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Laura Deutch and Shira WalinskyMay 5, 2021 Listen 5:04
I Heart Cambodia is one of more than 62 immigrant- and refugee-owned businesses south of Snyder Avenue. (Shira Walinsky/WHYY)
Sarun Chan began shopping on South 7th Street in South Philadelphia at the tender age of three years old.
His family had just emigrated from Cambodia and the pocket of shops between Snyder Avenue and Oregon Avenue offered them the flavors and ingredients they missed. In the small shops, he and his mother would search out ingredients they couldn’t find at traditional American-style grocers. Eventually, she trusted him to go to the street on his own to hunt down the fragrant reminders of home.
1500 Pattison Avenue &, S Broad St, Philadelphia, PA 19145
Thai food at the Southeast Asian Market at FDR Park
Diana Lu
Philadelphians and hungry travelers from Maryland, Delaware, New York, and New Jersey meet and mingle among dozens and dozens of tents selling Khmer street food, fresh sugarcane juice, and tropical fruit smoothies, spices, and fermented shrimp pastes made by aunties and home cooks.
On the shortlist of must-eats: grilled steak on a stick, deboned Cambodian chicken wings stuffed with meats and glass noodles, nom banchok (Khmer rice noodles in a light green curry with chicken and fish, topped with crunchy banana blossoms and a sugary chili crisp), ansorm chhrouk (tender pork belly and mung bean encased in sticky rice, best sliced and fried with fish sauce), Cambodian pork rolls, and steamed beef tripe and spleen with cabbage and cucumber salad and addictive anchovy peanut lime sauce. Move onto sweets like plae aie (sweet mochi-like balls stuffed with palm sugar and
How to support Asian and Asian American communities at home and on the road
Feb 21, 2021
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Racism against the Asian and Asian American communities in the U.S. is nothing new. But since the beginning of the pandemic, which originated in Wuhan, China, violent acts against these groups have been on the rise, fueled by hateful comments referring to COVID-19 as the “Chinese virus.”
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In an Unprecedented Development, Medical Disposables Become More Important that Missiles. Medical Applications of Spunbond Nonwovens Soars by a Mind-Bending 90.4%
Global medical applications of Spunbond Nonwovens is expected to soar by 90.4% in the year 2020, before stabilizing to 10.9% over the 2020 through 2027 period. The global market is expected to reach US$25.7 billion by the year 2027 trailing a post COVID-19 CAGR of 7.8% over the analysis period.
As the COVID-19 pandemic continues to spread across the globe, the nonwoven industry faces a mixed bag of opportunities and challenges, given its application in diverse end-use sectors. While the market faced a severe setback in construction, automobile, and packaging sectors, there was a significant demand from healthcare, hygiene and medical markets. Personal protective equipment (PPE) experienced an exponential demand during the first half of 2020, wit