NATO is a thing, friendly waters. Totally fine.
NATO is a thing, friendly waters. Totally fine.
In the US, a limit was only imposed in the last year. It only goes into effect in 2027. Before then, all there was was an EPA recommended limit in drinking water.
Supercook for recipes with filters and based on ingredients you have on hand.
Really helpful. I tried probably 6 apps a year ago, including Paprika, and nothing came close. Voice to text for adding ingredients is awesome when you come back from the grocery store.
When looking for recipes, you can spice things up by filtering for recipes where you’re only missing one, two, or three ingredients too, which really opens things up.
This past week, it suggested some amazing dishes I hadn’t tried before. One was a tofu dish with 6 cloves of garlic with skin on, onions, red pepper flakes, lime, and super firm tofu. Delicious over basmati rice.
The other was a pecan streusel coffee cake. Didn’t even know I had ingredients to make this. Freaking delicious.
The recipes pull from across the Internet and they do a great job removing the fluff to show you just the recipe, but if their coding messes up you can always go directly to the recipe source too.
You can favorite recipes of course too.
Finally you can start a shopping list there too. So let’s say you’re browsing for some new recipes and you have that filter on for “missing 1 ingredient”. Simply add it to your shopping list along with whatever else you need. If you are diligent about updating your pantry in the app as you use up ingredients, you can also just review all food you have and use the app to keep building your shopping list for the rest of your normal supermarket trips.
It’s an all around great app and totally free without ads. I assume they sell your pantry data and grocery list data to stay afloat. Which… I really don’t care about.
I can tell you from experience. You definitely can’t, but I can start and run an online e-commerce business by myself to give you a shoestring budget.
So that being said, if using Shopify for ecommerce, Adobe for creative, paying for your domain name with Namecheap, and registering your business with your local government, it costs me about $220/mo to run an ecomm business by myself.
Realistically, you could use open source replacements for Adobe products too, but I like their stock imagery as well. Take that out, and you’re at about $120/mo plus processing fees for each transaction.
If you don’t need an e-commerce site, you can use something like light speed for a free website. Even WordPress. Add free social media for a boost.
So now this means you’re down to only $20/mo if not using an e-commerce site.
You can learn everything you need to run these sites between dev docs, support articles, forums, blogs, and YouTube videos. All free.
My wife and I moved about 1,200 miles north due to climate change, reading forecasts and learning about water predictions where there won’t be water shortages in the next 50 years. We’re a couple hundred feet above sea level too. So far so good after 3+ years. We know that as it gets worse, everyone will keep moving up here. My home value rose over 130k so far in the last 3 years because of people moving here, and this is a poor New England area.
Still waiting for this care in New Hampshire for all the forever chemicals in the waterways and ground water…
Nice experience doesn’t pay the bills for a store owner who has more overhead than an online store.
Yup, at 2.65% myself. Can’t imagine ever moving at this rate.
They’re comparing 2021-2022 vs 2020-2021. Weren’t many, if not most schools, closed for most of that study?
Seems disingenuous. That’s definitely not to say it isn’t an issue, because it is.
Budget grocer??? Where. Please tell me lol I always walk outta there with an unexpectedly expensive cart.
Like a month ago. I made a jello chocolate fudge pudding pie with graham cracker crust and whipped cream. It was delicious.