• Race and Equity
  • Environment
  • Food
  • Circular Economy
  • Events
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Grid Podcast: The People Left Behind

The Latest

All Topics

Pastry Press: Market Day on Flying Kite

Flying Kite has a long feature on Gil Ortale, the man behind Market Day Canelé. We here at Grid love the things—crunchy on the outside, custardy on the inside—and featured the perfect pastries in our recent Holiday Gift Guide.    

More
November 18, 2010
1 min read
#021 December 2010

Holidays 2010: Fry Baby

I’ve been known to laud Hanukah as the original green holiday—no decorations, no elaborate meat-based meals and an origin story in which one day’s worth of fuel burns for eight. And, adding to my smugness, my family was never big on gifts; dad gave us a little bit of cash (or gelt) and my mom

More
November 17, 2010
1 min read
All Topics

Designed for the Dump: The Story of Electronics

Annie Leonard, the woman behind “The Story of Stuff” has a new video: “The Story of Electronics.” Watch and learn. Via New York Times‘ Green blog.

More
November 17, 2010
1 min read
#021 December 2010

Gift Guide: Present Tense

I come from people who believe that pickles are integral to a good sandwich, that dinner should be eaten around a table and that all the very best gifts are edible. In fact, one of my earliest memories includes reaching up to slip a cooling cookie off the kitchen counter, baked by my dad for

More
November 17, 2010
3 mins read
#021 December 2010

Guest Column: Farm Tour

In February, I joined the band Hoots and Hellmouth at the Pennsylvania Association for Sustainable Agriculture’s (PASA) annual conference. More than once, I was asked if I was the group’s new bass player, or maybe their roadie. In fact, I’m the band’s farmer. It’s not a common title, but, when you work with a band

More
November 17, 2010
2 mins read
#021 December 2010

Shoots & Ladders: The Pits

Last winter, after helping our neighbors shovel out of a blizzard, we were rewarded with a lovely pineapple. It got me thinking: “How do these things work?” Unfortunately, it remains a bit of a mystery, as last year’s attempts at pineapple propagation failed, and ditto the efforts to start an avocado tree.

More
November 17, 2010
1 min read
#021 December 2010

Along for the Ride: Stephen Bilenky

If, like me, you routinely lust after the beautiful bicycles populating our fair city, then chances are you’ve probably coveted one of Stephen Bilenky’s custom creations. My first encounter occurred last spring on a ride with Curtis Anthony, owner of Via Bicycles. We were taking a rest under the cherry blossoms along MLK Drive when

More
November 17, 2010
2 mins read
All Topics

Plaza Plans: City Hall’s Upcoming Facelift

Thanks to Philly Brownstoner for the heads up on this story detailing planned renovations at City Hall’s Dilworth Plaza, currently one of city’s biggest missed opportunities. From The Architects Newspaper:  Designed by Urban Engineers with Kieran Timberlake and landscape architects Olin, the new plaza will displace an underutilized 1960s-era sunken space that does not easily

More
November 17, 2010
1 min read
#021 December 2010

Dispatch: Better to Give

During the holidays, “It’s the thought that counts” is a sentiment lost on the McLaughlin clan. We’re an Irish family with five siblings and many more nieces and nephews, so the gift-giving gets competitive—it’s the MMA Championship of generosity. We’re always attempting to outdo each other, overlooking our debt/income ratio for the satisfaction of stupefying each other

More
November 17, 2010
2 mins read
#021 December 2010

From the Editor: The Pleasures of Slow Food

The birth of slow food is an inspiring story. In March 1986, McDonald’s opened its first location in Italy, near the Spanish Steps in Rome. The Steps were built in 1725, the neighborhood was home to John Keats in the 19th century and, not too long ago, Bob Dylan wrote a song about them.

More
November 17, 2010
2 mins read
Previous 1 … 307 308 309 310 311 … 398 Next

Recent Comments

  1. Bernard Brown on After several centuries, a dam is set to be removed from Cobbs Creek. Red tape continues to delay the project
  2. Dawn M on After several centuries, a dam is set to be removed from Cobbs Creek. Red tape continues to delay the project
  3. Suzanne Hagner on Despite its popularity, Pennsylvania’s solar energy future remains stalled
  4. Ebo Nunoo on Artisanal chocolate brings a Ghanaian immigrant back to his roots
  5. Stacey Howard on Bird advocates hit a wall at Philadelphia City Council

© 2022 - All rights reservedGrid Magazine

  • Race and Equity
  • Environment
  • Food
  • Circular Economy
  • Events
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Grid Podcast: The People Left Behind
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Online Store
  • Donate
  • Distribution
  • Magazine
  • Contact
  • Race and Equity
  • Environment
  • Food
  • Circular Economy
  • Events
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Grid Podcast: The People Left Behind