Places to see in ( Dunbar - UK )
Places to see in ( Dunbar - UK )
Dunbar is a town in East Lothian on the south-east coast of Scotland, approximately 28 miles east of Edinburgh and 28 miles from the English border north of Berwick-upon-Tweed. Dunbar is a former royal burgh, and gave its name to an ecclesiastical and civil parish. The parish extends around 7 1⁄2 miles (12.1 km) east to west and is 3 1⁄2 miles (5.6 km) deep at greatest extent, or 11 1⁄4 square miles (29 km2), and contains the villages of West Barns, Belhaven, East Barns (abandoned) and several hamlets and farms.
Its strategic location gave rise to a history full of incident and strife; but Dunbar has become a quiet dormitory town popular with workers in nearby Edinburgh, who find it an affordable alternative to the capital itself. Until the 1960s, the population of the town was little more than 3,500. The town is thriving with the most recent population published for the town at 6,940, and there are many active and planned housing developments ongoing. There are very well regarded primary schools and a secondary school in the town.
The town is served by Dunbar railway station with links to Edinburgh and the rest of Scotland, as well as London and stations along the northeast corridor. Dunbar is home to the Dunbar Lifeboat Station, the second-oldest RNLI station in Scotland.
Dunbar is the birthplace of the explorer, naturalist and influential conservationist John Muir. The house in which Muir was born is located on the High Street, and has been converted into a museum. There is also a commemorative statue beside the town clock, and John Muir Country Park is located to the north-west of the town. The eastern section of the John Muir Way coastal path starts from the harbour. One of the two campuses to Dunbar Primary: John Muir Campus, is named in his honour. On the last full weekend in September, Dunbar holds an annual weekend-long, traditional music festival sponsored by various local companies.
Alot to see in ( Dunbar - UK ) such as :
Chapel tower (with doocot conversion) of the Trinitarian Priory, Friarscroft, west of the town. Founded c. 1240 by Christiana de Brus, Countess of Dunbar.
Dunbar Castle, possibly from the 14th century, rebuilt and remodelled c. 1490 and c. 1520. Largely ruined with the aid of gunpowder (deliberately by Act of Parliament) in 1567 and with the whole north end removed with the aid of explosives (detonated using a specially-invented electrical system) for the new Victoria Harbour 1842–44.
Parish church (see above) by James Gillespie Graham 1818–21 in local red sandstone from Bourhouse quarry
Parish Church Hall (1910), located behind the post office off the High Street, contains stained glass removed from St Giles' Cathedral, Edinburgh, redundant there on the creation of the Thistle Chapel.
Abbey Free Church (1850) by Thomas Hamilton (architect).
St Anne's Episcopal Church (1889) by Robert Rowand Anderson.
The Town House (Tolbooth), High Street, (c.1550).
Mercat Cross (c.1911) created from medieval fragments to replace lost original sited opposite West Port. Now beside Town House.
Lauderdale House (1790–92), designed by Robert Adam and executed by his brother John after Robert's death; built round the carcass of Dunbar House (c1730).
Railway station (1845) but altered.
Cromwell Harbour, very old fishing harbour which dates to 1600s
( Dunbar - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of Dunbar . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Dunbar - UK
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Made in East Ayrshire - Dunlop Dairy
Made in Ayrshire - Dunlop cheese, Clerkland Farm, Stewarton
How to Make Gluten-Free Bread | Make Bread
Watch more How to Make Bread videos:
When you're making gluten-free bread you're basically substituting flour, or wheat flour or any type of flour that contains gluten with a type of flour that doesn't contain gluten. Generally, what types of flours don't contain gluten? Rice flour doesn't contain gluten. Amaranth flour doesn't contain gluten. There are a variety of different flours that don't contain gluten and those are the flours that you want to use when you're making gluten-free bread.
You also generally need some type of thickener when you're making gluten-free bread, so oftentimes you'll find the recipe calls for xanthan gum, which is becoming more and more available at grocery stores. You are going to use a liquid like you would use in making regular bread and you're also going to use some salt and any types of flavoring, like olive oil can be in gluten-free bread, and that helps to add a really nice flavor to your bread.
You don't need to knead gluten-free bread, because there's no gluten to develop. You're basically going to just mix your ingredients together and then you're going to generally spoon or pipe your bread or put your bread into some type of mold to bake. Because it doesn't have any gluten it's not really able to stand up on its own, so it's generally baked in some type of pan mold or a muffin tin or something to give it sort of that extra boost to help it rise, basically.
Gluten free bread has yeast in it, so it still needs to ferment and it still needs to proof, but you're not really going to be shaping it. So it just basically goes through a mixing phase and then a proofing phase after it's already in the pan, and then it gets baked like a regular bread in a bread oven or in an oven, where you're recreating that steam effect in its pan or in its muffin tin. That is a quick explanation on what the difference is between gluten-free bread and regular bread.
Class 321 Cabride from Cambuslang - Glasgow Central
First Video on my Train Simulator 2016 / Run8 Channel
: Class 321 Cabride from Cambuslang - Glasgow Central
Loco : AP Class 321
Route : WCML North
Hovis 'Bike' advert 1973 (Britain's favourite TV ad)
FROM:
HI-RES VODCAST:
In 1973, Hovis produced what became one of the all-time classic TV adverts, a delivery boy freewheeling down a cobbled northern hill.
In fact, the ad was shot on Gold Hill of Shaftesbury, Dorset. The director was (Sir) Ridley Scott. He later went on to direct Bladerunner, Alien, Thelma & Louise, and Gladiator.
The original boy on the bike, Carl Barlow, then 13, is now a 48-year-old fireman.
He said: It was pure fate that I got the part as the Hovis boy. I was down to the last three, and it turned out that one of the two boys couldn't ride a bike, and the other wouldn't cut his hair into the pudding bowl style - it was the Seventies after all. As the only boy who could ride a bike and would cut his hair, I got the part.
The ad is also famous for its soundtrack. In Britain at least, Dvorak's 'New World' symphony - rearranged for brass - says 'Hovis' and 'good, plain Northern values.'
Like many classic adverts of the 1970s, the Hovis 'Bike' advert was produced by iconic advertising agency Collett Dickenson Pearce & Partners.
Official Song - Dil Tut Na Jay Bechara| Ragav Singh | Kavya Sharma
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Pizza recipe in urdu
Pizza is a yeasted flatbread generally topped with tomato sauce and cheese and baked in an oven. It is commonly topped with a selection of meats, vegetables and condiments
One delicious way to please everyone at the table is to custom-make pizza at home.
Make yummy pizza with zara's kitchen in very easy steps.
Hartford CT Commercial Property: 310 Collins STREET
Offered at $1,200
Historic 1895 george flint building behind saint francis hospital second floor office spaces & reception & conference room parking off the street for the tenant to pay percentage of heating & electric costs
Contact John Balf Morgan
Office: 860-561-8012
Cell: 860-989-8096
Fax: 860-561-6077
BT Infinity Movie01.mov
copy of BT advert. original 0:55 at