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Your kitchen deserves these 5 great Amazon deals

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Americans across the country are spending more time at home than ever before, and they're also often cooking more meals as they look to save money by avoiding restaurants. Many believe that self-quarantine and social distancing recommendations could be in place across the United States until at least the end of May. Since you're spending more time than ever before in the kitchen, there are a few key upgrades you can make that'll ensure your meals are more delicious than ever before. Visit BGR's homepage for more stories. If you're like me, you always try to cook as much as possible as opposed to ordering food for takeout or going out and eating in restaurants. That said, plans change pretty often after a long day of work. Under normal circumstances, I would order food for delivery at least a few times each week so that I didn't have to be bothered to cook. These days, however, it's a different story. People across the country are se...

Animal Crossing kitchen furniture: How to design a kitchen and get the ironwood kitchenette in New Horizons

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Animal Crossing has a huge amount of items to help players decorate, but kitchen furniture is often in short supply. Thankfully, there are ways to get around this problem using the custom design feature, and by using some clever kitchen decorating techniques. If you want to build your own Reddit-worthy ironwood kitchen, we also have advice on how to build the elusive ironwood kitchenette. On this page: Finding kitchen furniture in Animal Crossing may take some time, and unless you're willing to trade with other players for items, you'll have to try a series of different methods to receive random items of furniture. Here are the main ways to find new items for your kitchen, and some tips on how to maximise your chances. Collect kitchen furniture from balloons. Balloons regularly fly over your island in Animal Crossing, and each will contain a random item, materials or DIY recipe. Always carry a slingshot with you when exploring, and be careful ...

This “Flaming Skillet” Can Push Beyond the Usual Kitchen Boundaries

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(Bloomberg Businessweek) -- The world's sauté masters are divided between cast-iron classicists, who worship the material's heat-holding properties, and carbon-steel groupies, who appreciate a lighter piece of cooking equipment. The A$150 ($96) Aus-Ion Satin skillet, from Solidteknics Pty Ltd. in Australia, aims to bring together both parties. Made from low-carbon wrought iron, it can also pair with an ingenious Flaming skillet insert that has a perforated bottom. Put it into the skillet for stovetop cooking, or use it solo on an outdoor grill. THE COMPETITION • Lodge Manufacturing Co., the venerable Tennessee-based maker of cast-iron and carbon-steel pans, has been around since 1896. And its wares are affordable: A 10.25-inch cast-iron skillet is $21. • Notable chefs such as Tom Colicchio are investors in direct-to-consumer line Made in Cookware, which specializes in blue-carbon steel—"blue" being a heat treatment to inhibit corrosion. Its 10-inch $69 pan is...

Amazon gives away a free year of live and on-demand cooking classes on Food Network Kitchen app

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Amazon is bringing a year's worth of free, live and on-demand cooking classes to tens of millions of Amazon Fire TV and Fire tablet owners across the U.S., thanks to an expanded collaboration with Discovery's Food Network Kitchen. The subscription service launched last fall as a flagship app for Amazon's Alexa-powered Echo Show, bringing daily live classes, step-by-step cooking videos, on-demand video, home delivery of ingredients, and more to Echo devices owners. While the Echo Show was the first smart-speaker-with-screen to gain access to Food Network Kitchen, the app is also available across devices, including Amazon's Fire TV, Fire tablets, as well as iOS and Android phones and tablets. The subscription offering combines episodes of popular Food Network Shows like "30 Minute Meals," "Barefoot Contessa," and "Brunch @ Bobby's" with both live and on-demand cooking classes from culinary experts and top chefs, including Bobby Flay, Rach...

The ‘Spy’ Who Fed Me. Jerry James Stone’s Pandemic Video Kitchen

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How a former DoD contractor became a popular video food blogger before and during the lockdown He says he's not a spy – though we will never know for sure; he once had a top secret clearance for his work as a DoD contractor, and he is entertainingly evasive about the entire affair. But he is now a chef … of sorts. Jerry James Stone is the host of one of the most joyous and popular food video blogs. And he is enjoying even greater success during the lockdown in California with a 5X increase in viewers. I am among the people who try to tune in for his beautiful, well produced videos whenever he has something new to share, from the sublime Simple Sheet Pan Shakshuka (a baked Mediterranean breakfast dish) to the seemingly absurd Best Toast With Butter, a recipe which provoked respectful ridicule from people like me on Twitter. Truth is, Stone's videos all have a touch of the simple yet sublime, for they are meant to tease out the need that so many people have to get comfortab...

Bolshoi in the kitchen: Russian ballet is also working from home during lockdown

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Adrian Mitchell and Andrea Lassakova at home. The Mikhailovsky Theatre, where they both perform, closed suddenly due to the coronavirus outbreak. Adrian Mitchell and Andrea Lassakova at ho...

8 Skin-Smoothing DIY Face Scrubs You Can Make In Your Kitchen

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From Women's Health Feeling like your face needs a refresh but can't go to the store to buy all kinds of new skincare products? Don't worry, DIY scrubs are here to save the day. They're super easy to make and you likely have all the ingredients you need already in your kitchen. A major bonus? DIY scrubs are good for your skin, too. They help get rid of dead skin cells, leave your face feeling baby-level smooth, and minimize the looks of pores, says Renee Rouleau, celebrity esthetician and founder of Renee Rouleau Skincare. They're also waaay less expensive than a store-bought version, so consider yourself saving some extra cash, too. That said, Rouleau notes there are a few things you should keep in mind before diving into the scrub game. Some ingredients like walnuts, salt, and kernels don't have round edges, and can actually create tiny micro-tears in the skin that can lead to increased irritation. You should also make sure that you're not rubbing too hard...