Most Popular
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The Talk of the Green Iguana
Will American voters elect the first gay vice president in November?
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The Muscle Men
Inside the "Rejuvenation Centers" at the heart of the nation's largest illegal steroid and HGH operation
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Are We There Yet?
Jeez, can we just embrace the electric car already?
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Accidental Hit Man
Sure, Paul Brandreth talks like a wiseguy. But is he a cold-blooded killer?
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They'll Take Your Houses
South Florida's real estate forecast calls for pain
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Man-Child in the Promised Land (11)
Pop star Sean Kingston hopes the party's just begun
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Your Mom Thinks Hes Hot (6)
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The Talk of the Green Iguana (4)
Will American voters elect the first gay vice president in November?
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Shooting the Moon (2)
Aim high or aim low, you're bound to hit something, even if it's the sleep button
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Incredible Turnout (2)
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Thinking Outside the Noodle Box
Cross this bridge when you come to it
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Devil and the Deep Blue Sea
Reading the future in two beachy-keen fish houses
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Not Your Average Jo
City Diner cuts the mustard
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Havana Is Open
And you don't need a boat to get there
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Clematis Lays Golden Egg
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The Mind-Boggling Lewis Murder Case
12:17AM 03/19/08 -
Rejected!
12:56PM 03/18/08 -
Palm Beach Post Cuts Coffee, Pages
11:56AM 03/17/08 -
Q&A with Pink Martini, to play Adrienne Arsht Center this Friday
03:51PM 03/19/08 -
Rick Ross' Trilla Debuts at #1
12:31PM 03/19/08 -
More Love for Flo Rida
09:08AM 03/19/08
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Recent Articles By Steve Koppelman
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Georgia on My Mind
From the Caucasus to the shore, it's time for some post-Soviet soup.
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Wawel-Va-Voom
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Hot Enough for Ya?
When at Peppers, do as the Chinese do.
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Bacalhalia
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Samba by the Slice
National Features
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Village Voice
A Long Way Wrong?
Another celebrated memoir threatens to blow into a million little pieces.
By Graham Rayman -
LA Weekly
Hoop Dawg
Billionaire Donald T. Sterling owns the L.A. Clippers and loves the ladies. And those are just two of his problems.
By Patrick Range McDonald -
Westword
The Good Soldier
When the Army tried to take down Andrew Pogany, they messed with the wrong coward.
By Joel Warner
When I was 5 years old, my family moved to suburban Montreal. In the winter, we'd bundle up in snowsuits and have snowball fights and dig tunnels through the mounds of snow where the sidewalks used to be. In the summers, I remember the local Dairy Queen, the old freestanding kind. I was just tall enough to see the top of the counter. I'd stand in the parking lot in the evening with my chocolate-dipped cone of soft-serve, watching for fireflies.
Dania Beach's 7-year-old Dairy Belle (118 N. Federal Hwy., 954- 920-3330), with its walk-up window and its picnic tables in the shade, would be welcome enough if it were only an old-fashioned ice cream and hot dog stand. But owners Gilles and Ritane Grenier and their daughter Isabelle serve the dishes of their native land, Quebec, to the snowbirds and other expats who make Greater Hollywood their home.
The Greniers, who were in the cheese business for decades in Victoriaville, serve the roadside food of Quebec, as specific to its locale as cheese steaks are to Philly.
First, that means poutine ($5.50 to $6.75), a pile of French fries tossed with salty, mozzarella-like white cheese curds and smothered in hot gravy that melts everything together and makes it taste deceptively wholesome. Need veggies with that? Try poutine italienne, with the same fries and curds covered in a homemade tomato sauce, and galvaude, which adds shredded chicken and mushy peas, hitting all the major food groups.
Another regional specialty is the guedille ($2); in its basic form, there's almost nothing to it, just a loose, mayo-based salad of chopped lettuce, tomato, and onion on a toasted hot dog bun. Those who need protein can get versions with bits of chicken or chopped egg ($2.40) mixed in. Either way, it's homey, light, and simple, like something you might have gotten at a lunch counter 40 or 50 years ago. They also have Montreal smoked meat sandwiches on rye ($8.95), for those homesick for that city's own Jewish deli staple, a light-pink cousin of pastrami. Ask for a hot chicken sandwich and you'll get shredded chicken between two slices of bread, covered in gravy and, of course, those mushy peas. There's Salisbury-ish "hamburger steak" and its tomato-sauced "Caruso" variant, the area's only ice-cream-stand spaghetti, and from there, the fare you'd expect: hot dogs available steamed on steamed buns or grilled on toasted buns, with toppings that include mild, nostalgia-laden chili, burgers, and, of course, ice cream, including the creamy soft-serve of my childhood, as well as shakes, malts, ice cream sodas, and all the rest. If you get a sundae, don't miss their homemade caramel topping, thick with cream.








