MakingWork

joined 2 years ago
[–] MakingWork@lemmy.ca 12 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Eggs + oil + salt = mayo

Toast bagels. Add mayo. Add tuna. Some peppers for spice. Top with cheese and melt the cheese.

That's the main meal. Spicy tuna bagel.

Dessert: pancake mix + milk to make pancakes.

Melt some chocolate and pour it on top decoratively. Add strawberry.

Done. What is my prize?

[–] MakingWork@lemmy.ca 4 points 2 days ago (2 children)
[–] MakingWork@lemmy.ca 5 points 2 days ago (4 children)

My understanding of Ontario law is that it prevents discrimination on protected grounds, like religion.

How did Quebec pass this law?

[–] MakingWork@lemmy.ca 2 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

Counter counter counter offer: I mail you cookies. And in return, you buy parchment paper or a silicon baking tray so you can't burn cookies.

[–] MakingWork@lemmy.ca 7 points 1 week ago (4 children)

Counter offer: you make the cookies per the recipe. In return, I shall have a cookie and give you compliments on a job well done!

[–] MakingWork@lemmy.ca 6 points 1 week ago
  • instant noodles /Ramen + frozen veggies defrosted in the micwave or pot
  • air fry chicken nuggets, fries, etc
  • toast with butter/ mayo and tomato and salt.
  • Cucumber with salt.
  • peanut butter banana sandwiches
  • eggs are easy to make
  • boil or microwave potato then add butter or oil
  • Grilled cheese
  • Sausages (bake in oven and done)
  • chips and salsa
  • crackers and cheese and kalbasa
  • cereal
  • canned soups and such. Open can. Heat. Eat.
  • frozen grapes are a great snack
  • hot dogs
  • toast with butter and cheese. Feta or marble. Any cheese
  • bread/ toas with butter and jam. And tea.
  • boil pasta, add pasta sauce. Make it fancy by heating frozen / canned veggies.
  • Rice. Option to make it by using tomato juice instead of water and some spices. Mexican rice?
  • Get rotisserie chicken from grocery store. You can now make chicken sandwiches, chicken wraps, etc. Shred it and add to pasta and an Alfredo sauce. So many options
 

90 calories each. Made 30 cookies.

Mix together

  • 1/2 cup butter
  • 1/2 cup packed brown sugar
  • 1/3 cup white sugar

Mix in

  • 2 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1 egg

In a separate bowl Mix

  • 1.5 cups flour
  • 2 tsp corn starch
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • 1/4 tsp salt

Mix dry and wet ingredients.

Add 1 cup chocolate chips. I used micro mini eggs to make them fun and colourful. It was 190g I think.

Mix.

Make into 1 inch balls then flatten a bit. I put them on a baking sheet with parchment paper. Spread apart because they expand. Bake at 350°F for 12 minutes.

[–] MakingWork@lemmy.ca 1 points 1 week ago (4 children)

I need the recipe ❤️

[–] MakingWork@lemmy.ca 1 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

I've heard workplaces tell employees they're just being sensitive. It's a bullying technique to discredit the victim.

[–] MakingWork@lemmy.ca 28 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

And for favours. Do you ask or demand a favour?

[–] MakingWork@lemmy.ca 0 points 2 weeks ago

I could see how balding would be devastating.

[–] MakingWork@lemmy.ca 18 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

This must be the avocado toast that's making all those millennial bankrupt or something. Looks delicious.

[–] MakingWork@lemmy.ca 0 points 2 weeks ago (4 children)

Enlighten me on this topic as I'm ignorant.

Do women generally find bald men less attractive? Or do men just find other bald men less attractive?

Basically what's wrong with being bald?

27
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by MakingWork@lemmy.ca to c/privacy@lemmy.ml
 

Looking for a robot vacuum and mop to either root and put Valetudo on it or one that prioritizes privacy (offline modes.)

bObsweep UltraVision claims:

Make no mistake: UltraVision fully respects your privacy, UltraVision never sends images anywhere - servers, cloud, or otherwise - be it of your room layout or your cleaning habits. Furthermore, any info you personally insert into the app, such as your name and email address, is stored on US-based servers. Nothing gets exported to foreign servers (unlike your neighbor's expensive vacuum).

Narwhal claims it keeps information stored locally as well and encrypts data on the phone app.

Is there an advantage to rooting a vacuum and using Valetudo if the vendor doesn't store information on cloud? Would using the vendor app be a security risk?

Thanks!

1
submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by MakingWork@lemmy.ca to c/bready@lemmy.world
 

These came out very soft! First time I tried to make these, somehow it did not turn out good. I realized I wasn't using enough flour.

Mix:

  • 4 cups of flour
  • 8 tsp baking powder
  • 2 tsp salt (add more salt if you want it saltier)

Cut in

  • 3/4 cup or butter (or shortening)
  • 2 cups of milk

Stir with a fork to form a dough

Add

  • 1 to 2 cups of grated cheese (I probably used over 200g)

Knead it 8 to 10 times

Then I cut it in half to make it easier to work with. I used flour to help since its very sticky. Shaped it into two thick baguettes. Used a knife to cut slices out.

Placed the slices on a baking pan with parchment paper and baked at 425°F for 15 minutes.

Perfect for tomato soup.

 

💕

 

Every industry is full of non-technical hills that people plant their flag on. What is yours?

(The other post was technical hills. I changed the question to non-technical.)

 

Chicken with carrots, celery, peas, onion, chicken broth, half and half, flour for thickening, thyme, salt and pepper, and Pillsbury biscuits with egg wash on top

 

I have a Christmas cookie recipe but thought I'd try this recipe instead since I do like the Starbucks cookies.

I used that recipe to make the cookies. I made royal icing, but only used white and blue. Recipe made 3.5 baking sheets of cookies.

:)

85
submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by MakingWork@lemmy.ca to c/cooking@lemmy.world
 

I had leftover nuts and wanted to get rid of them. My first time making biscotti. Turned out well.

 
 
 

Only 319 new condo units were sold in the third quarter, down 54 per cent from a year ago and the lowest quarterly total since 1990 when Toronto’s condo market faced a severe crash, according to a quarterly condo report by the real estate research firm Urbanation.

Lemmings, what are your opinions on the housing market?

 

There are certain words you don’t want to hear in a medical checkup or in an investment bank’s recession outlook: “stable but elevated.” It’s a phrase that could refer to blood pressure, even risk of a heart attack, a favorite metaphor of hedge fund legend Ray Dalio, or in UBS’s evaluation, risk of a recession.

The bank found that from May through July, the “hard data” from the U.S. economy has shown an elevated risk level, standing at a probability of 93% most recently. This sits at “historically worrying levels,” UBS says, given this signal’s track record of identifying turning points using data from the National Bureau of Economic Research.

The bank notes other classic warning signs of an impending recession from the data, such as the inverted yield curve, which it notes is 23% inverted, steady in recent months but up sharply since the start of 2025. Based on building stress in credit markets, it finds the credit metrics-based recession probability has risen to 41%, roughly doubling since January.

Fortune’s reporting throughout 2025 has outlined mounting warning signs the U.S. is headed toward a recession, echoing and expanding on the UBS research note’s findings. But when UBS zooms in to the hard data, it finds that while most metrics are turning negative, it’s more in a “mile wide, inch deep” kind of “malaise.” None of the hard series of data is showing “signs of rapid unraveling,” according to the team led by Pierre Lafourcade, resulting in an overall bill of health: “Soggy, soft, weak, yes, but not collapsing.” Key findings

The UBS analysis of “hard data” reflects the bank’s own proprietary factor model, which relies on objective, non-survey-based economic indicators such as personal income, consumption, industrial production, and employment data. It filters out sentiment surveys, purchasing manager indexes (PMIs), and financial market signals.

After a brief recovery at the end of 2024, the hard data signal tipped decisively back into negative territory starting in February 2025. The sideways movement since May suggests sustained weakness rather than any new acceleration downward. According to the note, none of the major hard economic series were showing the kind of sharp, downside deviation (such as more than one standard deviation below trend) typically seen directly ahead of past recessions.

The key message is that the U.S. economy, by these hard data measures, is locked in a prolonged phase of stagnation or slow contraction, warranting caution even as outright collapse has not yet materialized. This aligns with other analysts’ warnings that even if a recession doesn’t materialize, the economy is headed for a bout of 1970s-style “stagflation,” a combination of a stagnating economy and rising inflation. For similar reasons, UBS is actually not forecasting a recession despite this 93% probability in the hard data. Aggregate recession risk

Despite the elevated risk, UBS’s economics team is not formally forecasting a recession, but rather expects “soggy growth” followed by improvement in 2026. The bank notes its U.S. Economics team has recently warned about “stall speed” in the economy, especially after the July jobs report revealed very low employment growth, and that call now seems “roughly consistent with the roughly 50-50 interpretation combining the credit data, yield curve, and leading hard data indicators.”

UBS averaged the hard data together with inverted yield curve and credit markets to produce an aggregate recession probability of 52% for July, up 15 percentage points since January and at levels historically associated with NBER-designated recessions. The bank’s recession tracker, therefore, points to a precarious balance for the U.S. economy—much weaker than a soft landing, but not yet collapsing—leaving policymakers and market watchers on alert as 2025 progresses. The other recession calls

Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody’s Analytics, warned in early August the U.S. was on the precipice of a recession, citing much of the same hard data as UBS. Zandi argued the major revisions downward in the July report recalled earlier inflection points before recessions, when he sees revisions as much likelier due to swings in economic activity.

Zandi’s remarks followed a similar warning from JPMorgan, which said it has “consistently emphasized that a slide in labor demand of this magnitude is a recession warning signal…In episodes when labor demand slides with a growth downshift, it is often a precursor to retrenchment.”

In the weeks since, Zandi has voiced concerns over the coming winter of 2025/2026 as the time of greatest vulnerability, putting the odds of a recession at 50-50. Within a few days, Zandi argued states accounting for almost one-third of GDP were either in recession already or at risk of it. By his calculations, only one-third of the economy was expanding as of late August.

view more: next ›