Skip Navigation

InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)C
Posts
0
Comments
6
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • Of course, this works with pretty much any dried legume. Split pea and bean soup, bean chili, smokey red beans.

  • Dried chickpeas cook up nicely in the slow cooker. No need to pre-soak, just add enough liquid to cover them well, e.g. any combination of water, vegetable broth, coconut milk, canned tomatoes, plus whatever aromatics and spices you like! Onion, garlic, peppers, lemon peel, tumeric, curry paste, etc.

    Cook on low for 4-8 hours - you'll need to dial in your specific slow cooker at first, but you'll get the hang of it. Chickpeas won't be ruined by an extra hour or two.

    You can add in other pantry staples as well - split peas, dried fruits, lentils. Makes a ton of food, especially if you serve over rice.

  • sigh

    Jump
  • Do you like taco bell? Do you see value in fast food existing as a convenience?

    If you think that fast food jobs shouldn't exist at all (and everyone should have the means and the free time to make food at home, with accommodations for those who physically can't cook for themselves), I have more sympathy with your position (even though I still disagree with some of your opinions). But if you want fast food, retail, or any similar services to keep existing, someone will always have to work in those poorly-valued jobs. And I don't think they deserve less than the rest of us.

    Tbh I think the average fast food employee works a hell of a lot harder during their shift than I do at mine. I'm sitting at my desk typing on social media right now; the guy at the taco bell next door is standing in a hot kitchen, pumping out quesadillas for hours. Sure, my job requires more specific skills, but now that I already have those skills, I'm not laboring more strenuously to use them. If my education had been free, and I didn't need a higher wage to pay off my student debt/catch up for the years I hadn't spent working? I don't think I'd "deserve" more than the taco bell guy.

  • Great video on this from technology connections. tl;dr it takes more time, but not, like, that much more. We mostly just don't have a huge tea-drinking culture here.

    My family (American) did drink a lot of tea. Surprise surprise, we had a kettle. I did not die of old age from the cumulative weight of all that waiting.

  • Idk, I cost can be the issue. I live in a city with pretty decent public transit, and there's a reliable transit line that will take me to a friend that I visit pretty regularly. It's like 5-10 minutes to drive and maybe 20 to take public transit. More time, but if public transit was free I would definitely take it at least 80% of the time.

    The problem is, if my boyfriend and I both go, it costs us ~$10 for the round trip. It's hard to justify spending that when I already have a car, and the gas to get there is a negligible expense. I do okay money wise (hence why I have a car at all), but if you ride often enough that expense really adds up.