- 0 Posts
- 10 Comments
xavier_berthiaume@jlai.luto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Impulse buys are bad, we all know, but what was an impulse buy that proven to be a really good decision to you?
7·8 months agoFor me that was dwarf fortress. Insane game bought on a whim!
xavier_berthiaume@jlai.luto
Linux@lemmy.ml•[UPDATE][SOLVED] What distro would you associate with the tarot card Lucifer/Death?
10·9 months agoSeconded! This is your new beginning op, death to your old ways, today you are reborn!
xavier_berthiaume@jlai.luto
Chat@beehaw.org•I'm having a hard time making sense of just about anythingEnglish
7·10 months agoI feel a really similar sense of dread. Although I completed my university studies in a STEM field, there simply aren’t many jobs that seem to be left. I don’t know what will come next, but I stay hopeful that what comes after that will be a better time for all of us. I dream of a more compassionate society, where we make significant progress as individual communities on how to better live in harmony with our environments. Let’s hope that what comes next doesn’t prevent me from helping make that dream a reality.
xavier_berthiaume@jlai.luto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What is one relatively unknown thing that your country does much better than elsewhere, but that most people don't know about?
4·1 year agoWow that’s really impressive! I’m used to having a great online platform to transfer money, but having government issued documents be digitized is a step beyond what we have here!
Hmmmm les croissants
xavier_berthiaume@jlai.luto
Linux@lemmy.ml•I've never played games. Suggest a couple of addictive games I can play on Linux
1·2 years agoAt the moment I just picked up thronefall, and really enjoy it. It’s great if you like tower defense and city building games, but don’t have too much time on your hands to get invested into longer games. The progression system feels good and adds a lot of replayability. It runs perfectly on Linux as well right out of the box!
xavier_berthiaume@jlai.luto
Linux@lemmy.ml•I've never played games. Suggest a couple of addictive games I can play on Linux
6·2 years agoI second OpenTTD, it takes a bit to figure it out, but it’s so much fun when you really get the hang of it
xavier_berthiaume@jlai.luto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What is something small you can do almost (if not everyday) to improve on yourself?
3·2 years agoSeconding exercise. Even if it’s something small like taking stairs on your commute instead of the escalator. It ultimately adds up to so much over any period of time.


Nearly every week for the past few months I prepare a big pot of borscht. The ingredients are cheap and easy to come by here: a huge bag each of carrots, onions, potatoes and beetroots cost only a few dollars and last a few weeks. If you have a few dollars left in your budget, pretty much any cut of porc should be cheap and easy to chop up into small stewing cubes. Garlic also goes great in the recipe.
Making the soup doesn’t require much skill, and honestly just takes a bit of time and prep work. Dice the onion without getting too picky about the size of your pieces. Peel the potatoes and dice them too, try to make the cubes somewhat similar in size. Chop up your meat (if you have some) in cubes of a similar size to your potatoes. Peel the carrots and grate them. Peel the beetroots and grate them. Don’t get too picky on quantities, but I usually follow the following ratio of ingredients: 2 parts beetroot, 2 parts carrot, 2 parts potatoes, 1 part onion, 1 part meat.
Finally actually cook the food. Boil the meat first and watch the water as it starts to boil, you’ll see some foam rise on the surface of the water, and you want to remove as much of it as possible. After boiling the meat for an hour, you can add the potatoes and beetroots to the pot. In a pan, cook your onions first until they’re translucent. Throw in some crushed garlic if you want at this point; if you do make sure to add the next ingredient only after you can smell the fragrance from the garlic cooking. Finally add the carrots and cook them until the carrots are softened,it should take a couple minutes, but don’t cook them to the point of burning them. Once finished add them to the pot.
Let the whole mixture simmer until the potatoes are soft, and don’t feel bad for cooking it for longer. Add salt to taste and add a spoonful of sour cream to your bowl before eating.
I’m sure there are some far more traditional ways to make this soup, but I have no Slavic roots and just really enjoy this recipe that resembles borscht, so I call it borscht.