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68 votes
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How do I use up all this mint?
This spring my wife and I started growing some herbs in containers on our (quite large) balcony. I got some nice big pots bc I know a lot of these like some space, and I planted a bunch of...
This spring my wife and I started growing some herbs in containers on our (quite large) balcony. I got some nice big pots bc I know a lot of these like some space, and I planted a bunch of staples. On a whim, I planted some spearmint bc I figured it would be nice to have some fresh mint on hand for cocktails.
I knew mint was hardy and tends to grow out of control, but I didn't think much about it since it's in its own large standalone pot, away from my other plants. But Y'ALL. My other plants are dong okay but there is SO MUCH MINT. I'm barely doing anything and it's THRIVING. I don't even drink that many cocktails.
Other than cocktails and mint tea, I have no idea what to with the sheer quantity of mint I have. Even just ocassionally pruning the bits that stick out or have flower buds results in massive handfuls of mint that I don't have any idea how to use up.
Please give me advice on how to use up my mint!
24 votes -
How do Xubuntu and Linux Mint XFCE Edition compare in terms of lightness and performance?
I'm considering moving back to the Linux world after having jumped ship to Windows around Ubuntu 20.04, mostly due to increasing bloat, snap and other things I don't recall. I've used Xubuntu in...
I'm considering moving back to the Linux world after having jumped ship to Windows around Ubuntu 20.04, mostly due to increasing bloat, snap and other things I don't recall.
I've used Xubuntu in the past, the Thunderbird theme was good but I was disappointed by how little customization was allowed there, even the selection of wallpapers seems bland, especially when I compare it to Mint now. Even when it comes to UX experience, it seems Mint puts a lot of effort in enhancing the user experience?
So how do these two compare in terms of performance? As long as the difference isn't substantial, I'm leaning towards Linux Mint now mostly because of two reasons:
- Better UX, selection of wallpapers, customizing ability, etc. as described above.
- Mint is a community project unlike Canonical which is corporate, I like this aspect too.
What is your own preference in this regard and what do you suggest?
4 votes -
I made eight Mojitos using seven different herbs (mint, basil, sage, cilantro, thyme, rosemary, dill)
11 votes -
Linus and Luke of LTT try to daily drive Linux
30 votes -
Seven smokable plants you can grow that aren’t marijuana
10 votes -
Mint: Late-stage adversarial interoperability demonstrates what we had (and what we lost)
17 votes