Byline: Deborah Pankey Daily Herald Food EditorPankey, Deborah
Student Recipes is perfect for any cooking new cook or college student looking to learn how to make their own meals. Check out our recipes and blogs now.
Back when I was in college I was fortunate enough to live in a dorm with a kitchen. Sure I made plenty of meals but they weren’t always imaginative. Dorm life would have been a lot easier if I knew how to make tasty meals that doesn’t require the fanciest of equipment. What ...
I have my “go to” last minute appetizers and snacks I make that are all super easy to throw together – plus, as a bonus, they have very few ingredients (which means the odds are good I already have the ingredients on hand. If not, it only takes a quick grocery run to pick them...
For lots of quick and easy meals that you can make ahead of time, check outQuick and Easy Menus On A Dime, which is full of pre-made menus and recipes for meals in 30 minutes or less. Make it easier to put dinner on the table and get out of the kitchen faster!
Hotel accommodations, meals, transportation, and tickets Travel insurance AND An amazing unforgettable life experience There is no way to put a price tag on experiences. Earning credits seems more like a bonus to what you’ll see and do. Opportunities for High School Students to Earn College ...
cook. Even when we were living on frozen pizza half the time back in college, a simple stir fry filled in for the other half of the time. If you love the simplicity of these meals as much as I do, check out my recipes forcabbage stir fryandcauliflower fried ricefor more inspiration....
51.Over the years the cost of a collegeeducation has increased almost by 100%. 52.A law passed recently allows manystudents to pay no more than one tenth of their income for their college loans. 53.Middle-class Americans have highlyvalued a good education. 54.More kids ...
One of my middle-school teachers tried to show his class how to think rather than how to memorize. He found learning lists of facts out of context to be useless. Rather, he challenged his students—in homework and on tests—to apply what they knew to new situations they hadn't encountere...
Rebecca Lee Crumpler (1831 - 1895) worked as a nurse for eight years before studying in medical college in Boston in 1860. Four years later, she was the first African American woman to receive a medical degree. She moved to Virginia in 1865, where she provided medical care to freed slaves...