Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Santa Fe Flavors or Le Sucre

Santa Fe Flavors: Best Restaurants and Recipes

Author: Anne Hillerman

SANTA FE FLAVORS Best Restaurants and Recipes

IN A CITY KNOWN FOR ITS FINE DINING, Santa Fe boasts countless restaurants for the food lover. Restaurant critic Anne Hillerman takes connoisseurs on a whirlwind tour through some of the most delectable Santa Fe restaurants and offers recommendations on the best eateries and provides diners the chance to re-create some of their favorite dishes with recipes contributed by restaurant chefs.

More than fifty restaurants and recipes are included, with both celebrated and undiscovered chefs.

RESTAURANTS FEATURED INCLUDE:

Bobcat Bites, El Farol, The Pink Adobe, Blue Heron at Sunrise Springs, Coyote Cafe, Geronimo, Trattoria Nostrani, and more.

According to the Santa Fe Convention and Visitors Bureau, Santa Fe has more than 200 options for dining.

In 2007, Santa Fe was ranked the number four top city in the United States and Canada by Travel + Leisure magazine.

On average, Santa Fe attracts 1.2 i
to 1.4 t
million visitors annually, according to the Visitors Bureau.

Santa Fe was chosen as one of America's Top 25 Destinations by TripAdvisor in 2008.

Online marketing and promotions.

Print and web advertising campaign.

National broadcast and print publicity.

Co-op available.

During more than twenty years as a journalist, Anne Hillerman has worked as editorial page and arts editor for the Albuquerque Journal North and the Santa Fe New Mexican. She has been the Santa Fe restaurant reviewer for the Albuquerque Journal and Journal North since 2001. Her other books include The Insiders' Guide to Santa Fe and Children's Guide to Santa Fe. She is a director of Wordharvest Writers' Workshops and the Tony HillermanWriters' Conference. She lives in Santa Fe.



Read also Leadership and the New Science or Evelyn Wood Seven Day Speed Reading and Learning Program

Le Sucre: Production, Commercialisation et Usages Dans la Mediterranee Medievale

Author: Mohamed Ouerfelli

The present book traces the movement of sugar cane from the East to the West of the Mediterranean, from plantations to the sugar bowl, including the refinery and the apothecary's shop.



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