• 12 Posts
  • 57 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 17th, 2023

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  • With something like viili there will be a noticeable texture difference from what I’ve seen of people making it. Most places selling cultures will have some notes about what sets it apart (e.g. I see filmjolk called distinctively buttery on multiple sites). I don’t know how subtle those differences actually are until I get around to trying them and I imagine someone selling yogurt cultures for a living is probably more tuned into such things. I imagine plenty of people would just go, “It tastes like yogurt to me.”

    Edit: I can say the kefir-like I’m making lately has more of a fresh milk taste compared to thermophilic yogurt I’m familiar with. Though that could easily be differences of preparation showing themselves rather than anything to do with the culture specifically.






  • BUT I have read in the past that it has some smelling problem which the manufacturer were not able to get rid of.

    I know this is quite a bit of a long time to come back to a thread (someone posted a new comment so it has pulled me back) but I find there is a bit of a coffee odor retained even after washing. Nothing rancid or anything but you can tell it gets used as a coffee mug. I find the main culprit is the gasket on the lid. but I’ve found that if I want to make the effort a soak in baking soda water eliminates it but I find when it is full of coffee any new coffee scents aren’t being harmed by the lingering coffee smell. I may just not be very sensitive to such things though.









  • A cup in US Customary is 237 ml (often rounded to 240 ml). Americans don’t exist in a world where they have to play “is this cup US Customary or different measure also calling itself a cup measure?” as all their measuring cups are going to be in US Customary. Butter usually comes in quarter pound sticks with teaspoon (4.9 ml) and tablespoon (14.8 ml) measures printed on the wrapper so you can just cut a hunk of the appropriate volume from the stick and if you were using a measuring spoon to measure butter you’d use a level measure to create consistency and not just let it heap up.

    Note: I prefer weighing ingredients and in metric at that. I’m just answering your questions.






  • So if you send email to the owner of the compane and to your colleagues on same level you put boss at last spot if they come to your mind as last?

    Sure, why not? I think the disconnect is the people who think it is silly don’t attach any importance to the order. So asking, “Would you put the most important person last?” is a non-starter as the thinking is that the CC field ends up as a list is an artifact of how email works and isn’t imbued with a sense of ordering or ranking of importance. The ordering of the list could be a indicative of who came to mind first, how your email contacts are ordered, or even how a policy is written but not indicative of who you think is most important or senior.


  • Meijer and Walmart store brands of cheap ass white bread are 22 slices, Kroger is 21, and for a name brand example Sunbeam is 22. Nicer bread like Pepperidge Farm or Brownberry/Oroweat tends to be in the range of 16 slices per loaf (baring the thin sliced stuff) though.