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13 votes
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Mundane participation: Power imbalances in youth media use
5 votes -
A new mode of cancer treatment
8 votes -
FedFingerprinting: A federated learning approach to website fingerprinting attacks in Tor networks
6 votes -
Sinéad Griffin of Lawrence Berkeley National Lab publishes simulations supporting LK-99 as a room temperature superconductor
84 votes -
Removing carbon from Earth's atmosphere may not 'fix' climate change
23 votes -
Citizen science
9 votes -
Researchers find ancient high-energy impacts could have fueled Venus’s volcanism
12 votes -
A list of commonly recommended cookery books
Here's a list of cookery books that are frequently recommended in various forums when people ask for good cookery books. These are not in any kind of order. Please add any books that I've missed!...
Here's a list of cookery books that are frequently recommended in various forums when people ask for good cookery books.
These are not in any kind of order. Please add any books that I've missed! I'm sure there are lots of great books that I haven't heard of. I wanted to link to a bookshop, but I got stuck with that so I used Wordery, unless they didn't have it in which case I link to Amazon. Some of these books have hardback and soft-cover versions, or newer editions, so go careful with the links because I just link to any version of the book. I have done no research at all into the authors or illustrators here, so if I've included people who are toxic arseholes please do let me know and I'll fix it. (This post is episode 2 of "DanBC goes down a rabbit hole and dumps the results onto Tildes").
Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat: Mastering the Elements of Good Cooking - Samin Nosrat and Wendy MacNaughton.
A review from Kitchn: 8 cooks on why "Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat" is such a special, unlikely, hit
A lot of people love this book. Beginners say it gave them a bit more confidence, and good home cooks say it helped elevate their cooking by giving them usable information.
How to Cook Everything - Mark Bittman.
How to Cook Everything - the basics - Mark Bittman. A review from ShelfAwareness.
A lot of people don't know how to cook, and have never cooked anything. Mark Bittman's books are often recommended to this group of people. And the books are excellent sources of information, and so they're useful to lots of people. They're very clear and easy to use.
Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking - Marcella Hazan.
A VERY SHORT, almost bullet point, review from FiveBooks And a longer review from LitHub
She wrote two books in the 1970s, and these were combined and updated in the 1990s for this book. These books are widely credited as introducing people outside Italy to "authentic" Italian cooking. LitHub review has already said everything that I'd want to say about this, but better than I could.
On Food and Cooking: The science and lore of the kitchen - Harold McGee.
This is a heavy duty book about the science of food. It's often described as the best single reference book for the science of food and cooking.
Food Lab: Better home cooking through science - J. Kenji López-Alt.
A review from Chemistry World
Surely everyone knows J. Kenji. He's really approachable. He give you science, but it's actionable and achievable.
In Bibi's Kitchen: The Recipes and Stories of Grandmothers from the Eight African Countries that Touch the Indian Ocean - Hawa Hassan, Julia Turshen.
A mini-review from Kitchn. So, I'm cheating here because I haven't seen this recommended by anyone but I wanted more books that are not Euro-US focussed. This book focuses on food from Eritrea, Somalia, Kenya, Tanzania, Mozambique, South Africa, Madagascar, and Comoros
Each chapter starts with a short geo-political intro. You'll be familiar if you've ever read the CIA World Factbook. It then has a short interview with a grandmother, and then it gives some recipes.
Sauces: Classical and Contemporary Sauce Making - Wordery link - James Peterson.
A review from MostlyFood
"Don’t be put off by the size of this book. It’s true that it’s as big as a small piece of furniture but it’s as big as that for a good reason. There isn’t any padding in Sauces. It’s cover-to-cover solid information that will be welcomed by anyone wanting to perfect sauce-making. Nothing seems to be omitted or overlooked. Every imaginable sauce is described, including Asian Sauces which have been added since the publication of the first edition."
Lots of people like that "no padding" feature.
How to Eat: The pleasures and principles of good food - Nigella Lawson.
A review by Food 52
"Thinking back on the lifespan of this formative book, I can’t help but feel that it’s to the recipes in it, and of course to Lawson herself, that I owe much of my confidence in the kitchen today."
Lots of people just want to cook tasty food and they're not bothered by The Science. Lawson's books are excellent if you want great home cooking.
The Professional Chef - The Culinary Institute of America
There are lots of versions of this book. The current version will be expensive. The older version are usually very similar and will be much cheaper.
Home cooks often get into weird habits and that's fine - it's your kitchen, do what works for you. But if you want to get better in the kitchen by improving your techniques and skills this is the book for you.
25 votes -
AI often mangles African languages. A network of thousands of coders and researchers is working to develop translation tools that understand their native languages
17 votes -
Citizen science observation of a gamma-ray glow associated with the initiation of a lightning flash
5 votes -
How culture affects the ‘Marshmallow Test’
42 votes -
Abortion laws are driving academics out of some US states—and keeping others from coming
29 votes -
Conservatives go to red states and liberals go to blue as the USA grows more polarized
51 votes -
Interview with computer science professor Shaolei Ren about the environmental impact of artificial intelligence
https://themarkup.org/hello-world/2023/07/08/ai-environmental-equity-its-not-easy-being-green A few months ago, I spoke with Shaolei Ren, as associate professor of computer science at University...
https://themarkup.org/hello-world/2023/07/08/ai-environmental-equity-its-not-easy-being-green
A few months ago, I spoke with Shaolei Ren, as associate professor of computer science at University of California, Riverside, and his team about their research into the secret water footprint of AI. Recently, Ren and his team studied how AI’s environmental costs are often disproportionately higher in some regions than others, so I spoke with him again to dig into those findings.
His team, which includes UC Riverside Ph.D. candidates Pengfei Li and Jianyi Yang, and Adam Wierman, a professor in the Department of Computing and Mathematical Sciences (CMS) at the California Institute of Technology, looked into a path toward more equitable AI through what they call “geographical load balancing.” Specifically, this approach attempts to “explicitly address AI’s environmental impacts on the most disadvantaged regions.”
Ren and I talked about why it’s not easy being green and what tangible steps cloud service providers and app developers could take to reduce their environmental footprint.
4 votes -
Canadian smoke reaches Europe - NASA Terra satellite
16 votes -
Eating foods consumed at higher temperatures may increase cancer risk due to heat-damaged DNA
22 votes -
How scientific conferences are responding to US abortion bans and anti-LGBTQ+ laws
32 votes -
Superconductor chaos
8 votes -
Running and the science of mental toughness
26 votes -
The real reasons you shouldn’t clone your dog
14 votes -
Planet that shouldn't exist found
13 votes -
US Democrats and Republicans share core values but still distrust each other
27 votes -
A big gravitational wave announcement is coming thursday. Here's why we're excited
19 votes -
This is what happens to an exposed body in space
11 votes -
The Perseverance Mars rover collected its twentieth sample today
19 votes -
Life in the cosmos: JWST hints at lower number of habitable planets
36 votes -
Mercury ahead! - ESA/JAXA's BepiColumbo completed its third flyby of Mercury today
10 votes -
The advent of sunglasses
9 votes -
Key building block for life found at Saturn's moon Enceladus
9 votes -
For a billion years of Earth's history our days were only nineteen hours long, finds new study
26 votes -
Landmark ‘kids’ climate trial begins: how science will take the stand
13 votes -
Geoengineering is shockingly inexpensive
15 votes -
Eastern philosophy says there's no "self". Science agrees
23 votes -
Any college CS majors here? Any tips for one?
Hey everyone. I’m a Computer Science major who feels very behind. I don’t have any substantial projects to put on my resume. I look at basic open source stuff and can’t understand it. I’m...
Hey everyone. I’m a Computer Science major who feels very behind. I don’t have any substantial projects to put on my resume. I look at basic open source stuff and can’t understand it.
I’m currently attending WGU online, but also work full time so I don’t have a ton of free time to learn or work on side projects.
Anyone have advice for a guy in my scenario? I ended up dropping out of college a couple times during COVID and now I’m just trying to get back on the right path.
The language I know best is Java, but I’ve been trying to learn C++ and web development as well. Applied for internships but no luck so far, I think I need to make some better projects.
18 votes -
NASA prepares for historic asteroid sample delivery on Sept. 24, 2023
11 votes -
Sweden set up a eugenics plan, grounded in the science of racial biology, between 1934 and 1976 – between 20,000 and 33,000 Swedes were forced to be sterilised
12 votes -
Warrior skeletons reveal Bronze Age Europeans couldn't drink milk
8 votes -
Inside Big Beef’s climate messaging machine: Confuse, defend and downplay
8 votes -
Artificial Intelligence Sweden is leading an initiative to build a large language model not only for Swedish, but for all the major languages in the Nordic region
6 votes -
Oppenheimer: Vacated but not vindicated
4 votes -
Ronald Reagan and the biggest failure in physics
5 votes -
Soft ‘e-skin’ generates nerve-like impulses that talk to the brain
8 votes -
Leo Tolstoy on finding meaning in a meaningless world
10 votes -
How Sweden and Denmark became rare bright spots for Europe's pharma industry
3 votes -
Why it took thirteen years to engineer the Taco Bell Crunchwrap
8 votes -
DarkBERT: A language model for the dark side of the internet
11 votes -
Cognitive endurance as human capital
6 votes -
Double descent in human learning
5 votes -
Life in Ny-Ålesund, the world's northern-most research station – in pictures
7 votes