chairfairy
chairfairy t1_je1jor0 wrote
Reply to comment by rocket_gun in [homemade] pigs in a blanket by rocket_gun
Interesting. The US version is 1) fried, and 2) dipped in a cornbread batter instead of wrapped in a yeasted dough. Haven't seen these other versions before
edit: brain fart on what things are called
chairfairy t1_ja7nmjo wrote
Reply to comment by dell02 in Kate Bush, singer, songwriter, musician and dancer, 1978 by eaglemaxie
Hot or Naut.
chairfairy t1_j9vs6ow wrote
Reply to comment by erx612 in [Homemade] Smoked Brisket by erx612
> everyone's suddenly an expert
bUT wHy IS iT rAw On ThE OuTsIdE???
But seriously, looks like a good smoke ring, a solid bark, and plenty of nice little pockets of fat laced in around the meat. Well done!
chairfairy t1_j9ftns7 wrote
Reply to comment by Bax_Cadarn in when a limb gets amputated, how do they stop the flow of blood? by EnchantedCatto
The implication was that the branches lead to "increasingly smaller vessels up to capillaries". Not sure where else someone would think they go...
chairfairy t1_j9ewtc4 wrote
Reply to comment by EnchantedCatto in when a limb gets amputated, how do they stop the flow of blood? by EnchantedCatto
It has a return path through all the branches that come off it before the amputation point.
chairfairy t1_j93h50e wrote
Reply to comment by modern_julius in [homemade] ribeye by modern_julius
Great analysis and description, thanks for sharing.
I want to be skeptical that there's anything magical about stepping through the different settings on your stove to preheat the pan, but I can't argue with your results and that's all that matters.
chairfairy t1_j5tccln wrote
Reply to comment by Nanshe3 in [Homemade] Smoked half rack & blue box by yellowjacquet
In the literal sense, yes they are both mac'n'cheese. But they are very different dishes and it's a very different experience to eat one vs the other. I would be annoyed if I wanted the boxed version and someone gave me the homemade version, because they're not the same thing.
chairfairy t1_j5t8tiv wrote
Reply to comment by Nanshe3 in [Homemade] Smoked half rack & blue box by yellowjacquet
I'll say homemade mac'n'cheese is a completely different dish from box mac'n'cheese.
You don't make a sandwich if you want a burrito and you don't order a burger if you want a hot dog. You don't do homemade if you want boxed and vice versa. It hardly makes sense to compare them.
chairfairy t1_j3lsqk8 wrote
Reply to comment by ThymeIsTight in TIL Pluto hasn't completed an orbit around the sun since its discovery. Pluto's orbit takes about 248 years, and Pluto was discovered in 1930. by irbinator
In 2 Earth years, America will be 1 Pluto year old
chairfairy t1_j3lslh1 wrote
Reply to comment by Bsmith0799 in TIL Pluto hasn't completed an orbit around the sun since its discovery. Pluto's orbit takes about 248 years, and Pluto was discovered in 1930. by irbinator
Harder to guess because Alaskans still have circadian rhythms - that's a basic biological function built into your brain, that a lot of life on earth evolved with. (I assume circadian rhythm predates humans, because other animals have it, too.)
In a tidally locked world, there would be no circadian rhythm, at least not one driven by the day/night light cycle. I mean yeah they'd probably still need to sleep but the underlying biological mechanisms would be completely different
chairfairy t1_j2t9fkm wrote
Reply to comment by GreatAndPowerfulNixy in The Laws of UX - beautiful website explaining 21 rules for effective UX design by Quackerooney
Before cell phones you didn't learn that many area codes, though. Because that would be a long distance call so for the most part you just learned the base 7 digits
^(867-5309)
chairfairy t1_j2t95td wrote
Reply to comment by COSenna in The Laws of UX - beautiful website explaining 21 rules for effective UX design by Quackerooney
If nothing else, it's a decent starting point to give you concepts to research. Not perfect, but still useful
chairfairy t1_itplnla wrote
Reply to If each side of our body is controlled by the opposite brain hemisphere, how do we blink in sync? by killians1978
One minor note to add - even "standard" motor control (i.e. passed through the spinal column instead of cranial nerves) is not 100% unilateral. There is some amount of bilateral activity in the brain for e.g. hand / arm / leg movements. The hemispheres are not so perfectly disconnected.
chairfairy t1_je1zcq2 wrote
Reply to comment by Sayoria in [homemade] biscoff-cheesecake by animavivere
But we so desperately needed cookie butter in cake form!