Jason Cochran
What's Minnesota's budget meal secret? Food with a handle
The annual Minnesota State Fair, held in St. Paul, lasts just 12 days, ending on Labor Day. Officially, it's a confab for farmers and showcase for prize husbandry and cooking techniques, but locals love it just as much for its midway rides, concerts and novelty foods. The Fair is so popular, with nearly 1.7 million tickets sold, that vendors can make their entire year's income in less than two weeks, all on food items costing $3 to $7.
The most celebrated item of the Fair? Anything on a stick. And I mean anything. In fact, the dominance of the category has become an attraction unto itself: Souvenir shops sells t-shirts with checklists for all the sticked munchies on sale each year. In eras past, only the poorest people fried food on a regular basis, mostly because it could mask spoiled ingredients or compensate for a lack of leafy greens. But in modern America, fried food is a staple, and it's pretty much become Americana in an edible form. It's still cheap, too.
I visited the storied Fair this year with a mission to document as many foods on a stick as I could. And I found plenty, from plain old corn dogs to a surprising Italian pasta dish rendered a la stick. By my count, I found more than two dozen things on a stick, but maybe you can spot even more during my whirlwind tour of the 2009 fair and my visit to downtown Minneapolis.
Mitch LIpka
The $38 cup of coffee? The Top 5 risks of using your debit card
Consider this case: a man miscalculates how much money is in his checking account, uses it seven times in a day with no single charge more than $12 and ends up charged with $234 in overdraft fees. Welcome to the dangers of debit cards.
The plight of Peter Means, 59, of Colorado and how he came to be facing all these fees -- which in one instance cost him more than $38 for a cup of coffee at Starbucks ($4.14 for the coffee, $34 for the overdraft) -- was chronicled in the New York Times. Means' situation is just an example of how big a profit center these fees have become for banks, how important they are for banks and how consumer outrage over them have pushed lawmakers to try to rein them in. More...
SATURDAY OCTOBER 3, 2009
SUNDAY OCTOBER 4, 2009
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Coming up on Good Day Health:
More than half million kids get bad drug reactions (Pediatrics, 10/09)
U.S. Swine Flu Vaccinations Start Oct. 6 (CDC, 9/25/09)
No Increased Risk for H1N1 Virus Following Last Year's Seasonal Flu Shot (CDC, 9/26/09)
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Julianna Hough: Dancing with the Stars Celeb talks to Doug and the Good Day Team about the 70th Anniversary of the Wizard of Oz.Free Netflix video download until 10/3/09
Peggy Honore, style adviser for myBBF.com, a beauty and fashion social networking site, has tips on turning runway trends into everyday looks. And not just for women, but men as well. Even men as fashion-clueless as Rich.
Best known for his role as Ron Carver on Law and Order: Criminal Intent, award-winning actor Courtney B. Vance talks to Doug and the gang about his new show, Flash Forward, and his upcoming films with Harrison Ford and Forest Whitaker.
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