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This hour on The Colin McEnroe Show is all about the grocery store. From Trader Joe's to Costco to the economy and politics, everybody talks about groceries.
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This hour, a look at the history and evolution of kitchen tools and gadgets.
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This hour, a look at refrigeration and how it’s shaped what we eat and how we live with Nicola Twilley, author of Frostbite: How Refrigeration Changed Our Food, Our Planet, and Ourselves.
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This hour on Where We Live, PBS chef and cookbook author Lidia Bastianich shares some of her American story and answers your cooking and turkey-roasting questions ahead of Thanksgiving. What are your family food traditions?
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Plant hard- and softneck garlic and mild-flavored shallots in the fall for an early summer harvest.
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Bring these cook's favorites indoors for the fall and winter: parsley, rosemary, geraniums, chives, thyme and oregano. Once inside, mature potted herbs will continue to send out shoots and leaves into November, and under grow lights, your herbs will continue growing into winter.
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Charlie's tips for harvesting apples and pears.
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Fall in º£½Ç»»ÆÞ feels longer and warmer. It's an opportunity to garden more, so start planting quick maturing, cool weather loving greens like spinach, lettuce, arugula, escarole, kale and Swiss chard.
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Humans may need a break from the heat, but melons like cantaloups, honeydews and watermelons thrive during hot, wet summers.
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"A rose by any other name would smell as sweet," except when that rose is a rose of Sharon, which is neither a rose nor from Sharon; it's actually a shrub in the hibiscus family. You can use the edible blooms to make tea.