• 3 Posts
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Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: June 18th, 2023

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  • Addv4@lemmy.worldtoCooking @lemmy.worldPizza
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    2 days ago

    Yeah, steels are definitely better (got a cheap one at aldi a few months ago for $20), but I used stones for years before I got the steel and they do work. But in my experience stones are what I would consider the basic option, as you can pull it out and get a decent bottom, but steels are definitely better, even cheap ones giving a crisp bottom quickly. However, I recommended the stones mostly because there will be someone who will think a baking sheet is fine, and those generally aren’t (too low thermal mass, occasionally warp in the amount of heat that you will be cooking a pizza at, etc), whereas I’ve seen decent baking stones at the same price or lower than a baking sheet (seen at ~$5 a few times at aldi).


  • Addv4@lemmy.worldtoCooking @lemmy.worldPizza
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    2 days ago

    Yep. Been making pizzas since the pandemic in large part due to how cheap they are for good food (and bonus points, they’re generally better for you if you make them yourself). That being said, people probably need a few basic things if you want to reliability make great pizza. First up (in my opinion), are better ingredients. Good flour, good olive oil, and good sauce are the most important things in my book, and they don’t add too much to the price.

    Next is equipment, most important of which is a scale for weighing ingredients for the dough, then maybe a pizza steel (or baking stone, have used those plenty and you can occasionally find them cheap at Goodwill) and a peel (not strictly necessary in my opinion, but a very nice addition for ease of use).

    I use this recipe for my dough, with garlic powder and dried basil added and fermented for longer if anyone is interested in starting. I also recommend splurging for san maranzos on the sauce.




  • Yep. Funnily enough, never really had any issues with the drivers on a desktop, only on mobile, mostly switching between integrated and discrete. But after messing with them on my laptop for a few years, you better bet my laptop was only running Intel integrated and my desktop runs on amd.


  • What games specifically? Some distros require a bit more driver installation, so maybe that was part of it (was running an rtx 2070 super on linux until a few months ago on linux, didn’t have any issues with frame rates). The poor driver support is mostly on laptops, as they sometimes have issues switching between integrated and discrete graphics.


  • Yeah, I ran arch through college, it broke 3 times over 4 years, basically each time because Nvidia updated. Now that I don’t have the time to fuss with spending a couple of hours chrooting in and fixing Nvidia stuff, I just swapped to endeavorOS sway community edition (and made sure none of my PCs have Nvidia anything in them) and haven’t had an issue yet.


  • Huh, interesting. My old laptop was on x (i3wm), so I mostly had issues with that, and how the GPU would have to spin up if any of the usb c ports were being used, as they ran through the GPU (stupid design). Thankfully I don’t really have to worry about Nvidia anymore, new laptop (which is actually older) only has Intel integrated (specifically wanted to get away from Nvidia) and the desktop has an AMD gpu.


  • Any issues with the GPU drivers switching between integrated and discrete? That’s what I was having issues with on my last laptop, didn’t really have too much else as a problem, and why I often hesitate to recommend people with laptops running Nvidia graphics to switch too quickly for that reason.



  • Nvidia occasionally can be a pain, but that is mostly in laptops in my experience, desktop drivers are generally fine. Try whatever distro you want, might wanna start by burning some distros on flash drives and booting from them to see which one you like the most. Lazy recommendations are Mint, Fedora, Bazzite, and maybe endeavorOS. Also, the most you might have to do with regards to the Nvidia drivers is install them via terminal (which for a lot of people is literally copy/paste the command into a terminal and follow what it says, usually to enter your password and y/n do you want to install), but there are a few distros that have the option to install via GUI.



  • ADHD as well, texture can be a pretty annoying thing, and yeah dirt and sadness can apply to cremini (which are white button, portebellos, and bella mushrooms, just harvested at different times), but plenty of “exotic” mushrooms do generally taste better and can have a very different texture. Also, a lot of places straight up don’t know how to cook them, though it seems like that isn’t your main issue (though I will say their texture can vary quite a bit). I’d suggest maybe trying Lions mane crab cakes or breaded and fried oyster mushrooms (think southern fried chicken) if you ever encounter them, maybe those might be appealing. Sorry to maybe harp a bit much on it, just really love mushrooms and have known a few people who hadn’t actually experienced good mushroom dishes and once they did, they changed their minds a bit.






  • I like endeavorOS, it’s the main distro I use on my pcs. I’ve run arch before (with i3wm and switchable Nvidia graphics) and did for years, but honestly I don’t really have the time to properly configure my systems to my liking, so the option to install the sway community edition and just tweak a few settings in the config files is very nice.