plactagonic

joined 1 year ago
[–] plactagonic@beehaw.org 5 points 6 months ago (1 children)

0118 999 881 999 119 725

[–] plactagonic@beehaw.org 6 points 1 year ago

Mint was my first distro. My interest begun with LibreOffice, then W10 got unusable for me and rest is history.

I distrohopped a year ago but returned to Mint

[–] plactagonic@beehaw.org 3 points 1 year ago

Remembered another one.

Friend ask me and another friend, we cook on summer camp together, to cook lunch on his wedding.

He wanted form us to cook meal A we tell him that we didn't cook it so it will be shtshow, but we could cook meal B, C or D. This didn't work so we cooked meal A and it was shtshow.

It all started with "fully equipped professional kitchen" whitch wasn't equipped at all (we were prepared for this). Than few other things go wrong. But the TIFU moment was soup - some miscommunication and bad decisions led to adding the noodles in it too early so you can imagine the porridge it become.

I had a blast afterwards, and too much beer to forget this experience.

My friend then said that it was exactly as he imagined it to be, because his now wife didn't want another meal.

[–] plactagonic@beehaw.org 3 points 1 year ago

Similar - I didn't check valve on my brewery and get 10l of wort on me.

Also check out the homebrewing@sopuli.xyz community.

[–] plactagonic@beehaw.org 5 points 1 year ago

On the summer camp I cooked there were few as always.

We made halušky (Slovakian national dish) and water didn't boil enough so first batch was ruined.

Cooking related - we forgot to order bread and noone can deliver it.

One accident with chilly in food.

My whacky experimental oatmeal (it was edible).

[–] plactagonic@beehaw.org 10 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I like them in salads, but when is harvesting season and I have lots of them I like to add them to pasta veggie mixes.

Usually I add them at the end of cooking to be lightly roasted but still crunchy.

Edit: roasted autoerection in action ;-)

[–] plactagonic@beehaw.org 9 points 1 year ago

Just try few of these from live usb and pick what you like.

You can use Ventoy and just drag all your ISO images to it but creating few USBs is easiest option for beginners.

There is nothing bad about Debian/Debian based distros and I think that it is great option I started on Mint, tryed Manjaro and get back to Mint.

[–] plactagonic@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

No we use it for fun, it is work but it is mainly for our experiments/whacky ideas that we want to try. The bread is just a bonus ;-).

[–] plactagonic@beehaw.org 3 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Look at my oldest post, there is "oven" we made few years ago and we call it Igorrr.

I and other instructors make bread and other things in it. It is less work to make one big loaf than lots of small tortillas/pitas. I burned ceramic in it this year.

[–] plactagonic@beehaw.org 4 points 1 year ago (5 children)

It would be some sort of tortillas and other types of flatbread.

In theory it is simple just make dough and put it on the iron plates (directly on stove). In practice you stand 2 hours directly above hot wood stove and making 100 of them.

Easy meals are necessary, you can't make hard to cook meals every day. Only few times we decided to make our lives harder and make sth like tortillas.

 

Just want to tell you that I am glad that it is over.

Cooking in professional kitchen is hard and when you have only basic wood stove it is harder. Providing food 5 times per day for 21 days in row for about 40 people is even harder.

[–] plactagonic@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago

I use mint and it is great choice, I am not so techy and it just works on this machine.

 

I never ate pigeon or guinea pig. Only heard that it tastes like chicken and rabbit. But I still want to taste it.

 

I am looking for some plants ideally edible or other uses, that can grow indoors.

I tried tobacco, pythaya (dragon fruit), aloe. But it doesn't grow well or I have to wait very long time to have something from it.

So what is your go to indoor "useful" houseplant?

 

My moto is that alcohol is made for thousands of years - first make it easiest way possible then try something harder. This guide is ment to be that. Also sorry for my mistakes I am not native speaker.

So what is wine

Wine is non carbonated drink made usually from grapes, but you can make it from lots of different fruits - currants or apples for example.

Starting juice have around 17-20°Bx (17-20% of sugar) but can get as high as 25°Bx in some cases.

It is fermented completely in carboy, or other fermenting vessel, then aged in barrels or put directly in bottles.

And what is cider or hard cider

Cider is usually made from apples or pears, is carbonated and for me it is more similar from fermentation point to beer.

Starting juice has around 13°Bx, it is similar to beer OG.

Fermentation is nearly the same as beer - you put it in fermenter for primary, then at the end of it you transfer it to bottles for secondary fermentation - rest of the sugar is for carbonation.

How to make wine

  1. juice

For grapes and currants you need to first get rid of stems - they make bitter taste when pressed. Individual grapes are mashed and then pressed or you can use kitchen juicer.

Or you can buy it.

  1. fermentation

Red wine - you first partially ferment mashed grapes (this step is called maceration) then you press it and ferment completely.

White wine - you ferment only the juice.

Other fruits - they usually doesn't have enough sugar so you have to add some.

Apple juice has about 13°Bx so you have to add min. 50g per liter.

Currants are really sour and don't have any sugar so juice is diluted 1:1 with water and all sugar is added. Or it can be done like red wine - mash, mix with water and sugar.

Pitch yeasts and let it sit in carboy until all yeast activity stops (it stops bubbling).

  1. clarifying/ageing/bottling

Transfer your wine to clean carboy, let it sit at least a week or until it is clear.

Bottle it and wait.

How to make cider

  1. juice

Best choice is to make it from your own apples. It is really hard and time consuming if you don't have the right equipment. But if you contact local cidery or you live somewhere where it is possible to get them pressed this is the best option. On store bought juice look for preservatives that may stop or slow fermentation - for EU friends e200 - e219 are harmful, e220 - e228 should be fine (sulfites).

  1. fermentation/ bottling

Pitch yeasts and wait.

Fermentation is complete at about 1 - 1.5°Bx and you can bottle it.

Or you can wait until the fermentation stops and add sugar to bottles.

Few tips:

  1. Don't worry too much about infection. Fruit juices are yeasts play ground, so if you add strong strain it will outcompete all yeasts that are in your starting juice.

  2. When selecting yeasts there is no good or bad choice. I have great experience with ALE and wine yeasts for cider and for wine take some wine yeasts which are available to you.

  3. Look what is available to you - I have access to few apple trees that nobody wants so I make cider from them, have currants and vines on garden...

  4. Don't complicate it. You can make clear, nice wine/cider if you use sulphates, clarify it with enzymes... But it is not necessary.

  5. It is very drinkable through the fermentation (you can buy here partially fermented wine "burčák"). I made about 150l of cider last year and less than 60l got in the bottles. So if you don't want to mess with ageing/ clarification drink it quickly.

  • This is my thought diarrhea on night shift - needs corrections.
  • I will add pictures of the process in the final version. Or in fall when I will be making it.
 

I baked in this bread, meat, pies ...

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