Last I checked, two days ago, Netflix had a Watch Instantly tab, now it's gone. WTF? First they don't host trailers of the movies they're hosting, and now they stop providing easy access to one of their featured features?
Jayne ,'Serenity'
Natter 73: Chuck Norris only wishes he could Natter
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, butt kicking, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
It looks like if you click on "Browse" (or possibly hover, I'm not sure what I did) you get the Watch Instantly tab, among other things.
Meyer Lemon was also in there, but even as he mentioned it he said "I just saw a bunch those at Costco" so I don't know what that means.
coconut flour and turmeric sound like trends to me.
Next time I make beef stew I'm going to add turmeric
Coconut flour is certainly being discussed all over the place.
Oh, some new kind of lime that's tiny, but my audio cut out while he was explaining that so I didn't get the details.
Key lime or that fingerling thing that looks awesome but freaks me out?
Upon further googling, fingerling limes is good enough.
I like beets and cabbage too, but I've got Russian Jew in me. It's practically required cuisine.
Didn't key lime trend years ago?
My paternal granddad use to put a ton of turmeric in stew and soup, back in the 70s. Maybe it's retro?
I gave some friends salted, dark-chocolate-coated caramels for Yule a few years ago.
ETA: I read "fingerling limes" as "fingering limes" and was briefly disconcerted.
I remember TJ's salted caramel at Kat's a couplethree years ago. A house ago.
Fingerling I think, yeah.
Heh, you are right, Burrell, beets and cabbage are cultural imperatives for me, too. I associate turmeric with Tibet, I don't think I can lay claim to that. It's probably used other places and my family tree does extend to a variety of locales.