Bazsites.com Dips
Directory Topics
On the Web
- Dips and Spreads from RecipeSource - Collection of over 1000 various dips and spreads, from sweet to fiery hot.
- Hot Crab Dip - Serve with raw vegetables, crackers, or spread crab dip on small-loaf rye bread slices.
- Healthy Dip Recipes - Collection of dips, including black bean, garlic, and guacamole from InnerSelf Magazine.
- Spinach Dip - An easy, microwaveable spinach dip.
- Creamy Anchovy Dip - This dip is best chilled then served with fresh crudites.
- Warm Crab Dip - Serve with toasted Pita triangles.
- Cheese Dips and Spreads from AllRecipes.com - Recipes for cheese balls, cold or hot dips, cold or hot spreads, fondue, fruit or vegetable dips, and nacho and taco dips.
- Zatarain's Hot Artichoke Dip - Made with Zatarain's Creole Seasoning.
- Dips from CDKitchen - Large selection of dips and spreads including sweet, layered, guacamole, seafood, and fondue.
- Dip Recipes - Small collection of recipes including bean, bleu cheese, and clam.
Wikipedia Articles
- Leap-The-Dips - Leap-The-Dips is the World's oldest operating wooden roller coaster and North America's last surviving side friction roller coaster. It is located at Lakemont Park in Altoona, Pennsylvania and was built in 1902 by the E.
- Crazy dips - Crazy Dips are an American-made Candy. They come with a pouch filled with a powdered flavouring and a lollipop for dipping.
- Power dips - A power dip is a very short drop in voltage in a system (generally home AC wiring). It is most commonly observed when a high-current device (such as a hair dryer, microwave, or table saw) is switched on and lights in the same system will dim momentarily.
- Defective interfering particle - Defective interfering particles (DIPs) are virus particles that are missing part or all of their genome. Because of these deletions in their genome, DIPs cannot sustain an infection by themselves.
- Lakemont Park - Lakemont Park, located in Altoona, Pennsylvania, houses the world's oldest-surviving roller coaster, the Leap-The-Dips. The park opened in 1894 (four years before Kennywood Park) as a trolley park and became an amusement park in the summer of 1899.