After the positive reception to my post last night about my first ever loaf, I wanted to share another one I felt encouraged to try. This is the first time trying something different than the very basic loaf in my other post.
This one is ALSO quite basic but involved my kneading by hand for the first time, as well as separating and shaping. It was also on stove top instead of in the oven.
There's not really anything special about them but once again I was quite proud that I was able to make this. I am already itching to try something else. I think I am eager to branch out into different fillings... I immediately thought this same process would have benefited from a little bit of cheese in the middle to make like a gooey cheesy pull apart bun.
My point was more that regardless of what is officially allowed (hence my "in theory"), history has shown that the magic of Bigger Army Diplomacy usually has a say in things.
My groups play Pathfinder 2e and Fabula Ultima at the moment. My worldbuilding project is system agnostic, but high fantasy. We have played dnd 5e, Blades in the Dark, Slugblaster, Call of Cthulhu (7th edition I think?), beta Daggerheart. We want to play release Daggerheart, Triangle Agency, and even more.
Regarding the push to talk, I'm not an expert but is that a limitation of the Matrix protocol or perhaps the client you were using to connect?
I'm in the process of getting a Matrix server set up for my ttrpg group, and homebrew world project. If there was interest from the wider ttrpg community I'd be happy to drop a link when it's ready. I'm aiming for early March. I don't think I'll have call functionality on my server, though.
Of course, with the federated nature of Matrix, you can sign up to any server and still join our spaces/rooms!
Just finished Red Country by Joe Abercrombie. Best book of his so far (I'm reading them in release order). I liked his other books enough to keep going but on average they were just below 4/5 for me. This one though was a 5/5.
Today I'm starting Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir.
You still get the tax deduction if you donate at the till, fyi. The store does not (nor would it make any sense to, anyway - if they claim it as profit, then claim it as donation, the net is zero).
I've been feeling stressed lately and have been feeling good about the bread bakes... So there might be something to that.