Page 16 - IAV Digital Magazine #450
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Papa John's Now Sells Its Garlic Dipping Sauce By The Jug
By Eileen Reslen
Papa John's gar- lic dipping sauce is deliciously addictive, but it has one funda- mental flaw: It only comes in those little con- tainers next to the pepperoni pepper in the pizza box. There's hardly ever enough there to really slather your pizza in the stuff. But now, all that has changed, and you can now buy the garlic dipping sauce by the jug. Yes, seriously.
Starting Friday, Papa John's will sell extra large jugs of its garlic sauce on papa- johns.fooji.com (the website will
also go live then). Thrillist rep orts it will also go on sale in "select markets." According to a company press release, the sauce is set to retail for $20, which is a a total steal for all that sauce.
The How Do You #GarlicSauce container comes with a handle, making it easy to carry around the kitchen. The com- pany suggests that customers use the sauce to dip an entire slice of pepperoni pizza into it, or dunk any other food item on their menu, including its breadsticks,
garlic breadsticks, or cheesesticks for an extra garlic kick.
The catch is that the sauce will be on sale for a limit- ed time only. The company did not state when it will no longer be available for pur- chase, so you should probably act fast.
Papa John's is also hooking you up with garlic sauce merch that will be available for purchase online, including T-shirts featuring the dipping sauce. Because why wear any- thing else while carrying around a massive jug of garlic sauce?
Pet dog Raised By Chinese
Family For Two Years Turns
Out To Be A Black Bear
When Su Yun bought her family a puppy two years ago, she was surprised by how much the dog ate. “A box of fruits and two buckets of noo- dles every day,” she told Chinese media.
There was, it turns out, a rea- son for its prodi- gious appetite: the animal has grown into a 250lb bear.
The family real- ized their error when the pet did not stop growing and started showing a talent for walking on two legs.
The more he grew, the more like a bear he looked,” said Ms Yun, a villager living near the city of Kunming in Yunnan province. “I am a little scared of bears.”
The animal has now been taken into care at the
Yunnan
Wildlife Rescue Centre after the family got in touch requesting help. Footage taken by officials shows it standing about a metre tall. Staff were
so intimidated by the animal – which had lived in the family home – they sedated it before transportation.
It has been iden- tified as an endangered Asiatic Black Bear, which would fetch thou- sands of pounds if sold on the black market.
The family say they bought the animal believing it to be a Tibetan
mas-
tiff while on holi- day in 2016.
Any embarrass- ment they felt may have been mitigated by the fact they are not the first among their neigh- bours to mis- take the ursine for the canine when on the lookout for a family pet.
In March, local media reported how a man, also from Yunnan province, had raised a bear after finding it roaming in the forest and initial- ly believing it to be a stray dog. He kept it in a cage.
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