Any Home Bakers Here?

but now we know she can’t get enough of French toast made with homemade sourdough.
We've been having that at DWs request every Sunday for a few months! She gets on a "thing" and sticks to it. Since she works 6 days a week I figure she can choose whatever she wants on Sunday morning.

Regarding Comet Neowise - we haven't missed our chance (seeing as how none of us will likely be alive in 6,800 years.
"
  • Before July 14, the best time to see the comet was before the sunrise. But from the 14th onward, you're more likely to see the comet in the evening sky.
  • As it moves away from the sun and edges closer to Earth, the comet will fade away, but your chance of catching it improves if you can find a location that's free of light pollution, meaning street lights, car headlights, apartment lights, and the like.
  • "Start looking about 1 hour after sunset, when you'll find it just over the northwestern horizon as the last of twilight fades into darkness," the editors of Sky & Telescope said in a news release. "Look about three fists below the bottom of the Big Dipper, which is hanging down by its handle high above, and from there perhaps a little to the right."
Origin of the text

The next time we might not have too much cloud cover is this Saturday but even then Mr. NOAA says 20%.
 
We've been having that at DWs request every Sunday for a few months! She gets on a "thing" and sticks to it. Since she works 6 days a week I figure she can choose whatever she wants on Sunday morning.

Regarding Comet Neowise - we haven't missed our chance (seeing as how none of us will likely be alive in 6,800 years.
"
  • Before July 14, the best time to see the comet was before the sunrise. But from the 14th onward, you're more likely to see the comet in the evening sky.
  • As it moves away from the sun and edges closer to Earth, the comet will fade away, but your chance of catching it improves if you can find a location that's free of light pollution, meaning street lights, car headlights, apartment lights, and the like.
  • "Start looking about 1 hour after sunset, when you'll find it just over the northwestern horizon as the last of twilight fades into darkness," the editors of Sky & Telescope said in a news release. "Look about three fists below the bottom of the Big Dipper, which is hanging down by its handle high above, and from there perhaps a little to the right."
Origin of the text

The next time we might not have too much cloud cover is this Saturday but even then Mr. NOAA says 20%.

I understood all that, being a hobby astronomer. I am attempting to get a picture tonight. I have a VERY dark spot. You can see the Perseus Arm of the Milky Way
 
It's a pan with a small area on the bottom and wide sides. Idea is you cook quickly in the bottom and keep warm along the sides.
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ETA: A large skillet would work for that recipe. Most recipes I've used for fried rice called for the rice to be cold.
 

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