so, in one of my past lives i was a personal chef.
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fallenleavesreplied to your auntifa liza π΅π· π¦ 𦦠last edited by
@blogdiva @friesen5000 We always laugh at the βgirls arenβt good at math.β Budgeting =math. Cooking=math. Sewing=math. Baking=crazy science and math. Quilting=sorcery level geometry and fractions math.
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kelreplied to your auntifa liza π΅π· π¦ 𦦠last edited by
All of this
I love cooking baking preserving, for all these reasons.
There is one word you hinted at but didn't mention though and I think it is critical to being a knowledgeable foodie
Fermentation!
Fermenting is massive! Absolutely massive!!!
Fermentation is the foundation of so many things we love, tea, coffee, alcohol - of course, bread, yogurt, and so much more!
It's endless once you start looking - it's everywhere - hidden in plain sight
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your auntifa liza π΅π· π¦ π¦¦replied to fallenleaves last edited by
SAY THAT!!!
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JackieMreplied to your auntifa liza π΅π· π¦ 𦦠last edited by
@blogdiva @DonnaG @friesen5000 the math of knitting and crocheting is legitimately mind blowing
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@TomasHradcky @blogdiva my parents never did any food preserving. Neither did my grandmother. Somehow, I got fascinated by food preservation & now do waterbath & pressure canning, dehydrating, freezing, & lactofermentation. If you look at my pantry, you'd think I was an end-of-times prepper.
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your auntifa liza π΅π· π¦ π¦¦replied to JackieM last edited by
and itβs why the team of LITTLE OLD LADIES of the Apollo program were all fiber artists who crocheted and sewed transistors and memory chips right into the space suits, helmets and the walls of the capsule.
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@Jackiemauro @blogdiva @DonnaG @friesen5000 Iβve used a quadratic equation to solve for yarn consumption when designing a shawl with rows of changing size.
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@Jackiemauro @blogdiva @DonnaG @friesen5000 Agreed. I told my mother - an avid knitter and crocheter for 60+ years - that she has all the skills necessary to be a good programmer.
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@[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] Just gonna drop this link here, all casual like...
https://cray-history.net/2022/08/28/sonjas-story-about-cray-1-fabrication-and-assembly/ -
@[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] When I worked at Cray, I was told an early story about Seymour Cray selling a Cray to... I want to say Saudi Arabia and the difficulty of bringing his workers, who were women, in to the country to debug/rewire one of the machines. I know this is sort of tangential, but I could swear I've heard that part of the reason this work was "for women" was due to the relationship with knitting... I could be making that up though -_- stupid unhelpful google.
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your auntifa liza π΅π· π¦ π¦¦replied to Asta [AMP] last edited by
@aud @rajnr @friesen5000 @Jackiemauro @DonnaG yup. am not sure about the Saudi part and now am curious. my mother was hired to build circuit boards at the Western Digital factory that operated in her hometown cuz she had worked as a sewist in a NYC sweatshop and also did embroidery and they needed people who had the spacial awareness of building each piece as part of a larger component sewing together with wiring. i used to play with the rejects and make Barbie houses with them.
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Asta [AMP]replied to your auntifa liza π΅π· π¦ 𦦠last edited by
@[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] Thank you for sharing that! And the confirmation! I didn't think I had made it up...
It's so weird* that they considered this "women's work" and it required a substantial, functional understanding of math and excellent spatial awareness, and yet... we all know how sexist the field is, but I feel like it's doubly sexist in that not making this connection more explicit and widely known now that programming "is for men" contributes to devaluing these skills even further.
*sexist -
JustAFrogreplied to your auntifa liza π΅π· π¦ 𦦠last edited by
@blogdiva Definitely agree that you're dipping into multidisciplinary science when you get serious about cooking.
It's not at all simple stuff.
Understanding ingredients and processes takes some very real effort.
But when it all comes together like you were hoping, nothing beats that kind of satisfaction.
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@[email protected] @[email protected] I think my favorite thing about cooking is when you hit a point where you can start using your instinct and your knowledge from other dishes and experiences to create something
It's such a beautiful, scientific art that, sure, sometimes ends up like the censored, fucked up meal Link cooks from Breath of the Wild, butβ¦