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9 votes
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Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and US influencers bash seed oils, baffling nutrition scientists
52 votes -
A daily tea routine partially protects people from heavy metals, study finds
23 votes -
Second US company recalls raw pet food as bird flu spreads to cats through tainted meat
20 votes -
What do you drink with Mac and Cheese?
I’m wondering what people choose to drink with a Mac and cheese meal? This has long been a conundrum for me. Probably for 20 years I have finished making the mac only to stop for a minute and...
I’m wondering what people choose to drink with a Mac and cheese meal? This has long been a conundrum for me. Probably for 20 years I have finished making the mac only to stop for a minute and think “should I have milk? Water? Soda/pop? Something else?”
Seriously, I have this question almost every time. Doesn’t matter if it’s homemade mac or kraft box. For the last 8 years it hasn’t really come up because I just didn’t buy mac and cheese (box “dinner”), but now I have a kid coming into the age where they want it occasionally so it’s back on the menu.
Am I being weird about this?
Are there other foods that people have a hard time pairing with a drink?
23 votes -
Beekeepers say catastrophic honeybee losses are cause for alarm
37 votes -
As revolutionary new weight-loss drugs turn consumers off ultraprocessed foods, the industry is on the hunt for new products
20 votes -
Opossum hospitalized after gorging on a Costco chocolate cake
29 votes -
How to cook the perfect boiled egg, according to science
36 votes -
The United States of pizza, mapsplained
17 votes -
Academic urban legends about spinach and iron
14 votes -
Inside Iceland's futuristic farm growing algae for food – Vaxa Technologies has developed a system that harnesses energy from the nearby geothermal power plant
7 votes -
US Food and Drug Administration to revoke authorization for the use of red no. 3 in food and ingested drugs
34 votes -
The US government stopped enforcing Robinson-Patman and destroyed independent grocery stores
33 votes -
Looking for some advice on a cat food dispenser
I have a simple gravity fed cat food dispenser that is great but it needs a little help. No matter what gravity feed dispenser I use it never keeps up. My cat has food out 24/7 and he regulates...
I have a simple gravity fed cat food dispenser that is great but it needs a little help. No matter what gravity feed dispenser I use it never keeps up. My cat has food out 24/7 and he regulates his food on his own.
I 3d printed a new dispenser in hopes it would solve the food falling out constantly all day, but it's not working as I expected.
So what I'm hoping to do is make a simple vibrating device that will help the food fall out constantly all day long. Maybe a raspberry pi that has a cell phone vibration fob thing that will run a routine? I don't know. I'm having a really hard time finding examples of this. Does anyone have something to reference?
Also open to ideas on non-mechanical feeders that work well, or very simple battery operated options.
Thanks!
19 votes -
How easy is it for Norway's international seed bank to navigate politics and secure our future food supply?
6 votes -
Oregon house cat died after eating pet food that tested positive for bird flu - food sold and marketed as raw
31 votes -
The science of “ultra-processed” foods is misleading
19 votes -
A little math can streamline holiday cookie making
3 votes -
The first US lawsuit against ultra-processed foods
11 votes -
Why the Soviet Union was obsessed with corn
12 votes -
How a simple math error sparked a panic about black plastic kitchen utensils
28 votes -
Crabs, crustaceans, and pain
12 votes -
Reusing plastic water bottles, to-go containers? Scientists say that’s a bad idea.
27 votes -
Scientists are learning why ultra-processed foods are bad for you
38 votes -
How well do you cook?
I've been thinking about this over the past few weeks after chatting with some of my friends about this. For some framing: I grew up with my parents not encouraging me to learn to cook and my Mom...
I've been thinking about this over the past few weeks after chatting with some of my friends about this.
For some framing:
I grew up with my parents not encouraging me to learn to cook and my Mom actively refusing to have myself or my brother in the kitchen because we always "made a mess". Before I moved out to university I'd only ever cooked a couple of meals beyond warming things up or instant ramen + grilling meat. I also learned how to carve a turkey/bird because that would be expected of me at a family gathering later on. At university we had the mandatory freshman meal plan my first year and I lived in my fraternity for three years where we had a cook at our house when school was in session.It wasn't until I moved in with my girlfriend, now wife, where I started cooking. Learning from either recipes, or watching my wife cook things and asking her how she prepared a dish so I could try to make it. Nowadays I like cooking breakfast foods especially on the weekend when I don't have to get my oldest off to school and have more time since my wife doesn't like to wake up early.
When chatting with my guy friends who are around my age (late 20s/early 30s) I've found a lot of them don't cook much or say they don't know how. Many of them eat out regularly/order delivery or buy instant meals.
Knowing my parents, if I had had a sister growing up she would have been encouraged to learn to cook unlike my brother and I. My wife and her siblings all learned through helping my mother in law prepare food in the kitchen.
This got me curious for a wider perspective on this from other men:
Do you "know" how to cook or are you comfortable cooking for yourself, for others?
Were you encouraged to learn how to cook growing up or did you learn as an adult?
Do you have any favorite or signature dishes you prepare?32 votes -
Wonder announces acquisition of Grubhub
16 votes -
Hot dog hustle: Long nights, low pay, and exploitation
10 votes -
Tens of thousands of Chinese college students went cycling at night for soup dumplings in Kaifeng. That put the government on edge.
24 votes -
Cooking with black plastic is particularly crucial to avoid
55 votes -
‘Mild’ tofu, ‘mild’ carrots, ‘mild’ pine nuts: my five-year quest to understand German taste
30 votes -
E. coli outbreak linked to McDonald’s Quarter Pounders
45 votes -
No, raising the minimum wage does not hurt US fast-food workers
29 votes -
From "anti-core" to "felt inflation": Or how I calmed my populist demons
25 votes -
What sort of pets did medieval people keep?
21 votes -
Iceland's vertical farm turning algae into food – pioneering entrepreneurs are growing some surprising crops and doing it sustainably
6 votes -
Advanced technology discovered under Neolithic dwelling in Denmark – a stone paved root cellar, which could represent a remarkable technological leap in resource preservation
14 votes -
Recreating dog food from the last 2,000 years
7 votes -
Researchers make mouse skin transparent using a common food dye
24 votes -
Greenhouse gas emissions in US beef production can be reduced by up to 30% with the adoption of selected mitigation measures
18 votes -
Chefs are using fungus to transform food garbage into fancy, fully edible dishes
14 votes -
From animal protein without animals, dairy without cows, silk without worms, palm oil without deforestation, the options are endless
13 votes -
Why do so many recipes call for powdered sugar instead of regular sugar?
This is a question I've been wondering about for a while as a home baker and amateur food scientist. Why do recipes for whipped, fluffy desert components like whipped cream or buttercream icing...
This is a question I've been wondering about for a while as a home baker and amateur food scientist. Why do recipes for whipped, fluffy desert components like whipped cream or buttercream icing always seem to call for powdered sugar? If I want to add sugar to a something, why would I also want to add the anti-caking agent (usually starch I think) for powdered sugar as well? Is that starch actually something beneficial for a whipped desert? Because as far as I can tell, the only time powdered sugar makes sense is when it's dusted on top of something or incorporated into a desert that is being mixed by hand and doesn't have the shear of a mixer to dissolve or emulsify the granulated sugar. And I've never had any issues just using regular granulated sugar and honestly prefer it to powdered sugar for icings, whipped cream and the like. If a recipe calls for powdered sugar, but it's being combined with a mixer or beaters I just use regular sugar and the results are great.
Anyone have any thoughts or experience as to what I'm overlooking? Or is it just a hold over from a time when electric mixers weren't common and you needed a finer sugar to incorporate the sugar by hand?
18 votes -
The US government spends millions to open grocery stores in food deserts. The real test is their survival.
35 votes -
Chick-Fil-A hatches plans for streaming service as reality TV comes home to roost
17 votes -
This store only sells fake food
8 votes -
The banana apocalypse is coming. Can we stop it this time?
25 votes -
Modernist cuisine Bread School - free with email sign up
10 votes -
The baguette revolution: Banh Mi, Num Pang, and a Thai sandwich challenge
11 votes -
Young people should be banned from buying drinks with high levels of caffeine, say health and consumer groups in Denmark
35 votes