Word: drinked
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...accepts cash, but if you’re willing to brave these inconveniences, the food is definitely worth it. Though not the most romantic spot, many dates head to Bartley’s. Every burger on the menu is good, as are their onion rings and fries. For dessert, drink an Oreo milkshake; it’s expensive, but extremely delicious...
...resort, adding an extension, a spa, tennis courts and a golf course, and refashioning an old granary to house the Trattoria. Now bulldozers are flattening a patch of ground for a helipad. The vineyards will produce homegrown white wines this month, and the first reds will be ready to drink by Christmas. Wine on tap could prove useful if any of L'Andana's future guests share our deep and gorgeous thirst. The sommelier, Yuka Maekawa, concealed any surprise at our rate of consumption but packed a few surprises of her own. Female Japanese sommeliers aren't thick...
NAMED. Indra Nooyi, 50, chief financial officer of soft-drink giant PepsiCo; as the company's chief executive, making her one of just 11 women to head FORTUNE 500 companies; in New York. The Indian-born, straight-talking Nooyi will succeed Steven Reinemund in October. With Nooyi at the helm, PepsiCo will be the largest U.S. company, by market value, to be led by a woman. "Being a woman, being foreign-born, you've got to be smarter than anyone else," Nooyi said last week...
...That love of people, of life, found expression in Len's absurd generosity. Contrary to the general assumption, his cellar was not especially well-stocked, because he was always drinking the stuff. Not drinking; sharing. Len must have poured more great wine down unsophisticated throats than anyone in history: I have a beer-loving friend who still has no idea he has drunk Romane?-Conti. Len wasn't stupid-his glass tended magically to look a little fuller than the next-but he'd rather have called someone in off the street than drink a great bottle by himself...
Jamal Harwood prays five times a day. He doesn't drink, smoke or eat pork. He's active in his local Muslim community, and he's very serious about the need for an Islamic state. But if you passed him on the street, you would have no idea. Not just because Harwood, a financial consultant in London, wears a suit instead of traditional Muslim dress. Or because he keeps his beard cropped fashionably close. But because he's white...