MxRemy

joined 3 months ago
[–] MxRemy@piefed.social 24 points 2 weeks ago

Ok, take this with a grain of salt because I read about it ages ago in a dubious pop-sci book and my memory is shaky. One time, they tried to gene edit yeast to be able to survive much higher alcohol concentrations. There's lots of good reasons to want to do this... Beer/wine is just about the strongest beverage you can make without distillation of some kind because the yeast dies. Making way higher ethanol yields just from fermentation makes biofuel way more viable. Stuff like that.

EXCEPT... It nearly escaped, and was able to survive on it's own. Yeast is very ubiquitous in nature, so a wild yeast that can tolerate massive ethanol concentrations could conceivably have altered life on earth as we know it.

A cursory internet search isn't turning up anything about this, but I'm pretty sure I read it in the book Everything Is Going to Kill Everybody, if anyone wants to look harder than I did.

[–] MxRemy@piefed.social 6 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Omg I have been rabidly following Blades of Furry, that comic rules.

[–] MxRemy@piefed.social 3 points 2 weeks ago
[–] MxRemy@piefed.social 3 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Ahh, I knew that proc must have some neat potential! That's incredible lol, definitely have to mess with it more.

There are two other 3 mana blue enchantments that just do the "copy another enchantment" part, there's Mirrormade and one just called (I think) Copy Enchantment? I use a full stack of all three in a template deck I like to call "Oops, All [fill-in-the-blank]!" Basically, it's just fun to see what would happen if you had wayyyyyy too many of something that's fairly lackluster on its own. It's really really amusing with oddball cards like Haphazard Bombardment or Ominous Seas, or like you said, Smothering Tithe.

[–] MxRemy@piefed.social 4 points 1 month ago

One of my boyfriends is really into (and good at) fighting games. I haven't even played one in decades, and when I did it was just to button mash lol. I wanted to play with him so I've been deep diving into those. Now we play Battle Craze together.

[–] MxRemy@piefed.social 7 points 1 month ago

I could be wrong, but I think it's mostly a matter of familiarity? If a cis person is familiar enough with the trans experience and struggles, they're not gonna say anything that's a problem, because it'll be obvious.

[–] MxRemy@piefed.social 23 points 1 month ago

I enjoy the deranged erotica, partially because it's good but also because it makes the toxic alpha male/sigma male dudebro types go "no, not like that!"

[–] MxRemy@piefed.social 4 points 1 month ago

I definitely agree with some of these for sure. The uncreative decks is a big one, it's so boring and irritating to play your 30th match in a row against the same copy/paste "good" deck over and over... That's never been what I like about MTG, I don't even particularly care about winning or losing, just make it interesting.

Second, that glitch where even if you set your reactions to some huge stack of combo triggers to automatically resolve, there are times when Arena will still time you out, and there's nothing you can do about it. They should fix that.

Third, I just really want the rest of the old cards added!

[–] MxRemy@piefed.social 6 points 2 months ago (1 children)

A lot of public libraries offer access to ReferenceUSA through your library card. I vaguely remember that queries are pretty customizable on there, and exportable to various formats. Despite the generic name, it's specifically for businesses. Would that work?

[–] MxRemy@piefed.social 2 points 2 months ago

Oh geez that's tricky... My first instinct is to say Towa Tei's Sunny, the entire album. But the thing is, half of what I love about it is the nostalgia about how much I loved it the first time, and where I was when I listened to it. So maybe it'd be better to pick something you might've liked better under other circumstances? In that case... Hmmm... I'd say the audio drama Spines.

[–] MxRemy@piefed.social 1 points 2 months ago

Start the largest non-equity housing co-op that money can buy.

[–] MxRemy@piefed.social 4 points 2 months ago (1 children)

How was it? I've been ordering mesquite flour online because we don't have any species of them where I live lol.

 

All in all, I think it came out really well! The finished kōji had this incredible, indescribable taste/smell. Maybe kind of, flowers and mangos and peaches? I used it to make a ton of miso.

I used Modernist Pantry kōji kin and organic basmati white rice, and a makeshift immersion circulator/floating water bath incubator thingy. The rice was steamed in unbleached muslin cloth until just a little undercooked, then the same cloth was used to line a metal tray. The rice was spread into hills and valleys, covered with more muslin, then tented with some aluminum foil over the whole thing. The foil was mostly to keep condensation from dripping off the roof of the incubator onto the muslin cloth.

I put it in the incubator with the circulator st to 90 F.I stirred it at 12 hours and again at 24. It got appropriately matted, and for the most part it wasn't too wet. However, there were a few spots where I think it was getting on towards sporulation already, as you can see here:

Some darker spots, maybe close to sporulation

Could have been some extra humidity collecting in those darker spots? The tinfoil tent kept the incubator condensation from dripping on it, but I guess nothing prevented the tinfoil condensation from dripping lol... Anyway, the entire process seemed to go way faster than all the guides lead me to believe. I broke it all up as best I could and put it back in set at 84 F with the lid open for lower humidity. By 24 hours it was maintaining about 97 F on its own.

 

I'm a total amateur, but here's what I did:

  1. Soak 1.5 lbs beans for 6 hours in water with a little baking soda
  2. Change water halfway through
  3. Preheat immersion circulator/sous vide chamber to 110 F
  4. Pressure steam for 20 minutes
  5. Spread into wide flat container
  6. Stir old nattō into 1/2 cup water, mix evenly into beans
  7. Lay plastic wrap snugly against beans, poke many holes
  8. Cover tightly with tin foil, poke a couple holes around edges
  9. Poke corded probe thermometer into center from edge
  10. Float in immersion circulator chamber for approximately 20 hours

The temperature in the beans generally kept about 2 degrees less than the chamber. I think we want the early fermentation to happen at 108 F and then cool to 100 F, so I tried to keep adjusting it based on that. Anyway, the result was pretty tasty!! The bacteria seem to take well to black-eyed peas. Might have been a little less stringy than "normal", but still delicious!

 

The USDA's plant database shows something like 50-ish native viola species in Pennsylvania, where I live. As far as I can tell, they're all more or less edible, but what about the flavor? Are there any especially choice species that really stand out? Internet sleuthing doesn't seem to turn up much of anything. So far, I'm getting the vague sense that purple ones generally taste better than yellow or white ones, and that short species might be sweeter than tall species.

This seems like the sort of thing that somebody somewhere must have figured out by now, since violet used to be a pretty popular flavor. The classic liqueur Creme Yvette is very specifically flavored with these obscure Italian Parma violets, which implies that they must taste somehow unique. So what about the rest of them?

 

This was delicious when it finished. Just pineapple rinds, sugar and wild yeast, mostly. Sorry there's not really much to see here, I just enjoy watching the bubbles go by, and figured others might too.

Also, fingers crossed this video works right! File hosted on a Pixelfed instance, direct-linked to from a PieFed instance, and posted to a Lemmy instance... That's pretty convoluted lol.

 

This is a little off the beaten track as far as usual foraging posts go, but I had a question. Has anyone tried spinning Eastern Tent Caterpillar webs into a usable thread/yarn? I'm definitely not one of those people who hates them and wants them gone; they're native here and relatively harmless, despite what naysayers would have you believe. However, they sure do make a ton of webs! I'm sure they could probably stand to part with a little here or there right? Like, after they're done with them?

Communal tent of the Malacosoma americanum caterpillar

Not sure if it would work, but if it is spinnable, seems like it might be a convenient local source for an ahimsa silk alternative.

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