@“rejj”#p46051 those chiles rellenos look really good, as a mexican I can vouch for every recipe on that channel! that sweet old lady is the real deal!
I particularly like her soy ceviche recipe ((event though I normally prepare my ceviche quite differently (northern ceviche style) and with quinoa instead of soy)) and her pan de muerto recipe.
I‘ve been cooking a lot of pan de muerto recently because it’s the right season right now and I learned by watching her video, (even though I replace the egg and the butter because vegan (vegan pro tip: a good egg replacement that makes bread very spongy, soft and fluffy is mashed potato!)) my pan de muerto is so good that multiple people have asked me if they could pay me to make them more, even not-vegans! (and even though right now you can get pan de muerto literally at every bakery and supermarket)
edit: I just noticed the soy ceviche video doesn't have english subtitles, oops, i get excited when talking about cooking, luckily the pan de muerto one does have them, I'll link it again because it rules
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dl0pEmc4GdY
Via Facebook user [Isaac Gordon:](https://www.facebook.com/groups/224100792703827/posts/383078083472763/)
"Hello everyone, just joined the group. This makes me so happy to scroll through and see everyone else's native habitat projects. Here's a pic from last winter that I thought I'd share. I live at 7400' in SE Wyoming, which is a pretty harsh environment. This is a picture of my fence line a couple days after a snow. The left side is what I've been restoring for the last 5 years with native grasses, forbs, and shrubs. The right size is "managed" to "maximize" grazing. The restored surface structure on my side has actually cooled the surface of the ground enough that the snow lingers (There's still about 10" of snow in this pic), melts slowly, gets a chance to soak into the earth, and protects the ground from the harsh winter winds and cold temperatures. Even though it's "colder" on our side of the fence, the topsoil, thatch layer, and snow actually keep the ground from freezing as hard and as deep as it does on the other side of the fence. Year-round, our property is now about 3 degrees cooler (in the daytime) than all of the adjacent land. It stays slightly warmer at night. On average, I have about 5 degrees less daily temperature fluctuation than all the land around me. It's been so amazing to see the return of native plants, mammals, and birds that we never thought we'd see out here. Looking forward to sharing more. Have a wonderful day!"
Seen while browsing F******k Marketplace for game name typos for the Rainjerks thread. I can’t stop thinking about the uninspired title choice. “Theft” seems very clinical. Could have been heist, hijinks, caper… Sir, there’s been reports of a theft on the Mississippi. It’s no laughing matter. These fellows needed a thesaurus.
Had to post this somewhere. Maybe it’s actually a Bad Game with a Slamming Soundtrack, lol.