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piconaut@sh.itjust.worksto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Food service workers, what's the strangest kitchen request you ever saw someone order?English
6·7 months agoYou can watch this man go insane trying to make a “piña colada, extra creamy”
piconaut@sh.itjust.worksto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is the oldest thing you own that you still use daily?English
14·7 months agoA Kenwood amplifier made in Japan in the 80s.
2007 Toyota Corolla.
Osprey backpack I bought about 12yr ago.
piconaut@sh.itjust.worksto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Serious question for Americans: how was your history education re the 1930's in GermanyEnglish
271·8 months agoWe learned about Anne Frank and read Night in middle school. In high school we had separate classes for US, world, and European history. We covered the beer hall putsch, kristalnacht, Reichstag fire, that Hitler was given emergency powers, etc. WWI reparations and hyperinflation. Propaganda and Josef Goebbels “if you repeat a lie long enough, people will start to believe it”. Watched some of Triumph of the Will. We also had separate classes covering western philosophy which included Nitzche and how Nazis appropriated the will to power. I’m sure I’m forgetting a lot of the details. However I suspect this is more education than the average American receives.
piconaut@sh.itjust.worksto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What's an absurd luxury you pine for?English
4·9 months agoJerome?
piconaut@sh.itjust.worksto
You Should Know@lemmy.world•YSK You can substitue blood for eggs in recipesEnglish
17·11 months agoVery insightful. On an unrelated note, I’m off to the store to get some vegetables.

The authors of salad theory actually discuss their objections to cube rule.
The cuberule theory is amusing, but tragically inconsistent. It also performs poorly against Occam’s razor (it has eight rules for categorizing food into different sections). The choice of a cube as opposed to other geometric shapes appears to be entirely arbitrary. Each category both omits common foods colloquially considered to be members of it, while including many foods that colloquially are not in it.
Cuberule food categories are extremely unstable. While amusing, we find it particularly objectionable that merely slicing or biting into a food changes its nature according to cuberule (a calzone is a calzone, but a calzone with a bite taken out of it is a bread bowl). The same applies to a burrito (calzone when fully folded, bread bowl when bitten into). Notably, a burrito with a significant quantity of carbs mixed in on the interior (e.g. burritos often contain rice) would actually be categorized as toast, which is peculiar.
By category:
Our position is that unintuitive inclusions are acceptable so long as there are no unintuitive exclusions. But when you have both, it’s solid evidence that your rule is wrong.