2024
Bennett's Law says that as poor people ...
Bennett’s Law says that as poor people have more money they shift from coarse grains to fine and then to animal proteins. But it isn’t really a law, more a regular occurrence. Today, the first empirical test of Bennett’s Law, with researcher Marc Bellemare.
Trawling around after briefly noting Cooklang as ...
Trawling around after briefly noting Cooklang as a way of marking up recipes, I came across a recipe for gnocchi sauce that called for 300ml of cream as well as a burrata cheese and thought to myself, talk about gilding the lily.
2024-11-20
Links are powerful — that’s why Instagram and Twitter and Threads punish and limit them, and why Substack tries to take credit for them. And that’s why “wherever you get your podcasts” is such a radical concept — like email, it’s a medium that the tech tycoons don’t, and can’t, own. People can read your writing “wherever they get their email”.Anil Dash lays out the future of Sbstck www.anildash.com/2024/11/1…
2024-11-19
Needless to say, it was hard to glean any of these alleged meanings from the works themselves. Rather, they could be discovered only from the descriptions on the wall, which read like the everything-is-connected code-breaking ravings of an overeducated cabal convinced that a hidden semiotic language of resistance lies below everyday objects, camera angles, orientations, and gestures made so very many times before.https://harpers.org/archive/2024/12/the-painted-protest-dean-kissick-contemporary-art/Much to agree with, much more to be bemused by.
After years of using it for spices, ...
After years of using it for spices, I put my coffee grinder to work grinding, er, coffee because a friend gave me some French Roast beans from The Philippines. The coffee is good, with more than a hint of cumin.
Long reads from Eat This Newsletter. Modern ...
Long reads from Eat This Newsletter. Modern industrial production for better and worse. A review on dietetics so you don’t need to read the book. UK farmers sharpening their pitchforks; I’m not convinced. And more.
2024-11-10
- On bicycle* 41.884605, 12.475028* 10 November 2024* 423.74 ppm CO2* OpenStreetMapI went out for a long bicycle ride this morning, having vaguely noted that there was a Rabbit to be bagged not too far from the route. On the way back I dismounted, got as close as I could and took the picture. It was a great ride.
Very cool. A new website dedicated to ...
Very cool. A new website dedicated to taking your bicycle on a train (in Europe). Sort of The Person with a Saddle in Seat 61. There’s mention of it being crowd-sourced, which would be interesting. Instant follow.
Eat This Newsletter today ranges from big ...
Eat This Newsletter today ranges from big stories in India and Europe to little gems about candy floss (aka cotton candy) and asparagus.
Oh, and a titan of industrial food calls for mandatory nutrition labels.
Read it at buttondown.com/jeremyche… and while you are there, consider subscribing.
Almost identical to my own journey, although ...
Almost identical to my own journey, although I haven’t scoured ALL the places I might have left a bookmark. I should watch the tagging video, because I know I am too lax about tags, and have too many tags with only a single item. AI could fix that, right?
I’ve often dreamed of handing headphones to ...
I’ve often dreamed of handing headphones to people playing their shitty phone-based noises out loud, but never taken it beyond a dream. Terence Eden could be living the dream with his two quid shitty earphones.
Current me thanks past me for due ...
Current me thanks past me for due diligence.
New episode: How the Spanish learned to ...
New episode: How the Spanish learned to love anchovies
For hundreds of years, the people of Spain wanted nothing to do with anchovies, except perhaps as fertiliser for their fields. Today, they eat more anchovies than anyone else. How did that happen?
After a week away seeing family and ...
After a week away seeing family and mostly ignoring the online, it is very good to be back home and online.
The Tiny Potato at the Heart of One Tribe’s Fight Against Climate Change – Mother Jones
I don’t know why they call it a potato. Tuber would be just as alliterative, and instructive to boot. Still, an interesting read.
Last week was National School Lunch Week ...
Last week was National School Lunch Week in the US. The latest Eat This Newsletter wonders why there is still no such thing as a universal free school lunch.
Read it at buttondown.com/jeremyche… and think about subscribing there.
Truly baffled by someone who has a ...
Truly baffled by someone who has a kind of About page that links to their various online presences, and the one labelled “blog” takes me to a Substack signup. Whatever else you may think it is, a newsletter is not, on its own, a weblog. At least, not for me.
#IndieWeb