Mar. 2nd, 2018

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Chadwick Boseman surprises Black Panther fans while they say what the movie means to them.
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8 vegetables that you can regrow again and again.

Scallions

You can regrow scallions by leaving an inch attached to the roots and place them in a small glass with a little water in a well-lit room.

Garlic

When garlic begins to sprout, you can put them in a glass with a little water and grow garlic sprouts. The sprouts have a mild flavor than garlic and can be added to salads, pasta and other dishes.

Bok Choy

Bok choy can be regrown by placing the root end in water in a well-lit area. In 1-2 weeks , you can transplant it to a pot with soil and grow a full new head.

Carrots

Put carrot tops in a dish with a little water. Set the dish in a well-lit room or a window sill.  You’ll have carrot tops to use in salads. 

Basil

Put clippings from basil with 3 to 4-inch stems in a glass of water and place it in direct sunlight. When the roots are about 2 inches long, plant them in pots to and in time it will grow a full basil plant.

Celery

Cut off the base of the celery and place it in a saucer or shallow bowl of warm water in the sun. Leaves will begin to thicken and grow in the middle of the base, then transfer the celery to soil. 

Romaine Lettuce

Put romaine lettuce stumps in a ½ inch of water. Re-water to keep water level at ½ inch. After a few days, roots and new leaves will appear and you can transplant it into soil.

Cilantro

The stems of cilantro will grown when placed in a glass of water. Once the roots are long enough, plant them in a pot in a well-lit room. You will have a full plant in a few months.

Get your infinite food exploit out of here you cheater. People like you ruin the survival horror experience.
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codeinetea:

I have $24 to last me til Friday, what should I buy with it?

a pallet of ramen noodles

I hate ramen noodles tho

hmmmmm

bees?

Are you suggesting that I eat bees for a week

This is roughly what I make sure I have in my kitchen all the time along with rough estimates of local prices (MN). I buy a lot of things when they’re on sale and stockpile them. 

instant oatmeal packets with fruit in them - $3 probably and this can be breakfast all week and maybe even a lunch or dinner too since you usually get 10 packets

bag of rice - $2-3 depending on size. 1 cup dry rice makes enough for about two meals depending on what you add in. if you get cheap rice, rinse it before cooking

canned beans - usually under $1 per can - mix the can with your rice and you have a meal. chili-spiced beans will make bean tacos. Rinse non-spiced beans before adding to anything.

Tortilla - usually around $3 but you get like 8-10 of them. Tacos, wraps, and quesadillas are all fair game here

lettuce - $2 max around here, either a head of something or bagged precut depending on preference, use as a salad or on tacos

protein other than beans of some sort - probably $5-7 for meat, $2-3 for eggs. sometimes I can get bags of frozen chicken breasts in this price range and each is usually 2 meals if I add in a bunch of veggies. fry/scramble eggs and add to any of the options. 

your favorite stir fry sauce - $3ish

vegetables - $5ish. literally anything that you can 1. fry in a pan and 2. you’ll eat. fresh carrots are usually pretty cheap. get frozen if it’s cheaper and you’re strapped for cash/prep time on this part. 

alternative to stir fry:  pasta (~$2), fresh tomatoes (~$2), cheese (~$3). 

cheese and fruit if you have extra - look if your store has loyalty cards for free that you can load coupons on for cheese there’s always one it seems like.

ahh thank you!!!

Reblogging because there’s never knowing who’ll need it.

Adding also: the single most nutritious food on earth is potatoes in their peel. Potatoes + some milk and butter = everything you need. They don’t last all that long, but they’re fairly cheap and the quickest cheat to “How do I not fuck my body up.”

(Cooked potatoes’ll last a while in the fridge. Potatoes nearing the end of their useful lives? Cook them to half-done first, figure out what to do with them later.)

Easiest baked potatoes: slice thinly but not paper-like, spread like cards, brush with oil (a silicone baking brush is totes worth the little it costs), spread salt and pepper (a little less than you think you’d like), cover with foil, stick in oven or toaster-oven at 150C for 40min. (If you have the patience, at that point click up to 180C, remove the cover and add 10-20min.) Reheats well, lasts in the fridge longer than it’ll take you to nom.

Dead-Animal-Free Whole Protein: some legumes + some grain. AKA rice and lentils, or rice and beans. (Maybe some fried onion for flavor; onion’s cheap and stays good a descent while. Fried onion makes everything taste better and keeps forever in the freezer, so frying up a bunch and keeping portions is not a half-bad idea.) (If going for the beans option - lentils are cheaper around here but fuck if I know what it’s like in your area - dump some tomato sauce and oil in; canola or soy are best health-wise, and far cheaper than olive; avoid corn.) Oh, what does instant couscous go for in your area? It keeps for fucking ever, it’s usually cheap, and it takes well to any and all added taste.

If you get to choose, black lentils taste the best and need the least soak-time (0-20min), green lentils are best for cooked stuff and red lentils are best in soups. (Red lentils + potatoes + root vegetables of choice + spices; cut into small pieces, cook, run through the blender if you wanna [stick blender’s awesome], freeze in portions.)

When possible, get instant soup mix. Get the good instant soup mix. (The kind that’s not made primarily of sugar, yeast or both. The rest is optional.) Dump 1/2tsp (or more, but start on the low end) into couscous, or chicken, or sprinkle over potatoes being stuck in the oven. Whatever. It’ll make most cooked-food-type things taste better. And again, lasts forever on the shelf.

If  you can have eggs (goodness knows they’re sometimes expensive), dump some tomato sauce in a pan (tomato sauce lasts forever on the shelf), add some oil, onion/beans to cook in it, hot peppers if you wanna, then when it’s nearly ready crack an egg or two in. Hard-boiled eggs last a remarkably while in the fridge, so when eggs reach near the end of their usable lives, just hard-boil and stick in the fridge.

(Have eggs as often as you can, particularly as you have brain-shit going on. You need all the eggs, salt, and 60%-or-more chocolate you can get. Brains are made of cholesterol and salt, so folks with neuro or other brain shit need more of both. Potassium is also aces. You know what has the most potassium? Tomato paste.)

Grated cheese keeps in the freezer for ever. Grated cheese will make a lot of things taste nicer. Preserved lemon juice keeps forever in the fridge. Grated cheese + oil + lemon = instant and awesome pasta sauce that’ll liven up the weeks-old dry pasta in the fridge.

Slices bread also keeps well in the freezer. Try to have half a loaf or a loaf. Dry bread gets cut in cubes, mixed with oil and the aforementioned instant soup, stuck in oven at lowest until properly dry, then kept in an airtight jar to add to soups.

(Over-ripe tomatoes come cheaper. They get turned into soup or sauce, then frozen in portions.)

this is a very good post but why are we glossing over the fact that the alternative to ramen is bees

i have it on pretty good authority that bees are not an affordable eating alternative to ramen.

Seriously, bees are expensive

Trufax. 

And speaking as someone who is also living off oatmeal, beans, and brown rice, if you need recipes, I have them! 

Today I made 16 bean soup with chicken sausage and it was crazy good and I got 8 servings out of the one batch (froze half). I usually get the cheapest beans I can find, and GOYA bags of beans are usually $1-2. I soaked them overnight,rinsed them, and threw them in a gallon lidded saucepan with 2 boxes of chicken stock (also on sale for $2), two bay leaves, sauteed green pepper, onion, and celery, some garlic from a jar, about two tablespoons of dried herbs de provence,and the “fancy” bit was adding $6 bourbon and apple chicken sausages. You can actually sub veg stock for chicken and skip the sausage and make it vegan and it would still taste great.

Oh and I’ve been doing steel-cut oats. I don’t buy the name brand ones, I just pick whatever store brand/generic I can get for less than $4. They take about ½ an hour to make, but they’re super tasty and I make 2 cups of dried oats at a time with dried cranberries and that’s breakfast for 4 days at least. 

I’ve also been making black bean soup, red beans and rice, and curried potatoes and chick peas. I got 100 quart and pint take-away containers from Amazon for $20 and they all stack neatly and are perf for one serving of whatever.

Additionally, depending on where you live, whole rotisserie chickens are something like $4-$7 and are easily 4 - 6 servings of protein and on TOP of that, if you stick the carcass in a ziplock bag and then the freezer you have excellent soup makings. Using bones in soup literally squeezes all viable vitamins and minerals out of the suckers. Soup made from lots of bones is great to keep around if you get sick, it’ll feed and sooth you relatively easily and as you get better you can add noodles. ON TOP OF THAT, a quarter to a half cup of soup broth added to a lot of dishes also adds those nutrients PLUS flavor.

Here’s my “How to eat for a week on $30″ post.

don’t forget Good and Cheap: Eat Well on $4 A Day

Yall are clutch for this lmao cuz ima need this for about the first month after I move

Reblogging cause who knows what your followers are going through rn
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nianeyna:

@etirabys this seems like the sort of thing you would be sexually attracted to
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dailyraccoons:

(Source)

A good start
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arukou-arukou:

You know how you tell your brain you have like four WIPs you should be working on, and then your brain insists you do the thing anyway? Yeah. That. The timeline for this is super weird, because I’m using certain elements from AOU and Winter Soldier, but only as I need them. So it’s a mishmash of “I’ll have this and that, but none of that bullshit, thank you.” This was inspired mainly by that gif set of RDJ/Tony that’s been going around showcasing moments in which he is “best looking,” but in only one of the gifs does he really smile, and I thought that was terribly sad, that we find Tony to be looking his finest when he’s most wounded/determined/masked.

It popped into his head one February morning over eggs: “I can’t remember the last time I saw Tony smile.” At first, he couldn’t understand why the thought was there. Tony smiled all the time–at press junkets, at galas, at villains he was taunting, and team-dinner conversation. But the more Steve thought about it, the more he realized that somewhere along the line he’d realized those smiles weren’t quite right. When Tony smiled, his whole face lit up. His eyes crinkled like tissue paper at the corners, his teeth flashed, the smile lines around his mouth and nose deepened until the very shape of his face was happiness embodied. But that wasn’t the smile Tony gave to the public. That was something different, something hitching and lopsided, something with a hint of daring in his eyes. Go on, he seemed to be saying. Hit me with your best shot.

It was the same damn smile he’d given Steve on the helicarrier once so long ago, a smirk which slipped on his as easily as the latest iteration of the armor. How had Steve not seen it then?

The next logical step, scrambled eggs halfway to his mouth, was to ask himself when he last saw Tony give a true smile. New Years? He’d just looked tired then, accepting a kiss from Thor magnanimously, and laughing along with the rest of them. But his laughter had been weak, hollow. He wasn’t really with them. He’d been even more dour at Christmas, though Steve had chalked that up to it being so near the anniversary of his parents’ death. Maybe the Halloween kids event they’d done? That might’ve been the last time.

“Hey, Nat?”

“Yeah?” She was bowed over her coffee, eyes bloodshot. He didn’t ask why she looked rough, and she didn’t ask him why his knuckles were still bloody from another 3AM boxing session with the reinforced bag.

“When’s the last time you saw Tony smile?”

“Define smile.”

“You know. Happy. When’s the last time you saw him happy?”

She was watching him now, her eyes narrowed and suspicious, even through the haze of exhaustion. For a moment, she considered, head tilted to the side, and then she said, “April. Just before Ultron.”

Earlier than Steve had thought, though once she said it, he didn’t know how it hadn’t occurred to him. Of course it traced back to Ultron.

“Do you think…that’s not good, right? That he’s never happy around us. Maybe we should, I don’t know, do something.”

“Correlation is not causation, Cap. We might not have anything to do with it.”

“But what if we do?”

“Why does it matter to you?” He couldn’t quite read what she meant by that. Her tone was completely flat, her face closed off. Nat and Tony’s relationship was a mystery to him. He knew what the SHIELD files said. That she’d spied on him. That she’d felt he wasn’t right for the Avengers. But sometimes he saw them shoulder-to-shoulder over battle plans or sharing mugs of coffee in silent camaraderie and he felt like maybe there was more he didn’t know. So he considered his answer before he gave it to her.

“I don’t know,” he admitted finally. “I guess, I think… Is it wrong to want happiness for him? He’s a good man, and he takes care of all of us. I don’t know what we’d do without his help. And I know he doesn’t expect anything in return, but I still feel like if it’s in our power to help him, we ought to.” And I hurt him. We hurt him. We didn’t trust him. I didn’t trust him.

Nat assessed him for a few more seconds before nodding and sitting up straighter. “Okay. You’re right. So what are you going to do about it?”

“Us. What are we going to do about it?”

“Don’t go dragging me into your harebrained scheme, Rogers,” she mumbled, but there was no real heat behind it, and after a moment, she continued. “Let’s start with getting him out of the workshop. He’s there twenty hours a day, and that’s if he doesn’t end up sleeping on the cot he’s got in there. It’s not healthy to work so much, and I saw that as a self-professed workaholic.”

“He comes to team dinner when we have those. Should we plan one?”

“One’s not going to be enough.”

Steve leaned back and thought about it. It’d been bothering him as a big picture, too–their little living arrangement. They were all of them in the Tower, but they each had personalized floors, and they were all busy people. Steve, Nat, and Clint got called out on the regular for SHIELD business. Tony had his company to run. Thor was in and out on Asgard business at all hours of the day. Bruce was a recluse at the best of times, forever running experiments in his labs. They were supposed to be a team, but more often than not they were ships who passed in the night, having to coordinate months in advance to get time with all of them together. The likelihood of all six of them in the same place at the same time outside of battle was slim to none.

“I should talk to Fury,” Steve said, speaking without meaning to.

“Oh?”

Nat sounded genuinely intrigued and he glanced at her, watching the way emotions didn’t play on her face, the way she kept it all so carefully and closely tucked away. He smirked at her a little and ate another bite of eggs.

“We were supposed to be autonomous. Outside SHIELD’s purview for the most part. But somehow we’ve been sucked back in. First thing to do is fix that. I’m going to put a team dinner on for next Thursday night. And then every Thursday we can manage after that. FRIDAY, can you fix up Tony’s schedule to fix that?”

“I’ll do my best.” She brought up a calendar display for him and started shuffling until Tony had Thursday night Avengers dinner penciled in.

“You really think Fury’s gonna let us go just like that?”

“You say that like I’m giving him a choice.”

Her lips pursed, but he knew her well enough now to know she was hiding a smile. “So dinner. You think that’s enough?”

“That is only step one.”
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I’m not a year late with this or anything like that. >.> 

“Werewolves,” Iron Man said, disgusted. “Werewolves.”

Jan patted in on one arm. “Yes, Iron Man, we noticed that it was a werewolf.”

“Plural,” Tony stressed. “Plural werewolf-s, werewolves. Is it just me, or does the world get weirder, and weirder every day? I’m starting to suspect that we’re all in a computer program, and someone is testing our capacity for weird.”

“To be fair, our previous battles have been against a time traveler, a man who is just really good at making glue, a circus act, and a guy who controls people’s minds. Just to name a few. Are werewolves really that out there?” Hank asked. “Besides, if this really were a computer program, none of us would be able to tell if we were real, or just a bunch of code. I’m not ready to go down that particular rabbit hole just yet.”

Steve listened as the conversation devolved into a discussion on virtual reality, and theoretical computer applications that were mostly over his head. He got along with the technology of the new century just fine, and had no trouble with navigating around his various devices, but he hadn’t had the interest to learn anything about what made them run. As far as he was concerned, Tony Stark, Iron Man, and Hank were living, breathing works of science fiction. It was amazing to him that they were even real people. If he didn’t know them personally, he would doubt that even a fraction of their accomplishments were real.

“Hey, Cap, you okay?”

Steve looked up to see Iron Man turned toward him, head tilted slightly downward. The face mask was expressionless, but Steve had gotten a good grasp of Iron Man’s body language over the years. He was mildly concerned, and maybe curious. Steve unconsciously moved a hand to cover the deep gash on his thigh. One of the wolves had gotten a claw under his shield, and he’d bled enough to soak his pant leg down to his boot. The wound had already clotted, and it was on fire. The heat was unusual – he was more accustomed to it itching as it healed – but it had been a deeper cut than he normally dealt with on a mission.

“All good, Shellhead,” Steve said, summoning up a smile.

“Hope we’re not going to catch you howling at the moon next month.”

Steve snorted. “I haven’t even had a cold since the 40’s. I think I’ll be fine.”

Jan shoved at Iron Man’s shoulder. “Like a scratch is really going to turn someone into a werewolf,” she scoffed. “They were turned by magic.”

Without the benefit of being able to see his eyes, Steve couldn’t be completely sure, but he imagined Iron Man rolling his eyes. Both of his hands had turned over, palm up and fingers spread, in a gesture that Steve had come to associate with eye-rolling. This gesture was subtly different than both hands open, fingers spread but slightly curled, that Steve considered ‘raised eyebrows,’ which was different again than the similar gesture that indicated puzzlement.

Steve turned away before he got caught staring at Iron Man’s gauntlets. Iron Man and Jan loudly argued the merits of the improbable (but more scientifically likely) theory of lycanthropy transferred by a virus versus magic. Across from him, Hank dropped an elbow to table and set his chin in his palm. Far from looking annoyed at the escalating argument, he was obviously besotted with his wife. Hank caught him looking and had the audacity to give him a wink, which made Steve flush for reasons he didn’t want to think on too hard.

“My friends, excuse my tardiness,” Thor said as he entered the room, his cape still hanging in tatters from his shoulders, and Mjolnir held loosely in his hand. He took his seat, setting his hammer in his lap, and scooted the chair up to the table. “This meeting can now come to order.”

They settled down, Iron Man and Jan’s argument drifting off into a muttered, “I’m not finished with you, Iron Man.” Steve stood to discuss the unexpected battle, and what they could have done differently, and did his best to keep his hand from pressing against the hot pulse of the cut on his leg.
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m–ood:

A very curious octopus.
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curtaincallpodcast:

A weekend workshop project? #theatrehacks #carpentry #stagecraftskills #butotherwise #nottheatrerelated
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