Radishrain

Things pertaining to life: plants and animals, gardening, cooking, food, botany, zoology, farming, ranching, wildlife, genetics, plant breeding, software, media, etc.
Radishrain by Radishrain @ in Life
Here's a list of tomatoes I feel comfortable direct-seeding, either due to an abundance of seeds or other factors:

Black Cherry
Picnic_2
BSX
Insurance_1
Cold Black Brandy
Stick (not because the seed stock is particularly abundant, but because I'll know it's Stick, rather than a volunteer, by the way the plant looks; however, I plan to start them in pots this year, in order to get lots of plants, since I don't want to overseed too much, since the seed supply is only moderate)
Galapagos Island
Egg Yolk
Japanese Black Trifele
Garden Leader Monster
Chocolate Chestnut
SunChocola F3
Black Bear
Carbon
Cherokee Yellow Perfection Peach
Frittata Kitchen
Isis Candy
Matina
Napoli
Napoli crosses
Sweet Ozark Orange

George Detsikas Italian Red
Chapman
Cuostralee
Sweet Orange Cherry
Brown Berry
Riesentraube
Radishrain by Radishrain @ in Life
I just read an article that said almost all the feral dogs in Australia were actually pure Dingos, or else Dingo hybrids. Here it is:

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/03/210326104708.htm

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Radishrain by Radishrain @ in Other
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/03/210325190246.htm

This is pretty interesting. It could solve a lot of problems.

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Radishrain by Radishrain @ in Life
Here's some backstory to this post:
* https://www.growspice.com/Baked-potatoes-and-chicken-sandwiches-td3488.html
* https://www.growspice.com/Oven-fried-potatoes-td1026.html

Anyway, I decided to make baked potato sandwiches (without chicken or meat). I took a number of potatoes (maybe 5) and sliced them into fairly thin slices (like you'd do for fried potatoes, on the thin side). I put avocado oil on the pan to prevent sticking. I made a savory seasoning sauce to dip them in; here are the ingredients:

* Soy sauce
* Worcestershire sauce
* Key lime powder
* Granulated garlic
* Great Value calcium-fortified orange juice
* Black pepper

I dipped them all in the sauce, and put them in a 12" cast-iron frying pan. I probably had two or three layers of potato slices. Then I  baked them on 450 degrees F. for 50 minutes (which was too long; I'm guessing 35 minutes might be better). I should have flipped them over about half-way through, too, but I didn't. So, they were pretty dark brown and crispy, especially on one side. Whatever the case, they still tasted great, except I used too much key lime powder (so they were bitter inside), but inside the sandwiches, I didn't notice the bitterness anymore. I added two leaves of lettuce on store-bought whole wheat bread (probably Franz brand) with mayonnaise on each slice, and put a third of the potatoes on each sandwich. It was great! [Other than being overcooked,] I consider it a success. The orange juice was a great improvement, too, I think. No chicken needed to make it taste great (although chicken is great in its own way); I'm pretty sure the lettuce is needed, though.

I'm sure it would have been even better with onions, cheese, and tomatoes, but it's still a good sandwich with just lettuce, potatoes, and mayonnaise.

Warning: I'm sure there was plenty of acrylamide in these potatoes, due to how brown they were on that one side. Acrylamide is a natural chemical that is formed when you cook food; it's what makes it brown and extra tasty--but it may or may not be unhealthy. You could reduce the acrylamide by reducing the cooking time or some such (which you would want to do anyway).

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Radishrain by Radishrain @ in Software
Also see:
https://www.growspice.com/A-desktop-user-s-guide-to-Nano-a-command-line-text-editor-td3471.html

Termux is basically a command-line Linux distribution that you can use on Android. You can download it here:
https://f-droid.org/en/packages/com.termux/

You can either download F-Droid and install it through that, or you can download the APK on the same page (the version of your choice). The information herein was tested on Termux 0.106, on Android 10 (but there are newer versions of both Termux and Android).

Here are some very helpful keyboard shortcuts (when you have such as a bluetooth keyboard connected to your Android device--which I highly recommend):

https://wiki.termux.com/wiki/Hardware_Keyboard

(Some important shortcuts to remember currently include ctrl+alt+down/up to switch between Termux instances, and ctrl+alt+c to create a new one. Also, ctrl+alt+r to rename a session, and ctrl+alt+right/left to open/close the sidebar, or drawer, and ctrl+alt+v to paste.)

The drawer is a sidebar that shows you all your sessions by number/name; you can click on a session to navigate to it.

To exit a session (a Termux instance), type exit.

Congratulations! Now you can multitask on Termux on Android!

You can also create a new session with a Termux widget (long press on the Termux icon in Android 10 to find the place where you can create the widget that lets you start new sessions).

I wrote this after finding these incorrect suggestions highly ranked on Google:
* https://github.com/termux/termux-app/issues/106
* https://www.gitmemory.com/issue/termux/termux-app/106/528807387

I also recommend checking out Ki if you're serious about using Termux to turn your Android tablet into a workstation:
https://www.growspice.com/ki-td3550.html
Radishrain by Radishrain @ in Other
How to make noise-canceling headphones:

1. Get a pair of earbuds.
2. Put them on.
3. Get a pair of noise canceling earmuffs.
4. Put them on, over the earbuds.

Enjoy.

life_hacks
Radishrain by Radishrain @ in Life
So, a few months ago, or so, I got the idea that it would be easier, prior to baking, just to score my potatoes with a knife than to poke them with a fork. Knifes are easier to wash, and it takes less effort to score than to poke.

So, I did it, and the potatoes cooked a lot more nicely, too. (I don't wrap my potatoes in foil, just for the record; I let them get hides, and I typically eat the skins).

You can score a potato lots of times in lots of places, and it's still pretty easy. No more jamming in and yanking out forks. Yeah, the potatoes come out of the oven looking like crustacean abdomens or something, and they're quite tasty.

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Radishrain by Radishrain @ in Life
I haven't experimented terribly with creating chicken sandwiches. So, I decided it's about time to start.

I live with a relative who likes plain, unseasoned, unadorned baked chicken. No seasonings. No sauces. Just the natural flavor. I like to flavor and/or sauce things.

Anyway, I decided I would make the chicken, last night, and then I could make mine how I wanted it (and experiment with making chicken sandwiches). Yeah, people probably usually grill their chicken breasts for sandwiches, but baking was the option here.

So, I put my relative's chicken in a separate pan, and got some potatoes to bake. I scored the potatoes, but then decided I wanted them to cook even faster (so they'd be done easily the same time as the chicken), so I quartered the smaller potatoes, and I cut the larger potatoes into eighths.

Then I made some seasoning to coat the chicken in, and I decided to coat the potatoes in it, too. The seasoning could have contained any number of things, but it contained this (probably not the ideal recipe, but it's one that worked well enough for my purposes):

* Soy sauce
* Worcestershire sauce
* Key lime powder
* Granulated garlic
* Black pepper
* Avocado oil
* Water (because it was kind of thick)

So, I coated the chicken and potatoes (and I ought to have greased the pan, like I did for my relative's, but I didn't, as I figured the seasoning of the pan and the oil in the chicken/potato seasoning might be enough--it wasn't, but I managed to extract them from the pan).

Anyway, I baked it on 450 degrees F. for 50 minutes. The chicken was very well-done, and a good consistency for sandwiches (if you like your meat well-done). The potatoes were also very well done; so, I put some of them on my sandwiches, too. I put mayonnaise on each slice of bread, and added romaine lettuce. I thought about adding tomatoes and especially onions (but I didn't).

Anyway, it tasted great. The potatoes were about as tasty of a contribution to the sandwich as the chicken. Next time, I should be sure to cut them in ideal shapes for sandwiches (only some of them were particularly flat).

The baked potatoes outside the sandwich were also pretty good.

Marinating the chicken and potatoes would probably be tastier, but a coating of seasoning on the exterior does add some nice flavor.

So, while I don't plan to eat chicken breast sandwiches extremely often, I'm thinking I want to experiment with baking potatoes for sandwiches.
Radishrain by Radishrain @ in Life
So, I figured this out a few weeks or so ago:

Take about a quart of Great Value orange juice (I used the calcium fortified kind, but I imagine the regular kind is at least as good). Add about a half a teaspoon of baking soda (give or take some; experiment to see if less works). Stir for about 45 seconds. It should be carbonated by now. Drink!

You may notice that the baking soda doesn't make it taste worse. It actually makes it taste creamier, instead of bitter (unless you added too much baking soda). Oranges are already kind of bitter (so that's probably why).

Anyway, it's delicious.

orange_juice
orange_juice_soda
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Radishrain by Radishrain @ in Life
I just made an impromptu salad and potato dressing, and it worked out pretty nicely:

Ingredients
• Mayonnaise
• Fenugreek powder
• Ginger powder (more than the fenugreek)
• Soy sauce
• A little key lime powder (the powder I used was homemade, and included the fruits, peels, and seeds)
• Sesame seeds (dark seeds; the longer they sit in it, the more flavor they add)

I sprinkled powdered Parmesan cheese and artificial bacon bits on the salad before adding the dressing. It had quite the hearty taste, like bacon (even before I got to the bacon bits and Parmesan cheese, I believe). It went well with the baked potatoes, too.

I was at first worried that it would be too powerful, since there seemed to be a lot of powders and soy sauce compared to the mayonnaise, but it was about right.

The salad contained
• Celery
• Lettuce
• Tomatoes
• Avocados

I posted on TomatoJunction about it, too (and by the time you read it there may or may not be some discussion):
https://www.tomatojunction.com/viewtopic.php?f=85&t=2293&p=42917#p42917

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salad_dressing
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