|
Breads show beauty more than crust-deep // City, suburban bakers offer slices of perfection
|
You may not be able to judge a book by its cover but you sure
can tell a sandwich by its bread.
Before tastebuds even get near robust meat, creamy cheeses and
crunchy condiments, they must penetrate bread or bun. For a superior
sandwich, wimpy white factory slices just don't cut it.
Italian, rye, pita, pumpernickel, whole-grain - these are the
hearth products that are essential to sandwich satisfaction.
Here are some wonderful foundations to great Chicago sandwiches
- bread winners all.
D'Amato's, 1124 W. Grand (733-5456), bakes a fabulous sourdough
Italian peasant loaf that graces ...
|
Zooflagellate phylogeny and the systematics of protozoa.(Evolution: A Molecular Point of View)(includes discussion)
Magazine article from: The Biological Bulletin
; ...subphylum Protalveolata of the Dinozoa, and not with the Sporozoa. The Sporozoa are once again restricted to nonflagellate endoparasites...cortical alveoli, are transferred from Microsporidia to Sporozoa, as the subphylum Manubrispora; they are probably...
|
|
The protozoa, a kingdom by default?
Magazine article from: The American Biology Teacher
; ...fundamental classes within the phylum Protozoa-Mastigophora (flagellates), Sarcodina (amoebae), Infusoria (ciliates), and Sporozoa (gregarines, coccidea)-remains influential (a basis for our proposition of the "full-circle" arrival of knowledge...
|
|
Toxoplasmosis in a Bone Marrow Transplant Patient.
Magazine article from: Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine
; ...cats; humans and other warm-blooded animals serve as intermediate hosts. It belongs to the subphylum Apicomplexa, class Sporozoa, and exists in nature in 3 forms: the oocyst (which releases sporozoites), the tissue cyst (which contains and may release...
|
|
Toxoplsmaosis in a bone marrow transplant patient
Magazine article from: Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine
; ...cats; humans and other warm-blooded animals serve as intermediate hosts. It belongs to the subphylum Apicomplexa, class Sporozoa, and exists in nature in 3 forms: the oocyst (which releases sporozoites), the tissue cyst (which contains and may release...
|
|
Cyclospora species as a cause of diarrhoea in humans
Magazine article from: British Journal of Biomedical Science
; ...cayetanensis is smaller than other species of cyclospora common in nature,l'2 and belongs to the phylum Apicomplexa, class Sporozoa, order Eucoccidda, family Eimerdae, based on its structure and sporulation characteristics.? Until recently, C. cayetanensis...
|
Find more facts and information related to the
article "Breads show beauty more than crust-deep // City, ..."