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During a round of “This or That” Canada Edition for Netflix Canada, Maitreyi and her co-star Darren Barnet had some interesting thoughts and feelings about iconic Canadian foods.
Aside from the fact that Barnet had no idea who Tim Horton and the famous chain named after him was, the pair shared some insight on another important topic for us folks living north of the border: chips.
When asked if they prefer All Dressed Chips or Ketchup Chips, Barnet revealed that he’d opt for the All Dressed variety and also that he just tried them for the first time in Vancouver.
Shai s All Dressed up is a song with a rebellious vibe aninews.in - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from aninews.in Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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4. Unfrosted Pop-Tarts
We already know which vegan flavors we’re having for a mid-morning snack tomorrow: Unfrosted Strawberry, Blueberry, and Brown Sugar.
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5. Doritos
Finding these Spicy Sweet Chili-flavored tortilla chips at a vending machine or gas station is a safe bet.
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6. Fritos
The inventor of these salty corn chips was supposedly vegetarian. Try the Original and Bar-B-Q flavors for your dairy-free chip fix.
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Introduced in 1991, the fruity snack is like childhood currency at lunchtime and playgrounds.
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8. Ritz Crackers
No butter is added to the original flavor of these buttery, versatile crackers it’s made with vegetable oils so enjoy them with vegan cheese, peanut butter, or salsa.
Johnathan Green s oral history of the sixties underground , Days in the Life, has been until now the most complete account of that celebrated (and much maligned) decade. In All Dressed Up he expands on that book to provide a facsinating and controversial overview of the cultural and political events of the decade. Comprehensive, detailed, often hilarious, this will be the definitive account of the sixties in Britain, challenging the myths fostered by those who were there and enlightening those who were not. Green s sixties begins with the invention of the teenager with the Teds, the Beats and CND; it ends with the Oz trial and with two of the decade s most lasting legacies: the women s movement and gay politics. In between his focus is on the whole panoply od that extrordinary decade, from sex, drugs and rock n rol to student protest, the anti-Vietnam movement and the radical social legislation-abortion, obscenity, homosexuality and capital punishment-pioneered by Roy Jenkins. Th