Maybe it's because of the caption, but there's something very Gallic about that cat
I can imagine it helping Asterix defeat the Romans
[Muffled sounds of gorilla violence]
+9
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Donkey KongPutting Nintendo out of business with AI nipsRegistered Userregular
edited November 2021
Most canned cranberry sauces are just cranberries, hfcs / sugar, and water. There's plenty of pectin in the berries so no supplementary gelling agents need to be added. The acidity of the berries makes additional preservatives unnecessary. This isn't just the fancy ones, it's pretty much all of them. Oceanspray, store brand, etc. Cranberries aren't very expensive and they have a strong characterizing flavor that doesn't dilute easily. You just target a level of sweetness people will enjoy and you're done.
In short, there's nothing canned cranberry sauce makers really can do wrong without actually increasing cost to fuck it up on purpose. Idk, like chu I think it can be fun to spice it how you like or watch the berries split and release their juices into the pot as it cooks, but there's simply not a compelling difference between what you'd make at home and what comes in a can to justify feeling any particular way about it.
Donkey Kong on
Thousands of hot, local singles are waiting to play at bubbulon.com.
if i could pick a career path in a new life maybe i'd be that guy who tries to homemake everything in the world and then tell the masses on the internet what is and isn't worth the effort
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OrcaAlso known as EspressosaurusWrexRegistered Userregular
if i could pick a career path in a new life maybe i'd be that guy who tries to homemake everything in the world and then tell the masses on the internet what is and isn't worth the effort
But what if I'm lazy and so not willing to put as much effort in as you
Most canned cranberry sauces are just cranberries, hfcs / sugar, and water. There's plenty of pectin in the berries so no supplementary gelling agents need to be added. The acidity of the berries makes additional preservatives unnecessary. This isn't just the fancy ones, it's pretty much all of them. Oceanspray, store brand, etc. Cranberries aren't very expensive and they have a strong characterizing flavor that doesn't dilute easily. You just target a level of sweetness people will enjoy and you're done.
In short, there's nothing canned cranberry sauce makers really can do wrong without actually increasing cost to fuck it up on purpose. Idk, like chu I think it can be fun to spice it how you like or watch the berries split and release their juices into the pot as it cooks, but there's simply not a compelling difference between what you'd make at home and what comes in a can to justify feeling any particular way about it.
What about m o u t h f e e l?
and I wonder about my neighbors even though I don't have them
but they're listening to every word I say
+2
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Donkey KongPutting Nintendo out of business with AI nipsRegistered Userregular
if you use canned cranberry sauce and it's the depulped, clear jelly one, it has to be served molded into the shape of a can
I dont make the rules you just have to
if you've made your own at home, please reserve a can for the purposes of molding it before serving
Thousands of hot, local singles are waiting to play at bubbulon.com.
+7
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ChanusHarbinger of the Spicy Rooster ApocalypseThe Flames of a Thousand Collapsed StarsRegistered Userregular
if i could pick a career path in a new life maybe i'd be that guy who tries to homemake everything in the world and then tell the masses on the internet what is and isn't worth the effort
actually on second thought, people are fanatical about their foods and incredibly nonscientific and i'd probably get death threats so nevermind
do it anyway
piss them off
homemade cake isn't as good as the box stuff for fluffyness
+4
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Donkey KongPutting Nintendo out of business with AI nipsRegistered Userregular
I would 100% quit my job and dedicate my life to scoring foods by how much it's worth making them yourself if that job paid any reasonable amount of money
Thousands of hot, local singles are waiting to play at bubbulon.com.
+2
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zepherinRussian warship, go fuck yourselfRegistered Userregular
Totes worth a 7 dollar tip and dash pass to not go anywhere.
+2
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joshgotroDeviled EggThe Land of REAL CHILIRegistered Userregular
if i could pick a career path in a new life maybe i'd be that guy who tries to homemake everything in the world and then tell the masses on the internet what is and isn't worth the effort
But what if I'm lazy and so not willing to put as much effort in as you
the goal wouldn't be to necessarily change your behaviors- just to impart knowledge. i hate urban legends and superstitious rumors around food. some people say 'never do this, it'll make it runny/tough/dry' and they've never tested that. it's just inherited knowledge which they take as gospel. or they'll do this extra step- always brown this, make sure you give these ingredients 10 minutes to get to know each other in the pot, whatever. and probably the broadest, most high level bromide is- 'of course, if you have the time/energy/money, homemade is always better. but it's acceptable to...'
and i just think that's trivially false. there are a huge number of foods where it genuinely is not better to do it homemade. but even if i convinced you of that, it wouldn't necessarily change the way you cook. i just like the idea of the knowledge being out there, competing with all the wive's tales.
Organichu on
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OrcaAlso known as EspressosaurusWrexRegistered Userregular
if i could pick a career path in a new life maybe i'd be that guy who tries to homemake everything in the world and then tell the masses on the internet what is and isn't worth the effort
you'd be Donkey Kong?
i'm nicer than DK. i talk to the customers so the engineers don't have to. i'm a people person, goddamnit.
+7
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ChanusHarbinger of the Spicy Rooster ApocalypseThe Flames of a Thousand Collapsed StarsRegistered Userregular
if i could pick a career path in a new life maybe i'd be that guy who tries to homemake everything in the world and then tell the masses on the internet what is and isn't worth the effort
But what if I'm lazy and so not willing to put as much effort in as you
the goal wouldn't be to necessarily change your behaviors- just to impart knowledge. i hate urban legends and superstitious rumors around food. some people say 'never do this, it'll make it runny/tough/dry and they've never tested that. it's just inherited knowledge which they take as gospel. or they'll do this extra step- always brown this, make sure you give these ingredients 10 minutes to get to know each other in the pot, whatever. and probably the broadest, most high level bromide is- 'of course, if you have the time/energy/money, homemade is always better. but it's acceptable to...'
and i just think that's trivially false. there are a huge number of foods where it genuinely is not better to do it homemade. but even if i convinced you of that, it wouldn't necessarily change the way you cook. i just like the idea of the knowledge being out there, competing with all the wive's tales.
Honestly I feel like America's Test Kitchen is about halfway there with their deconstructions of exactly how and why certain steps are needed, and where you can cut corners.
as a job, i said. if you're good at something, never do it for me.
i'll start a patreon.
That's the worst way to get my money.
0
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Donkey KongPutting Nintendo out of business with AI nipsRegistered Userregular
Making soda syrups at home is a fool's errand for example. The precision involved and the amount of science that has gone into emulsifying oil based flavors into a water based syrup is just something you'll never realistically accomplish in your home kitchen. It's not going to happen. Plus the ingredients involved have to be fresh and the process works overwhelmingly better at commercial scale.
That said the fact that coke refuses to sell syrup to homes, and instead insists on bottling their product with water into wasteful, single-use containers is just like, some high bullshit. One of the poster children for how capitalism has utterly failed to capture external costs of manufacturing and we're going to destroy our entire planet because of it.
Thousands of hot, local singles are waiting to play at bubbulon.com.
Posts
...A dozen? A dozen and a half?
Like that's 6 and 9 since a "Deviled egg" is just one half of the white and yolk, right?
er
right, yeah, of course we get time off
i see
it has attacked and dethroned god
Hot burrito technology really losing this race
isn't he supposed to be omniscient in their theology
pick one, dumbasses
wouldn't a lack of faith in god's all knowingness represent....heresy
*looks down the street at night at any point in the last two weeks*
I have bad news for you
curious
I am very intelligent
Maybe it's because of the caption, but there's something very Gallic about that cat
I can imagine it helping Asterix defeat the Romans
In short, there's nothing canned cranberry sauce makers really can do wrong without actually increasing cost to fuck it up on purpose. Idk, like chu I think it can be fun to spice it how you like or watch the berries split and release their juices into the pot as it cooks, but there's simply not a compelling difference between what you'd make at home and what comes in a can to justify feeling any particular way about it.
I get free food at my parents' place
Of course I participate in Thanksgiving
But what if I'm lazy and so not willing to put as much effort in as you
What about m o u t h f e e l?
but they're listening to every word I say
I dont make the rules you just have to
if you've made your own at home, please reserve a can for the purposes of molding it before serving
you'd be Donkey Kong?
do it anyway
piss them off
homemade cake isn't as good as the box stuff for fluffyness
This targeted advertising is getting awfully aggressive
The opening credits are at least A+
the goal wouldn't be to necessarily change your behaviors- just to impart knowledge. i hate urban legends and superstitious rumors around food. some people say 'never do this, it'll make it runny/tough/dry' and they've never tested that. it's just inherited knowledge which they take as gospel. or they'll do this extra step- always brown this, make sure you give these ingredients 10 minutes to get to know each other in the pot, whatever. and probably the broadest, most high level bromide is- 'of course, if you have the time/energy/money, homemade is always better. but it's acceptable to...'
and i just think that's trivially false. there are a huge number of foods where it genuinely is not better to do it homemade. but even if i convinced you of that, it wouldn't necessarily change the way you cook. i just like the idea of the knowledge being out there, competing with all the wive's tales.
abscene?
i'm nicer than DK. i talk to the customers so the engineers don't have to. i'm a people person, goddamnit.
all of them
Honestly I feel like America's Test Kitchen is about halfway there with their deconstructions of exactly how and why certain steps are needed, and where you can cut corners.
as a job, i said. if you're good at something, never do it for free.
i'll start a patreon.
You got it Chu
I'll never do a job for you
okay
That's the worst way to get my money.
That said the fact that coke refuses to sell syrup to homes, and instead insists on bottling their product with water into wasteful, single-use containers is just like, some high bullshit. One of the poster children for how capitalism has utterly failed to capture external costs of manufacturing and we're going to destroy our entire planet because of it.