Yellowknife salad dressing is so popular, stores are selling thousands of bottles
Bullocks Bistro in Yellowknife has sold thousands and thousands of bottles of its famous salad dressing in less than a year. Now the restaurant is building a processing plant to keep up with demand.
Social Sharing We’ve sold so much of it, we can’t keep it on the shelves, said Co-op deli manager.
Posted: Feb 27, 2021 8:00 AM CT | Last Updated: February 27
This salad dressing is so popular, the Yellowknife Co-op store has sold almost 7,000 bottles since May 2020.(Photo: Jay Legere)
It started with a Facebook post back in April 2020.
Great Blacks in Wax puts a spin on Black history
By: Bo Evans
and last updated 2021-02-10 21:09:42-05
BALTIMORE â Joanne Martin starts at the beginning.
âI had a young man from somewhere in Africa and he said that all his life, they had talked about those who were lost, about the people who had been stolen,â said Martin.
From the outside, the National Great Blacks in Wax museum looks unassuming, just a building in Baltimore. But your first steps inside take you to the depths of the slave ships that took these stolen ones from the African coast to the shores of some British colonies in the west.
Taken from The National Great Blacks In Wax Museum Facebook page
(WEAA) Dr. Kaye celebrates Black History Month with Dr. Joanne Martin, co-founder and president of The National Great Blacks In Wax Museum located in Baltimore City.
Diamonté Brown, president of the Baltimore Teachers Union also joins Dr. Kaye to discuss in-person learning expectations and protocols.
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Taken from The National Great Blacks In Wax Museum Facebook page
(WEAA) Dr. Kaye celebrates Black History Month with Dr. Joanne Martin, co-founder and president of The National Great Blacks In Wax Museum located in Baltimore City.
Diamonté Brown, president of the Baltimore Teachers Union also joins Dr. Kaye to discuss in-person learning expectations and protocols.
Listen
Volunteers - including local residents and retailers - in Market Lavington have mobilised once more to support their community. Last March, Suzanne Morrison created a Facebook group with a call-out for help ahead of a looming lockdown announcement. She took her son to a physio appointment, and expected to come back to perhaps a handful of sign-ups. She got home and made a coffee, and was shocked to see that 80 people had already got in touch to volunteer. She said: “No-one knew what was coming or how long we’d have to work for. “By the time lockdown was imposed I was shielding due to a lung condition, so my thanks goes out to the volunteers on the ground who are doing amazing things. We hit the ground running here in Market Lavington.