Cockroach milk healthier than almond milk? Yes, in fact could be among “the most nutritious substances on earth”
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    plantteacher
    Now 100%

    Goat cheese tastes like goats smell.

    I occassionally visited someone with a goat farm. The odor around the farm was quite distinct and far from pleasant. Then when I tried goat cheese, the taste was spot-on the same as the external odor of goats. Really put me off. I cannot do goat cheese because of that. Yet goat cheese is somewhat popular so I get it. I wonder if aroma is unimportant to some people.

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  • Cockroach milk healthier than almond milk? Yes, in fact could be among “the most nutritious substances on earth”
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    plantteacher
    Now 100%

    Not sure why that is necessarily the case. Recall how wine was made at one point: people barefeet got in a tub of grapes and smashed them by running around. Roach milk could be a matter of rounding up some 8 year old boys and giving them gummy bears or a candybar if they stomp around in a vat of roaches.

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  • Cockroach milk healthier than almond milk? Yes, in fact could be among “the most nutritious substances on earth”
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    plantteacher
    Now 92%

    I cannot help but think about that future-set movie with a non-stop train conditions non-survivable outside the train, with a class system on the train. The lowest class people were at the back of the train were fed something called nutrition bars or blocks (or something like that), which looked like mysterious black jello-like bricks. They were made on the train from cockroaches. Anyone know what movie I’m talking about? This research fits nicely into that movie narrative.

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  • Cockroach milk healthier than almond milk? Yes, in fact could be among “the most nutritious substances on earth”
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    plantteacher
    Now 100%

    Agreed.

    As a kid I recall stepping on one and thick white milk squirted out. Another kid said “just like a Jr. mint!” Ever since then, I have been unable to mentally separate Jr. mints from cockroaches. And to be clear, that association was not an upgrade for the roaches.. it was a mental downgrade to Jr. mints.

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  • https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2016/08/06/488861223/cockroach-milk-yes-you-read-that-right

    Woah.. ho.. Gotta love that clickbait title. I’ll cut to the chase though- more research is needed before you can get roach milk on the shelf. From the article: “But today we have no evidence that it is actually safe for human consumption.” “Plus roaches aren't the easiest creatures to milk.”

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    For Baby Guiness, are all coffee liquors acceptable? All creme liquors as well?
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    plantteacher
    Now 100%

    I’ve not heard of Conker. I think it’s not in my area. Looks interesting though particularly because they have a decaf version. Although the color makes it look weak:

    https://www.conkerspirit.co.uk/coffee-liqueur/

    The cocktail on that website involves just adding water and shaking. I think I would sooner brew coffee and add gin, than to dilute the shot.

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  • Saffron: The Story of the World’s Most Expensive Spice - JSTOR Daily
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    For centuries, saffron has been a prized dye

    Bizarre that such a costly substance would be used as a dye for clothing. Why pay what’s likely the equivalent of HP ink when you can just get a box of Rit yellow dye at the supermarket?

    Surely the price will drop when someone figures out that drones can fly around and harvest the saffron.

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    For Baby Guiness, are all coffee liquors acceptable? All creme liquors as well?

    Just wondering if anyone has made a Baby Guiness that turned out bad, or if any combinations should be avoided. Presumably all the rum and brandy based coffee liquors would be versatile with all creme liquors. But then I wonder if some likely to have a strong character might clash, for example: * Chouffe Coffee - brandy-enriched but also has McChouffe beer. * Sambuca (caffe zanin and Molinari Cafe) - IIUC both zanin and molinari have a black liquorish/anise taste, which seems like an unlikely mix with coffee in itself but then putting something like a crème brûlée flavored liquor or salted caramel Baileys sounds risky. * Patron XO Cafe - tequila-enriched coffee. I’m surprised to hear this is a popular variation of Baby Guiness but does tequila necessarily go with all the various creme liquors that would be coffee compatible? The cream liquors that would seem to deviate from neutrality: * Baileys salted caramel (says on the bottle not to mix with citric or acidic drinks.. hmm.. isn’t coffee acidic? I will try this on the Chouffe coffee as caramel and dark beer seem compatible) * Baileys tiramasu (though seems quite safe with coffee liquors) * Baileys? crème brûlée * Amarula -- marula spirit often described as a citrus-y orange creamsicle; recommended to consume <6 months after opening.. so shelf-stability not so great, thus likely dairy milk is involved but note that Baileys has a <2 yr *guarantee*, which implies whiskey might be a better stabilizer than marula despite both Baileys and Amarula having 17% alc. * vegan creme liquors tend to go in the coconut direction.. wonder if that’s dicey I guess my main question is about the two Sambuca coffees because I’m not sure whether to buy it. I’ll be experimenting with Chouffe Coffee anyway since I already have some of that. I’ve never had Amarula before. I’d like to know if it goes well on a baby guiness before buying. If not I might play it safer and go with the Baileys tiramasu. Amarula website says it’s good in tiramasu, which kind of implies it would do well on a baby guiness.

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    The [website of the producer](https://www.caffeborghetti.com/en/come-berlo) of this coffee liquor is useless for getting info about this product. Some digging around on 3rd party sites reveals that it’s made of 70% Arabica from South America and 30% Robusto from Africa, and that 3 different coffees are made in a giant moka machine (thus unfiltered) and blended. One source says it’s “steeped in grain alcohol, blended and sweetened with sugar. No coffee aromas, chocolate, extracts or distilled additives are added.” I cannot find any direct info as to what spirit is used. Coffee liquors are all over the map (rum, jenever, tequila, brandy, vodka, whisky, etc). If the source claiming use of grain alcohol is correct, I suppose that rules out rum, tequila, & brandy. Whiskey and jenever have a clear character. So I’m tempted to assume vodka is in play. Can anyone confirm or deny?

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    is it safe to let a water heater to be unplugged for ~3—6 months at a time?

    My house has a tankless water for most of the house. Exceptionally, one floor gets hot water from a tank. I rarely need hot water on that floor so I keep the tank unplugged. But when I need a backup shower (e.g. the tankless gets clogged with limescale) I plugin the tank, let it reach a quite high temp, then shower. Is this risky? I just heard from someone saying they only unpower their water heater for 1 day at a time because of some specific kind of bacteria. I was assuming whatever bacteria colonizes in 6 months or whatever would be killed off when I fire it up. But I know that some bacteria (which goes after spoiling meat) produces toxins, so even when the bacteria is dead there are dangerous chemicals remaining. Is this the same risk with water heaters? If it’s unsafe, what do I need to do? Do I have to fill the tank with air between uses? Or can I just run the water for as long as needed to get all new water in the tank before powering it?

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    posts blackholed on the onion instance
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    plantteacher
    Now 100%

    As a test, I enabled js on the onion site and tried again to post from the onion connection. Again my message was simply blackholed. So noscript’s default disabling of JS is not the issue.

    (edit) then I posted from the clearnet site mader.xyz.. no issue. This problem is onion-specific.

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  • I just got burnt. Wrote up a relatively high-effort post in: http://mandermybrewn3sll4kptj2ubeyuiujz6felbaanzj3ympcrlykfs2id.onion/c/water clicked *sumbit*, and it simply ate my msg. Redrew a blank form.. no way to recover the info loss. This is my 1st use of the onion, so I did not think to enable 1st party j/s (which is strangely off be default in noScript on Tor Browser despite clearnet sites having 1st party js enabled by default). It’s unclear if it’s a JS problem or if it’s because the onion version uses a quite old/classic reddit-like theme. In any case, it sucks.. it’s a defect for sure.

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    Jump
    African elephants call each other by unique names, new study shows
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    plantteacher
    Now 100%

    I would assume the extent of the uniqueness is probably unknown at this point. The researchers probably meant uniqueness within a group. Though I suppose the population is small enough that the names could be unique globally.

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    Jump
    African elephants call each other by unique names, new study shows
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    plantteacher
    Now 66%

    Also worth noting that AI was used by the researchers. It’s not mentioned in the article, but I guess AI helped sort out which sounds might be a name.

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    African elephants call each other by unique names, new study shows
    www.ctvnews.ca
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    (US) the unnecessary-IV (swindle?) [update: price corrected to $600]
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    Now 100%

    That would make sense. In Europe I got an IV just for blood samples. They could have been anticipating the possibility that I would need pain killers later, but seemed like it would have made more sense to use a normal needle and only do the IV if it came to the point of needing meds.

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  • Loss of cooking skills has hurt our ability to adapt to rising food prices, experts say
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    plantteacher
    Now 100%

    Indeed.. now that we can simply enter a couple ingredients into a search field and get countless recipes, and also w/Youtube, I would expect people to be better equipped in recent decades.

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  • Loss of cooking skills has hurt our ability to adapt to rising food prices, experts say
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    plantteacher
    Now 100%

    Weren’t bread machines all the rage because you just dump in the ingredients and it’s autopilot from there? I see a lot of them at 2nd markets and in dumpsters, so I wonder if their usefulness was overestimated.

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  • Loss of cooking skills has hurt our ability to adapt to rising food prices, experts say
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    plantteacher
    Now 100%

    .. or farmers trying to sell obscure things like celery root!

    seriously though, the article seems reasonable and balanced to me. E.g:

    • “Of course no amount of cooking prowess will help if you can't afford a basket of groceries”
    • “It's important to note, however, that cooking skills alone cannot solve the affordability problem”.
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  • Loss of cooking skills has hurt our ability to adapt to rising food prices, experts say
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    plantteacher
    Now 100%

    Right but what if the cheapest food is idk, something like celery root? I think the idea w/the thesis of the article is that a skilled cook can adapt to whatever ingredients are cheapest at any moment.

    I think I’m a decent cook but I also think I need to improve because when I’m in the produce area and have no idea how to use like 15—20% of the options there. E.g. celery root, cactus, and ½ dozen things I don’t even recognize.

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  • Hospitals will often give patients an IV as an automatic procedure and then use it for just one blood draw or injection, or even not use it at all. Then charge ≥$~~60~~ 600¹ for it (in the US)! I went to the ER in Europe and got an automatic IV. They only used it to take blood and nothing else. So I took notes and prepared for a dispute. When the invoice finally came, I found no charge for the IV. But had to probe because I’m the type that will fight over a nickel on principle. I asked for details on some of the doctor’s fees, since it was not itemized separately. After my investigation, it turns out the IV was bundled in but only €6. LOL. So insignificant indeed. Not sure if it’s fair to call it a swindle in the US. Is it typically a deliberate money-grab when the IV is not really needed? Staff are (generally rightfully) unaware of pricing and just focused on giving the best care for the patient independent of cost. And for insured people that’s ideal. But I often steer the staff, saying I’m an uninsured cash payer and need price quotes and to asses the degree of need on various things. It’s a burden on them but it’s important to me. I have gotten discharged a day early on a couple occasions (which generally saves me ~$/€ 1k each day I avoid). Funny side story: a doc who I steered well toward budget treatment pulls out his smartphone with a gadget that does an echo. He said this is free but unofficial… maybe we can get out of the pricey proper echo imaging. And indeed the pics were good enough. Anyway - to the question: Whether to give an IV involves guesswork on whether more things will need to be injected. Do docs have any criteria to follow when ordering an IV, or is it their full discretion and they just order it for convenience without much thought? 1) ~~$60~~ was the price ~15-20 years ago.. probably even more today. CORRECTION: the ER nurse in my family apparently tells patients who possibly don’t need an IV that the cost on the bill will be $600 (as a good samaritan warning). I don’t have direct contact with this family member.. heard it through someone else. Can any other ER nurses in the US confirm whether that’s accurate? I am really struggling to believe this price and wonder if someone’s memory failed. I think if I were quoted that price I would surely say for that price I do not need it.. feel free to stick me 10-20 times if needed. (update 2: [seems realistic](https://kffhealthnews.org/news/article/surprise-bill-iv-push-hospital-unbundling/))

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    Dishwasher guide: salt will harm the stainless steel lining. What about salt water in stainless steel pots?
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    plantteacher
    Now 50%

    If you read the whole thread, I would not have to spell this out. These are preservatives (source):

    • honey
    • salt
    • garlic
    • sugar
    • ginger
    • sage
    • rosemary
    • sage
    • mustard
    • mustard seed
    • cumin
    • black pepper
    • turmeric
    • cinnamon
    • cardamom
    • cloves
    • vinegar
    • citric acid
    • lemon/lime juice

    They generally work by killing/repelling/deterring microbes that to a notable extent happen to be of the unwanted variety. Before yesterday, I thought salt worked similarly to the others on that list. Yesterday I learnt that salt is uniquely functions as a preservative due to a different mechanism (a drying effect).

    Your logic is nonsense. To claim that because substance X does not kill /everything/, it cannot serve as a preservative -- this is broken logic that you brought to the thread. Nothing on that list of food preservatives kills or deters every microbe - not even every harmful microbe. Of course they selectively mitigate /some of/ “the bad bacteria” (but note it’s a bit straw mannish for you to use the article “the” in your phrasing imply /all/ unwanted microbes). Most preservatives mitigate enough unwanted microbes without unacceptable overkill to beneficial microbes to justify use as a preservative. They are selected as preservatives for this reason. Foods that fail to significantly select against unwanted microbes (i.e. most foods) don’t get tagged as a preservative. How are you not grasping this?

    You also have noteworthy bad assumption: that evolution does not happen outside of the ocean. The claim that because life started in the ocean, the ocean is therefore suitable for everything -- this is bogus. Try putting a freshwater fish in the ocean. If a complex organism can evolve to become intolerant to the environment of its ancestors, why wouldn’t microbes also evolve to develop intolerances?

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  • Dishwasher guide: salt will harm the stainless steel lining. What about salt water in stainless steel pots?
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    plantteacher
    Now 100%

    Indeed, that’s a good point. I wonder how many people don’t know that. I used to think “nothing will survive 250°F in my pressure cooker” and was tempted to cook some questionable pork. But yeah, would have been dangerous because chemical toxins from bacteria output would “survive” (persist) in 250°F. So after some quick research, I tossed it.

    Though I might be surprised if 24hrs is enough time for brine to not only accumulate bacteria in high numbers but also allow enough time for bacteria toxins to be produced. How fast does that happen? I would have thought a day is too short (I don’t think I ever let more than a day pass between boils).

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  • The manual for my dishwasher says to refill salt just before running a wash cycle, because if any grains of salt spill onto the stainless steel interior it will corrode. If it runs right away, no issue because the salt is quickly dissolved, diluted, and flushed. So then I realized when I cook pasta I heavily salt the water (following the advice that pasta water should taste as salty as the ocean). But what happens when I leave that highly salty brine in a pot, sometimes for a couple days to reuse it? Does that risk corroding the pots?

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    In the 90s campus to me was like a small city that was self-sufficient in a lot of ways. The school provided its own services in-house. A prof also told me he would teach us what industry is doing wrong so we can correct it -- that academia was *ahead* of industry. The school chose the best tools and languages for teaching, not following whatever industry was using. These concepts seem to be getting lost. These are some universities who have lost the capability of administrating their own email service: * mit.edu → mit-edu.mail.protection.outlook.com * unm.edu → unm-edu.mail.protection.outlook.com * ucsc.edu → aspmx.l.google.com * ucsb.edu → aspmx.l.google.com * cmu.edu → aspmx.l.google.com * princeton.edu → princeton-edu.mail.protection.outlook.com I have to say it’s a bit embarrassing that these schools have made themselves dependent on surveillance capitalists for something as simple as email. It’s an educational opportunity lost. Students should be maintaining servers. These lazy schools have inadvertently introduced exclusivity. That is, if a student is unwilling to pawn themselves to privacy-abusing corps who help oil¹ companies find oil to dig for, they are excluded from the above schools if required to have the school’s email account. Schools pay for MATlab licenses because that’s what’s used in industry. But how is that good for teaching? It’s closed-source, so students are blocked from looking at the code. It contradicts education both because the cost continuously eats away budget and also the protectionist non-disclosure. A school that ***leads*** rather than ***follows*** would use GNU Octave. Have any universities rejected outsourcing, needless non-free software, and made independence part of the purpose? 1. Google and Microsoft both use AI to help oil companies decide where to drill.

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    plantteacher

    mander.xyz