It is actually weird. I'm not sure where the name comes from, but I understand the style to be American but based slightly on yorkshire pudding and dutch pancakes
Dough is made by combining 4 eggs, 180g milk, 90g sifted bread flour, and 1/4 tsp salt. I used a mixer to combine and whip it just a bit so that it's smooth and aerated (but not enough to whip the egg whites into peaks). I let it sit to acclimate to room temp for about 45min (while I made the onion jam).
On the side I made the goat cheese, garlic, and basil mix and once the oven and the cast iron were heated (I let the cast iron sit in the oven while it got up to 450°F so it was piping hot), I dropped around 40-45g butter in the pan so it sizzled and melted completely and then poured the previously made batter into it along with the cheese herb mix, then let it bake for around 15 (started checking on it through the door at 12). Main thing to keep in mind is to not open the oven until it's done otherwise it'll just flatten and droop (like any soufflé)
You paint him and his sycophants as pr masterminds suddenly, something they're certainly not and have never been. You attribute too much intelligence and competence to him and his people.
Me personally? I can't ever carry a child physically, so I don't feel that my opinion should ever matter at the individual level (and imo, the choice should always be at the individual level and not societal/political level). Asking for black letters rules and laws for something as gray as abortion is nonsensical imo. There are too many factors and too many circumstantial details that go into a decision like that. I don't personally believe that having a blanket rule (even with exceptions, which are just mini blanket rules within the rule) makes sense because everyone's situation will be different. I'm firmly of the opinion that the person carrying the potential child physically is the only person whose opinion matters. And to be even more "radical," I'm also of the opinion that they should not need an excuse or justification to make that decision. It is their body that acts as the host and they, and they alone, should be the ones who make decisions about their bodies. Full stop.
You make a lot of assumptions of Americans and commit the same binary-choice fallacy you claim you're against.
Also, just because you say topics are "taboo" does not make them so. That sounds like empty talking points. Supporting non-hetero-normative freedom of self-expression, supporting a person's right to decision making and choice over their own bodies (and let's be clear, there's no such thing as "pro-abortion," that is a propaganda marketing term much like "pro-life"), contesting open genocide and flaunting of international law and order...these are not "taboo" topics. They're acknowledgments of basic human rights that one side has made into personal, political, and culture wars because they no actual polcies or ideas to improve things. It is absurd to label them "taboo" topics in much the same way that calling rape a taboo topic would be.
First, I'm not blaming anyone. Just pointing out that what happened was a logical and known potential outcome and consequence of signing up to go overseas to murder others in their country so his bosses could further perpetuate US hegemony across the globe.
Secondly, there are many other ways to "eat." You make it sound as if the choice is binary between starving and joining the military: it's not.
Thirdly, the US has been at war for all of its existence in one form or another. The only thing that makes the last 80 years different is the efficiency of murder and the new murder weapons they have access to.
Lastly, yeah, fuck this guy. He's putting blame on someone who is neither the proximal nor actual cause of his sons death, and he's choosing to do it in a forum/in a way that does nothing but create a media spectacle.
Yeah, this is just sensationalist click bandwagoning. The fact that it was a Boeing plane had nothing to do with the issue of improper maintenence by the ground crews.
It is actually weird. I'm not sure where the name comes from, but I understand the style to be American but based slightly on yorkshire pudding and dutch pancakes