Why?
It's from the Unofficial Ghibli Cookbook, the Thibaud Vilanova one! a picture of the page
The broth it's mentioning is just "simmer 8.5 cups of water with 10g of kombu and 40g of bonito flakes for 35 minutes, then strain"
The truth, in a way that isn't overly critical of my current employer and emphasizes what I hope to get from a new opportunity. I take it less as "what's wrong with the company you're leaving" and more "what are you looking for from a company you're interested in jumping to", which has very similar answers but focuses on the positive and also gives them actually relevant information that they can use to help you. They can connect the dots that the reason you're looking for that is because you're not finding it there, without you having to trash a company yourself.
What if you have a bad memory and blank when you're put on the spot, so you like something but can't remember why you liked it when someone asks
Spiders Georg origin story right here
I believe in you.
Yeah people do that, until you're sharing a code window and then need to see if it works on a browser and then your dev tools are popped out so you have three windows...or you don't want to just have one meeting and one window visible, you also want slack or a window for googling or something similar...
It's all workaround-able, it's just minor annoyance after minor annoyance lol.
Everyone at my work who has this runs into issues whenever they need to share their screens, apologizing for low resolution or painstakingly resizing every window to mimic multiple screens anyway.
That's the exact recipe I used :) except I forgot to turn the oven down in the last step lol.
It's not like all those subreddits existed at 0.1 though.
The dangers of raw eggs are generally the dangers of getting eggs covered in feces from sick chickens. I only buy pasture raised eggs from small farms, which minimizes the risk of illness (although as a kid I ate plenty of raw cookie dough from regular eggs without incident soo...) This specific chicken egg is from a chicken raised on a natural pasture with at least 108 square feet of space per bird and as much time outdoors as they would like all year.
Some people just can't stand the texture though - the egg cooks some in the rice, but there is still some of that runniness for sure.