The Bristol Art Museum announces its next exhibit, "Breadth & Depth: Earth, Water, Air, Fire," a national juried exhibit that challenges conventional boundaries through which 51 artists from 18 …
Port City Pretzels have less salt but all the flavor
Theyâre neither fat and doughy and bursting-at-the-seams, nor are they hard and stick-like
By Rachel Ellner Globe correspondent,Updated May 11, 2021, 2:00 p.m.
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Port City pretzels.Handout
Port City Pretzels are prim and proper as pretzels go. Theyâre neither fat and doughy and bursting-at-the-seams, nor are they hard and stick-like. The standout bestseller is the Tasty Ranch Dill, with its pronounced buttermilk taste enhanced with garlic, dill, and parsley. Thereâs a soft crunch to them, all the while maintaining a signature pretzel taste.
Port City Pretzels are lower in salt content than many typical brands; 18 Tasty Ranch pretzels (they are smallish) contain 320 mg of sodium, about 15 percent of the recommended daily dose. There are now three additional flavors. The most recent, Tangy Mustard âN Honey, begs to go with a deli sandwich, and you can hold the mustard on that. Thereâs t
New Hampshire s and Portsmouth s first female mayor, Mary Carey Dondero, is well-represented in the Portsmouth Athenaeum s archives, with the details of her life outlined in several thick folders of letters, photographs and newspaper articles.
A photo from February 1937 shows N.H. House of Representatives member Dondero (1894-1960) proposing a 48-hour work week. Ten men in suits and ties sit around her, leaning in and listening intently as she talked about the bill she introduced on behalf of Gov. Francis P. Murphy. It was signed into law a month later.
Her daughter, Eileen Foley, who served eight terms as Portsmouth mayor, recalled in a late 1990s interview with Denise J. Wheeler that her mother was known as the Sweetheart of the House.