Oklahoman
When the COVID-19 pandemic scuttled Michelle Bui’s best laid plans for 2020 she mourned like everyone else, but then she started baking like no one’s ever seen and now her outlook for 2021 is on the rise.
On Saturday, Bui and her sister Anna will be back out at the OSU-OKC Scissortail Farmers Market, this time with more inventory after their baked goods were wiped out before noon during the season’s first event.
The Hokkaido milk bread from Bui’s Breads has quickly grown an audience since she began offering it for sale last summer. That inspired her to add sourdough, Hawaiian rolls and pretzels to the menu, which she currently creates in the family kitchen.
•2 ounces chopped butter lettuce
•1 (or 2) heaping spoonful(s) of avocado mashed with a little lime juice and salt
•1 tablespoon of mayonnaise
•Sliced tomato, sweet onion, pickled hot cherry peppers
Toast the bread, spread each side with mayo. Top one side with turkey, the other with Provolone, then stack evenly with remaining ingredients. Carefully put the two stacked slices together as one and slice diagonally.
Serve with your favorite chips, and don t be afraid to let them come to rest between the slices.
For information about how to order a loaf for yourself, go online to https://www.buisbreads.com/
Lido return looks promising
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Testimony presented in court about an attempted escape at the Marion County Jail several months ago revealed that if the mission had been successful, then 40 inmates could have made it out.
That number of inmates running around would have posed a significant danger to the community, stretched law enforcement resources thin and threatened surrounding areas, according to additional statements made in court.
Joshua Blue Douglas Haynes, one of three people accused of either being involved in or knowing about the daring venture, told Circuit Judge Gary Sanders that he wasn t thinking clearly at the time of the July incident.
Haynes, speaking via video link from the Marion County Jail at his sentence hearing on Tuesday, told the judge that law enforcement and State Attorney s Office officials were giving him too much credit for his role in the unsuccessful escape.