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" ... Like many stategically-located mountain towns in Italy, Bormio, in the province of Sondrio, saw rulers come and go (among them the duchy of Milan, the Swiss canton of Grisons, France and Austria), leaving their mark on the local culture without overwhelming it. As for cuisine, what you’ll find is a hearty cooking style that developed around products found in the Valtellina valley (Bormio lies in the upper part of it). Local dishes include pizzoccheri, a very substantial first course made with buckwheat pasta, cheese, potatoes and cabbage; sciatt, a fried cheese fritter frequently spiked with a dash of grappa; the uniquitous bresaola and Valtellina cheeses like Bitto and Casera. ... "
" ... Montenegro’s advocates attempted to rush its inclusion through the lame duck session, but were blocked by Sen. Rand Paul (R-Kty) and others. Now, like horror villain Freddy Krueger, NATO membership back. Again, the Senate’s usual hawks are attempting to wave the duchy lookalike through before Donald Trump is inaugurated. After all, there is a chance that he would put America’s security ahead of that of Montenegro and kill the move. ... "
" ... The go-to broadcast. No other broadcaster has been given their level of access to Windsor Castle on the day. But the main, refreshing thing about the BBC America livestream is that the BBC will not bother smacking you in the face with any of that nutty, sweaty urgency of American or other non-English Anglophiles because the BBC contributors, editors and presenters are definitely already British. It can help you and your party skirt a lot of the fawning found elsewhere. Instead, the BBC's is the staunch 'home view,' in other words, the level of discourse that the British themselves have about their monarchy. Their reporters and editors will be up to snuff on the arcana of the Court of St. James, such as the fun fact that, formally speaking, the Queen will grant Harry and his bride a duchy, tipped to be the vacant duchy of Sussex, but despite her becoming a peer of the realm, Ms. Markle will remain a royal-by-proxy and thus will be styled with Harry's name, as in 'Princess Henry of Wales.' She is not and will never be on a titled par with the core royals. Among the mountains of coverage on offer on Saturday in America, the BBC's will be the equivalent of a bracing whiskey after a long walk in the country: Plenty of sugar in there in the form of love-of-country, but as an American you won't really know it. ... "