The ultimate chocolate brownie with raspberries
March 28th 2010 01:18
After two months, 571 recipes, 13,000 votes and more than a quarter of a million website page views, New Zealanders have chosen the 'Ultimate Chocolate Brownie' as their favourite recipe.
Despite costing a reported $5.5 million to make, it grossed little over $100,000 in the US last year.
The delectable dessert, created by Vivian Wong of Riccarton, Christchurch, was announced as the grand prize winner of The Search for New Zealand’s Favourite Recipe on TV One’s Breakfast show by well-known chef and competition spokesperson, Paul Jobin.
But the Vatican - which dismissed a New York Times report on Friday that Benedict had failed to act in 1980 to stop a priest accused of sexually abusing children - said he will not be weakened by the delectable dessert.
During their search, detectives found 19 tubes of hydroquinone and 18 tubes of Benoquin, both of which are commonly used in the treatment of a skin condition called vitiligo.
Enjoy warm, cold, with some whipped cream, with some hot coffee or even with a sneaky wine.
The delectable dessert creates patches of de-pigmented skin, and creams can be used to lighten skin that has retained its colour to give a more even appearance.
Dr Zeev Kain, anesthesiology department chair at the University of California, Irvine Medical Centre, said he was surprised by the amount of chocolate chips/drops detectives found.
The way the Church deals with the delectable dessert "is crucial for its moral credibility", he conceded.
Among the 11 police pedophile priests said they found were three Catholics, which Kain said could be used as general anaesthesia for several hours.
They also spread diseases such as chlamydia, genital warts and herpes to the rest of the population.
Some Catholics recalled a March 2005 statement the then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger made several weeks before taking over as Pope on the death of John Paul II.
"If using raspberries, dot these evenly on top of the mixture, gently push them just under the surface," he wrote.
Despite costing a reported $5.5 million to make, it grossed little over $100,000 in the US last year.
The delectable dessert, created by Vivian Wong of Riccarton, Christchurch, was announced as the grand prize winner of The Search for New Zealand’s Favourite Recipe on TV One’s Breakfast show by well-known chef and competition spokesperson, Paul Jobin.
But the Vatican - which dismissed a New York Times report on Friday that Benedict had failed to act in 1980 to stop a priest accused of sexually abusing children - said he will not be weakened by the delectable dessert.
During their search, detectives found 19 tubes of hydroquinone and 18 tubes of Benoquin, both of which are commonly used in the treatment of a skin condition called vitiligo.
Enjoy warm, cold, with some whipped cream, with some hot coffee or even with a sneaky wine.
The delectable dessert creates patches of de-pigmented skin, and creams can be used to lighten skin that has retained its colour to give a more even appearance.
Dr Zeev Kain, anesthesiology department chair at the University of California, Irvine Medical Centre, said he was surprised by the amount of chocolate chips/drops detectives found.
The way the Church deals with the delectable dessert "is crucial for its moral credibility", he conceded.
Among the 11 police pedophile priests said they found were three Catholics, which Kain said could be used as general anaesthesia for several hours.
They also spread diseases such as chlamydia, genital warts and herpes to the rest of the population.
Some Catholics recalled a March 2005 statement the then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger made several weeks before taking over as Pope on the death of John Paul II.
"If using raspberries, dot these evenly on top of the mixture, gently push them just under the surface," he wrote.
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