He is me. I am him.
Carmy + tumblr text posts
Source: beth_thefirstyear on Instagram
I have four muffin tips for making bakery style muffins at home.
Tip number one:
Rest your batter for 15 minutes in your mixing bowl after you make it. This is gonna allow the starch molecules to swell and absorb, creating the thicker batter and the thicker batter is known for doming!
Tip number two:
Fill your muffin holes with at least six to eight tablespoons of batter. That’s like a heaping half cup okay. You want them super full so they’re gonna create that dome.
Tip number three:
Kinda goes along with tip number two. You’re only gonna fill every other hole in your muffin pan. And why we do that - that’s so the muffins that are baking can spread and dome without running into their neighbors. Because when they run into their neighbors they get like square edges but we want perfect dome circles.
Tip number four:
You’re to bake your muffins at a high temperature initially. That’s gonna be 425*F for the first seven minutes. And then keep them in the oven and lower the temperature to 350*F for the remaining bake time. Starting the muffins off at a high temperature initially allows the muffins to rise rapidly and it sets the outer surface of the muffin, producing a dome shape.
There you have it. My four muffin tips for creating bakery style muffins.
These tones…
Gahhhh I love Wolff’s art so much!!!!
Odysseus sketch
As time went on, new technologies became available for attack and defense. Different types of castle were built to match them.
Most common in: 10–11th century
Construction: wooden castle built on a mound (motte), surrounded by a fortified enclosure (bailey)
Strengths: quick and cheap to build
Weaknesses: vulnerable to attack by battering rams and fire
Most common in: 12–15th century
Construction: central fortress, or keep, surrounded by layers of stone walls
Strengths: long lasting and very hard to break into
Weaknesses: took a long time to build; defenders could become trapped inside; vulnerable to cannon fire
Most common in: 16–20th century
Construction: stone or concrete
Strengths: angles deflect cannon fire, and allow defenders to fire on enemies from several sides
Weaknesses: modern high explosives
A large number were built by feudal lords in Europe, who needed a place to keep their families and treasures safe from rivals while they were away at war.
The Crusaders depended on castles to protect their settlements in the Holy Land, where they might come under attack at any time.
With towering stone walls bristling with arrow slits, murder holes, and other defenses, castles were a formidable obstacle to any medieval invader.
At the center of the castle was the keep, a tall tower where the lord and his family made their home, and which could be defended even if the rest of the castle fell.
Around the keep were wards, open areas where the castle’s other inhabitants lived and worked, all protected by stone walls
Source ⚜ More: Parts of a Castle More References: Medieval Period
Art by Anna-Laura
Yeaaaaaah
walking for an hour is a such factory reset for when you want to kill yourself shoes on coat on hands in your pockets and keep it moving playa
“How do you move on? You move on when your heart finally understands that there is no turning back.”
— J.R.R. Tolkien
white fuchsia 🤍🎀
Yeah he’s fine.
on my knees begging you to please look up “squick” if you don’t know it and help bring it back to fandom space by using it. it’s a valuable word we’re missing that through normalizing could solve some of the more prevalent communication issues.