obesity were randomly divided into three groups: healthy dietary regimen, Mediterranean diet and green Mediterranean diet.
Maybe it won’t be so bad to curl up in an armchair and watch the giant ball drop virtually in New York’s deserted Times Square. Or to snack while continuing with whatever show you happen to be binge-watching, leaving leftovers for Shabbat.
The case came to the European Union’s highest court in Luxembourg following a 2017 law in Belgium’s Flanders region prohibiting animal slaughter without stunning.
“Despite a tough year, Jersey City is as strong as ever, and we remain an amazingly diverse city with different communities working together to build a better future,” said Jersey City Mayor Steven Fulop, the grandson of Holocaust survivors.