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In "Smitten Kitchen Keepers: A Kitchen Counter Conversation," author Deb Perelman riffs on some of her favorite recipes, sharing stories about what inspired it or how she has tweaked, simplified and perfected it over the years.
Segment 1 Guy's guest in this week's adventure in Food, Wine, & Fun is the author of the "You Can Cook Any THING" cookbook series.
Emails, Ted's Meat & Potatoes is all about the 4th of July Cookout! Plus Headlines Mike is NOT working on!
It's the 19th Century and the whole show is about to change - and it's Iron that makes it possible. How we cook, how we get around and what is going to be available to even make food out of.With a mysterious detour through why calculus is important, find out how Iron and American food continue to be absolutely inextricable.Music Credit: Fingerlympics by Doctor TurtleShow Notes: https://thehistoryofamericanfood.blogspot.com/Email: TheHistoryofAmericanFood at gmail dot com Threads: @THoAFoodInstagram: @THoAFood
The show called 1800-butterball to get advice on how to cook a turkey since only ONE member of the show actually knows how to cook a turkey!
Soup can be a flexible, cozy meal that allows you to experiment in the kitchen. But to make a delicious one, you need to get some fundamentals down first. Chef Sohla El-Waylly offers her best tips on everything from creating a yummy broth to ensuring you get your cook time right.
The girls discuss the matchups with the Dallas Cowboys and San Francisco 49ers, keys to for the Cowboys to ensure success, and we introduce you to Nicole Hutchison the Dallas Cowboys' team reporter! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The girls discuss the matchups with the Dallas Cowboys and San Francisco 49ers, keys to for the Cowboys to ensure success, and we introduce you to Nicole Hutchison the Dallas Cowboys' team reporter!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Guy's guest in this week's adventure in Food, Wine, & Fun is the Author of the new cook book “Blue Ribbon Kitchen.”
Guy's guest in this week's adventure in Food, Wine, & Fun is the very popular TV show host and the leader of Planet Barbecue.
Exposed: Queening Out w/ Joseph Shepherd and Laganja Estranja
Joseph Shepherd sits down to chat with Acid Betty! She has been off the grid for a while, but now she is back. They chat her BioShimmers, her time on Drag Race, Trixie drama, Werq the World and so much more. Get Cooking with Dinnerly! Only $1.29/portion and 6 ingredients a dish! Save up to $142 on your first four boxes. https://glnk.io/kom93/josephashepherd Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
We go through Week 9's results and into Week 10. Let's Get Cooking. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thedanielgutierrezshow/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thedanielgutierrezshow/support
Chef Marcela Valladolid. Author and Food Network Star. We all need Mexican Made Easy. It's getting spicy with Marcela, Ros and Eric See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Guy & Coleen go over all the details of how one can join Coleen and cook in Tuscany.
About PriyankaPriyanka Vergadia is currently a Staff Developer Advocate at Google Cloud where she works with enterprises to build and architect their cloud platforms. She enjoys building engaging technical content and continuously experiments with new ways to tell stories and solve business problems using Google Cloud tools. You can check out some of the stories that she has created for the developer community on the Google Cloud Platform Youtube channel. These include "Deconstructing Chatbots", "Get Cooking in Cloud", "Pub/Sub Made Easy" and more. ..Links Referenced: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/pvergadia/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/pvergadia Priyanka's book: https://www.amazon.com/Visualizing-Google-Cloud-Illustrated-References/dp/1119816327 TranscriptAnnouncer: Hello, and welcome to Screaming in the Cloud with your host, Chief Cloud Economist at The Duckbill Group, Corey Quinn. This weekly show features conversations with people doing interesting work in the world of cloud, thoughtful commentary on the state of the technical world, and ridiculous titles for which Corey refuses to apologize. This is Screaming in the Cloud.Corey: Finding skilled DevOps engineers is a pain in the neck! And if you need to deploy a secure and compliant application to AWS, forgettaboutit! But that's where DuploCloud can help. Their comprehensive no-code/low-code software platform guarantees a secure and compliant infrastructure in as little as two weeks, while automating the full DevSecOps lifestyle. Get started with DevOps-as-a-Service from DuploCloud so that your cloud configurations are done right the first time. Tell them I sent you and your first two months are free. To learn more visit: snark.cloud/duplo. Thats's snark.cloud/D-U-P-L-O-C-L-O-U-D. Corey: What if there were a single place to get an inventory of what you're running in the cloud that wasn't "the monthly bill?" Further, what if there were a way to compare that inventory to what you were already managing via Terraform, Pulumi, or CloudFormation, but then automatically add the missing unmanaged or drifted parts to it? And what if there were a policy engine to immediately flag and remediate a wide variety of misconfigurations? Well, stop dreaming and start doing; visit snark.cloud/firefly to learn more.Corey: Welcome to Screaming in the Cloud, I'm Corey Quinn. Periodically, I get the privilege of speaking to people who work in varying aspects of some would call it developer evangelism, some would call it developer advocacy, developer relations is a commonly accepted term, and I of course call it devrelopers because I enjoy annoying absolutely everyone by giving things terrible names. My guest today is Priyanka Vergadia, who is a staff developer advocate at Google Cloud. Priyanka, thank you for joining me.Priyanka: Thank you so much for having me. Corey. I'm so excited to be your developer—what did you call it again?Corey: Devreloper. Yes indeed.Priyanka: Devreloper. That is the term I'm going to be using from now on. I am a devreloper. Anyway.Corey: Excellent.Priyanka: Yeah.Corey: I'm starting to spread this out so that eventually we're going to form a giant, insufferable army of people who pronounce it that way, and it's going to be great.Priyanka: It's going to be awesome. [laugh].Corey: One of the challenges, even as I alluded to different titles within this space, everyone has a slightly different definition of where the role starts and stops, just in terms of its function, let alone the myriad ways that can be expressed. In the before times, I knew a number of folks in the developer advocacy space who were more or less worldwide experts in accumulating airline miles and racking up status and going from conference to conference to conference to more or less talk about things that had a tenuous at best connection to where they worked. Great. Other folks have done things in very different ways. Some people write extensively, blog posts and the rest, others build things a sample code, et cetera, et cetera.It seems like every time I talk to someone in the space, they have found some new and exciting way of carrying the message of what their company does to arguably a very cynical customer group. Where do you start and stop with your devrelopment?Priyanka: Yeah. So, that is such—like, all the devrelopers have their own style that they have either adopted or learned over time that works for them. When I started, I think about three years ago, I did go to conferences, did those events, give talks, all of that, but I was also—my actual introduction to DevRel [laugh] was with videos. I started creating my first series was deconstructing chatbots, and I was very interested in learning more about chatbots. So, I was like, you know what, I'm just going to teach everybody, and learn.So like, learn and teach at the same time was my motto, and that's kind of how I got started into, like, okay, I'm going to create a few videos to learn this and teach it. And during the process I was like, “I want to do this more.” And that's kind of transitioned, my move from being in front of customers, which I still end up doing, but I was doing more of just, you know, working with customers extensively to get their deployments done. This was a segue for me to, you know, think back, sit back and think about what's working and what I personally enjoy doing more, and that's what got me into creating videos. And it's like, okay, I'm going to become a devreloper now.And that's kind of how the whole, like, journey started. And for me, like you were pointing out earlier—should I just stop because I've been talking too long? [laugh].Corey: No, keep going. Please, [unintelligible 00:04:10] it's fine.Priyanka: [laugh]. For me, I started—I found my, I would say, in the last two years—it was all before the pandemic, we were all either writing blogs or doing videos or going to conferences, so it was, you know, the pandemic kind of brought us to a point where it's like, “Okay, let's think about—we can't meet each other; let's think about other ways to communicate and how can we make it creative and exciting?”Corey: And the old way started breaking down, too, where it's, “Yay, I'm going to watch an online conference.” “What is it?” “Oh, it's like a crappy Zoom only you don't have to pretend to pay attention in the same way.” And as a presenter, then you've got to modify what you're doing to understand that people's attention spans are shorter, distraction is always a browser tab away, and unlike a physical event, people don't feel the same sense of shame of getting up from the front row and weaving in front of 300 people, and not watching the rest of your talk. I mean, don't get me wrong, I'll still do it, but I'll feel bad about it.Now it's, “Oh, nope, I'm sitting here in my own little… hovel, I'm just going to do and watch whatever I want to do.” So, you've got to—it forces you to up your game, and it—Priyanka: Yep.Corey: Still doesn't quite have the same impact.Priyanka: Yeah. Or just switch off the camera, if you're like me, and just—uh, shut off the camera, go away or do something else. And, yeah, it's very easy to do that. So, it's not the same, which is why it prompted, I think all of us DevRel people to think about new ways to connect, which is for me that way to connect is art and visual aspects, to kind of bring that—because that—we are all whether we accept it or not or like it or not, we're all visual learners, so that's kind of how I think when it comes to creating content is visually appealing, and that's when people can dive in. [laugh].Corey: I am in the, I guess opposite side of the universe from you, where I acknowledge and agree with everything you're saying that people are visual creatures inherently, but I have effectively zero ability in that direction. My medium has always been playing games with words and language. And over time, I had the effectively significantly belated realization that wait a minute, just because I'm not good at a thing doesn't mean that other people might not be good at that thing, and I don't have to do every last part of it myself. Suddenly, I didn't have to do my own crappy graphic design because you can pay people who are worlds better than I'll ever be, and so on and so forth. I don't edit my own podcast audio because I'm bad at that, too.But talking about things is a different story, writing about things, building things is where I tend to see a lot of what I do tend to resonate. But I admit I bias for the things that I enjoy doing and the way that I enjoy consuming things. You do as well because relatively recently, as of time of this recording, you have done what I don't believe anyone actually wants to do. You wrote a book. Now, everyone wants to have written a book, but no one actually wants to write a book.Priyanka: So, true. [laugh].Corey: But it's not like most technical books. Tell me about it.Priyanka: Yeah, I actually never thought I would write a book. If you asked me two years ago—three years ago, I would say, I would have never thought that I would write a book because I am not a text person. So, I don't like to read a lot of texts because it zones out. So, for me, when I started creating some of these sketches, and sharing it on social media and in blogs and things like that, and gotten the attention that it has gotten from people, that's when I was like, okay, ding, ding, ding. I think I can do a visual book with these images.And this was like, halfway through, I'd already created, like, 30 sketches at this point. And I was like, “Okay, maybe I can turn this into a book,” which would be interesting for me because I like doing art-type things along with teaching, and it's not text because I wanted to do this in a very unique way. So yeah, that's kind of how it ended up happening.Corey: I have a keen appreciation for people who approach things with a different point of view. One of your colleagues, Forrest Brazeal, took a somewhat similar approach in the in his book, The Read Aloud Cloud, where it was illustrated, and everything he did was in rhyme, which is a constant source of envy for me, where it's, “Mmm, I've got to find a way to one-up him again.” And it's… he is inexorable, as far as just continuing to self-improve. So, all right, we're going to find a way to wind up defeating that. With you, it's way easier.I read a book, like, wow, this is gorgeous and well-written that it's attractive to look at, and I will never be able to do any of those things. That's all you. It doesn't feel like we're trying to stand at the same spot in the universe in quite the same way. Nothing but love for Forrest. Let's be clear. I am teasing. I consider him a friend.Priyanka: He is amazing. Well honestly, like, I actually got to know Forrest when I decided to do this book. Wiley, who's the publisher, sent me Forrest's book, and he said, “You should look at this book because the idea that you are presenting to me, we could lay it out in this format.” Like, in the, you know, physical format. So, he sent me that book. And that's how I know Forrest, honestly.So, I told him that—this is a little story that I told him after. But anyway, yeah. I—the—[sigh]—I was going to make a point about the vid—the aspect of creating images, like, honestly, like, I designed the aspects of, like, how you layout information in the sketches, I studied a bunch of stuff to come up with, how do I make it precise and things like that. But there's no way this book was possible without some design help. Like, I can't possibly do the entire thing unless I have, like, five years. [laugh]. So—Corey: Right on top of all of this, you do presumptively have a day job as well—and while—Priyanka: Exactly.Corey: This is definitely related. “I'm just going to go write a book.” “Oh, is it a dissertation?” “No, it's going to look more like a children's book than that,” is what they're going to hear. And it's yeah, I'm predicting some problems with the performance evaluation process at large companies when you start down those paths.Priyanka: Exactly. So, I ended up, like, showing all these numbers, like, of the blog views and reads and social media, the presence of some of these images that were going wider. And in the GCPSketchnote GitHub repo got a huge number of stars. And it was like, everybody could see that writing a book would be amazing. From that point on, I was just like, I don't think I can scale that.So, when I was drawing—this is an example—when I drew my first sketch, it took me an entire weekend to just draw one sketch, which is what—I was only doing that the entire weekend—like, assume, like, 16 hours of work, just drawing the one sketch. So, if I went with that pace, this book was not possible. So, you know, after I had the idea laid out, had the process in place, I got some design help, which made it—which expedited the process much, much faster. [laugh].Corey: There's a lot to be said, for doing something that you enjoy. Do you do live sketchnoting during conference talks as well, or do you tend to not do it while someone is talking at a reasonably fast clip, and well, in 45 minutes, this had better be done, so let's go. I've seen people who can do that, and I just marvel in awe at what they do.Priyanka: I don't do live. I don't do live sketching. For me, paper and pen is a better medium so that's just the medium that I like to work with. So, when the talk is happening, I'm actually taking notes on a pen and a paper. And then after, I can sketch it out, faster in a fast way.Like, I did one sketchnote for Next 2020, I think, and that was done, like, a day after Next was over so I could take all the bits and pieces that were important and put it into that sketch. But I can't do it live. That's just one of the things I haven't figured out yet. [laugh].Corey: For me, I was always writing my email newsletter, so it was relatively rapid turnaround, and Twitter was interesting for me. I finally cracked the nut on how to express myself in a way that worked. The challenge that I ran into then was okay, there are thoughts I occasionally have that don't lend themselves to then 140—now 280—characters, so I should probably start writing long-form. And then I want to start writing 1000 to 1500-word blog posts every week that goes out. And that forced me to become a better writer across the board. And then it became about one-upping myself, sort of, live-tweeting conference talks.And the personal secret of why I do that is I'm ADHD in a bottle. Someone gets on stage—you say you zone out when you read a giant quantity of data; you prefer something more visual, more interactive. For me, I'm the opposite, where when someone gets on stage and starts talking, it's, “Okay, get to—yes, you're doing the intro of what a cloud might be. I get that point. This is supposed to be a more advanced talk. Can we speed it up a bit?”And doing the live-tweeting about it, but not just relating what is said, but by making a joke about it, it's how I keep myself engaged and from zoning out. Because let's face it, this industry is extraordinarily boring, if you don't bring a little bit of light to it.Priyanka: Yeah, that is—Corey: And that how to continue and how to do that was hard, and it took me time to get there.Priyanka: Yeah. Yeah, no, I totally agree. Like, that's exactly why I got into, like, training videos and sketches. Like, and videos and also. Like, I come up with, like, fake examples of companies that may or may not exist.Like, I made up a dog shoe making company that ships out shoes when you need them and then return them and there's a size and stuff, like, you have to come up with interesting things to make the content interesting because otherwise, this can get boring pretty quickly, which is going back to your example of, “Speed it up; get to the point.” [laugh].Corey: This episode is sponsored in parts by our friend EnterpriseDB. EnterpriseDB has been powering enterprise applications with PostgreSQL for 15 years. And now EnterpriseDB has you covered wherever you deploy PostgreSQL on premises, private cloud, and they just announced a fully managed service on AWS and Azure called BigAnimal, all one word. Don't leave managing your database to your cloud vendor because they're too busy launching another half dozen manage databases to focus on any one of them that they didn't build themselves. Instead, work with the experts over at EnterpriseDB. They can save you time and money, they can even help you migrate legacy applications, including Oracle, to the cloud.To learn more, try BigAnimal for free. Go to biganimal.com/snark, and tell them Corey sent you.Corey: It's always just fun to start experimenting with it, too, because all right, once I was done learn learning how to live-tweet other people's talk and mostly get it correct because someone says something, I have three to five seconds to come up with what I want to talk about and maybe grab a picture and then move on to the next thing. And it's easy to get that wrong and say things you don't necessarily intend to and get taken the wrong way. I've mostly gotten past that. And—I'm not saying I'm always right, but I better than I used to be. And then it was okay, “How do I top this?”And I started live-tweeting conference talks that I was giving live, which is always fun, but being able to pre-write some tweets at certain times, have certain webhooks in your slide deck and whatnot that fire these things off. And again, I'm not saying that he this is recommended or even a good idea, but it definitely wasn't boring. And—Priyanka: Yeah.Corey: And continue to find ways to make the same type of material new and interesting is one of the challenges because the stuff is complex.Priyanka: Also bite-size, right? Like, it's—I think Twitter is, like, the [unintelligible 00:15:54] words are obviously limiting, but it also forces you to think about it in bite-size, right? Like, okay, if I have a blog post then I'm summarizing it, how would I do it in two sentences? It forces me to think about it that way, which makes it very applicable to the time span that we have now, right, which is maybe, like, 30 seconds, you can have somebody on [unintelligible 00:16:18]Corey: Attention is a rare and precious commodity.Priyanka: Yeah. Yeah.Corey: People who [unintelligible 00:16:21] engagement, I think that's the wrong metric to go after because that inspires a whole bunch of terrible incentives, whereas finding something that is interesting, and a way to bring light to it and have a perspective on it that makes people think about it differently. For me, it's been humor, but that's my own approach to things. Your direction, it seems to be telling a story through visual arts. And that is something we don't see nearly as much of.Priyanka: Yeah. I think it's also because it's something that you—you know, like, I grew up drawing and painting. I was drawing since I was three years old, so that's my way of thinking. Like, I don't—I was talking to another devreloper the other day, and we were talking about—Corey: It's catching on. I love it.Priyanka: —[laugh]. Two different ways of how we think. So, for me, when I design a piece of content, I have my visuals first, and then he was talking about when he designs his content, he has his bullet points and a blog post first. So, it's like, two very different ways of approaching this similar thing. And then from that, from the images or the deck that I'm building up, I would come up with the narrative and stuff like that.My thinking starts with images and narrative of tying, like, the images together. But it's, that is the whole, like, fun of being in DevRel, right? Like, you are your own personality, and bringing whatever your personality, like you mentioned, humor and your case, art in my case, in somebody else's case, it could be totally different thing, right? So, yeah.Corey: Now, please correct me if I'm wrong on this, but an area of emphasis for you has been data analytics as well as Kubernetes, more or less things that are traditionally considered to be much more back-end if you're looking at a spectrum of all things technology. Is that directionally accurate, or am I dramatically is understanding a lot of what you're saying?Priyanka: No, that's very much accurate. I like to—I tend to be on the infrastructure back-and creating pipeline, creating easier processes, sort of person, not much into front-end. I dabble into it, but don't enjoy it. [laugh].Corey: This makes you something of a unicorn, in the sense of there are a tremendous number of devreloper types in the front-end slash JavaScript world because their entire career is focused on making things look visually appealing. That is what front-end is. I know this because I am rubbish at it. My idea of a well-designed interface that everyone looks at and smiles at [unintelligible 00:19:12] of command-line arguments when you're writing a script for something. And it's on a green screen, and sometimes I'll have someone helped me coordinate to come up with a better color palette for the way that I'm looking at my terminal on my Mac. Real exciting times over here, I assure you.So, the folks who are working in that space and they have beautifully designed slides, yeah, you tend to expect that. I gave a talk years ago at the front-end conference in Zurich, and I was speaking in the afternoon. And I went there and every presentation, slides were beautiful. And this was before I was working here and had a graphic designer on retainer to make my slides look not horrible. It was black Helvetica text on a white background, and I'm looking at this and I'm feeling ashamed that it's—okay, I have two hours to fix this. What do I do?I did the only thing I could think of; I changed Helvetica text to Comic Sans because if it's going to look terrible and it's going to be a designer thing that puts them off, you may as well go all-in. And that was a recurring meme at the time. I've since learned that there is an argument—I don't know if it's true or not—that Comic Sans is easier to read for folks with dyslexia, for example. And that's fine. I don't know if that's accurate or not, but I stopped making jokes about it just because if people—even if it's not true, and people believe that it's, “Are you being unintentionally crappy to people?” It's, “Well, I sure hope not. I'm rarely intentionally crappy. But when I do, I don't want to be mistaken for not being.” It's, save it up and use it when it counts.Priyanka: Yeah, yeah. I've—yeah, I think, when it comes to these big events—and like front-end for me is—I would think, like, I actually thought that I would be great at front-end because I have interest in art and stuff. I do make things that [crosstalk 00:20:57]—Corey: That's my naive assumption, too. I'm learning as you speak here. Please continue[.Priyanka: Yeah. And I was just—I thought that I would be and I have tried it, and I only like it to an extent, to present my idea. But I don't like to go in deeper and, like, make my CSS pretty or make this—make it look pretty. I am very much intrigued by all the back-end stuff, and most of my experience, over the past ten years in Cloud has been in the back-end stuff, mainly just because I love APIs, I love—like, you know, as long as I can connect, or the idea of creating a demo or something that involves a bunch of APIs and a back-end, to present an idea in a front-end, I would work on that front-end. But otherwise, I'm not going to choose to do it. [laugh]. Which I found interesting for myself as well. It's a realization. [laugh].Corey: Every time I try and do something with front-end, it doesn't matter the framework, I find myself more confused at the end than I was when I started. There's something I don't get. And anytime I see someone on Twitter, for example, talking about how a front-end is easier or somehow less than, I read that and I can't help myself. It's, “You ridiculous clown. You have no idea what you're talking about.”I don't believe that I'm bad at all of the things under engineering—just most of them—and I think I pick things up reasonably quickly. It is a mystery that does not align with this, and if it's easy for you, you don't recognize—arguably—a skill that you have, but not everyone does, by a landslide. And that's a human nature thing, too. It's if it was easy for me, it's obviously easy for everyone. If something's hard for me, no one would understand how this works and the people that do are wizards from the future.Priyanka: Yep. So true.Corey: It never works that way.Priyanka: Yeah. It never works that way. At least we have this in common, that you don't like to work on front-ends. [laugh].Corey: There's that too. And I think that no matter where you fall on the spectrum of technology, I would argue that something that we all share in common is, it doesn't matter how far we are down in the course of our entire career, from the very beginning to the very end, it is always a consistent, constant process of being humbled and made to feel like a fool by things you are supposedly professionally good at. And oh my stars, I've just learned to finally give up and embrace it. It's like, “So, what's going to make me feel dumb today?”Priyanka: Exactly.Corey: It's the learn in public approach, which is important.Priyanka: It's so important. Especially, like, if you're thinking about it, like that's the part of DevRel that makes it so exciting, too, right? Like, just learning a new thing today and sharing it with you. Like, I'm not claiming that I'm an expert, but hey, let's talk about it. And sure, I might end up looking dumb one day, I might end up looking smart the other day, but that's not the point. The point is, I end up learning every day, right? And that's the most important part, which is why I love this particular job, which is—what did we call it—devreloper.Corey: Devreloping. And as a part of that, you're talking to people constantly, be it people in the community and ecosystem, people who—you say you've talk to customers, but you also talk to these other folks. I would challenge you on that, where when you're at a company like Google Cloud, increasingly everyone in the community in the ecosystem is in one way or another, indistinguishable from being your customer; it all starts to converge at some point. All major cloud providers have that luxury, to be perfectly honest. What do you see in the ecosystem that people are struggling with as you talk to them?And again, any one person is going to have a problem or bone to pick with some particular service or implementation, and okay, great. What I'm always interested in is what is the broad sweep of things? Because when I hear someone complaining that a given service from a given cloud provider is terrible. Okay, great. Everyone has an opinion. When I started to hear that four or five, six times, it's okay, there's something afoot here, and now I'm curious as to what it is. What patterns are you seeing emerge these days?Priyanka: Yeah. I think more and more patterns along the lines of how can you make it automated? How can you make anything automated, right? Like, from machine learning's perspective, how do I not need ML skills to build an ML model? Like, how can we get there faster, right?Same for, like, in the infrastructure side, the serverless… aspect? How can you make it easy for me so I can just build an application and just deploy it so it becomes your problem to run it and not mine?Corey: Oh, the—you are preaching to the choir on that. I feel like all of these services that talk about, “This is how you build and train a machine learning model,” yadda, yadda, it's for an awful lot of the use cases out there, it's exposing implementation details about which I could not possibly care less. It's the, I want an API that I throw something at—like, be it a picture—and then I want to get a response of, “Yes, it's a hot dog,” or, “That's disgusting,” or whatever it is that it decides that it wants to say, great because that's the business outcome I'm after, and I do not care what wizardry happens on the back-end, I don't care if it's people who are underpaid and working extremely quickly by hand to do it, as long as it's from a business perspective, it hits a certain level of performance, reliability, et cetera. And then price, of course, yeah.And that is not to say I'm in favor of exploiting people, let's be clear here because I'm pretty sure most of these are not actually humans on the back-end, but okay. I just want that as the outcome that I think people are after, and so much of the conversation around how to build and train models and all misses the point because there are companies out there that need that, absolutely, there are, but there are a lot more that need the outcome, not the focus on this. And let's face it, an awful lot of businesses that would benefit from this don't have the budget to hire the team of incredibly expensive people it takes to effectively leverage these things because I have an awful lot of observations about people in machine learning space, one of them is absolutely not that, “Wow, I bet those people are inexpensive for me to hire.” It doesn't work that way.Priyanka: It doesn't. Yeah. And so, yeah. I think the future of, like, the whole cloud space, like, when it started, we started with how can I run my server not in my basement, but somewhere else, right? Now, we are at a different stage where we have a different sets of problems and requirements for businesses, right?And that's where I see it growing. It's like, how can I make this automated fast, not my problem? How can I make it not my problem is, like, the biggest [laugh] biggest, I think, theme that we are seeing, whether it's infrastructure, data science, data analytics, in all of these spaces.Corey: I get a lot of interesting feedback for my comparative takes on the various cloud providers, and one thing that I've said for a while about Google Cloud has been that its developer experience is unparalleled compared to basically anything else on the market. It makes things just work, and that's important because a bad developer experience has the unfortunate expression—at least for me—of, “Oh, this isn't working the way I want it to. I must be dumb.” No, it's a bad user experience for you. What I am seeing emerge as well from Google Cloud is an incredible emphasis—and I do think they're aligned here—on storytelling, and doing so effectively.You're there communicating visually; Forrest is there, basically trying to be the me of Google Cloud—which is what I assume he's doing; he would argue everything about that and he'd be right to do it, but that's what I'm calling it because this is my show; he can come on and argue with me himself if he takes issue with it. But I love the emphasis on storytelling and unifying solutions and the rest, as opposed to throwing everything at the wall to see what sticks to it. I think there's more intention being put into an awful lot of not just what you're building, but how you're talking about it, now it's integrated with the other things that you're building. That's no small thing.Priyanka: Yeah. That is so hard, especially when you know the cloud space; like, hundreds of products, they all have their unique requirement to solve a problem, but nobody cares, right? Like, as a consumer, I shouldn't have to care that there are 127 products or whatever. It doesn't matter to me as a consumer or customer, all that matters is whether I can solve my business problem with a set of your tools, right? So, that's exactly why, like, we have this team that I work in that I'm a part of, which has an entire focus on storytelling.We do YouTube videos with storytelling, we do art like this, I've also dabbled into comics a little bit. And we continue to go back to the drawing board with how else we can tell these stories. I know—I mentioned this to Forrest—I'm working on a song as well, which I have never done before, and [laugh] I think I'm going to butcher it. I kind of have it ready for, like, six months but never released it, right, because I'm just too scared to do that. [laugh] but anyway.Corey: Ship and then turn the internet off for a week and it'll be gone regardless, by the time you come back. Problem solved until the reporters start calling, and then you have problems.Priyanka: I might have to just do that, and be, like, you know what world? Keep saying whatever you want to say, I'm not here. [laugh]. But anyway, going back to that point of storytelling, and it's so—I think we have weaved it into the process. And it's going really well, and now we are investing more in, like, R&D and doing more of how we can tell stories in different ways.Corey: I have to say, I'm a big fan of the way that you're approaching this. If people want to learn more about what you're up to—and arguably, as I argue they should get a copy of your book because it is glorious—where's the best place to find you?Priyanka: Thank you. Okay, so LinkedIn and Twitter are my platforms that I check every single day, so you can message me, connect with me, I am available as—my handle is pvergadia. I don't know if they have [crosstalk 00:31:11]—Corey: Oh, this is all going in the [show notes 00:31:13] you need not worry.Priyanka: Okay, perfect. So yeah, I don't have to spell it because my last name is hard. [laugh]. So, you'll find it in the show notes. But yeah, you can connect with me there. And you will find at the top of both of my profiles, the link to order the book, so you can do it there.Corey: Excellent. And I've already done so, and I'm just waiting for it to arrive. So, this is—it's going to be an exciting read if nothing else. One of these days, I'd have to actually live-tweet a reading thereof. We'll see how that plays out.Priyanka: That would be amazing.Corey: Be careful what you wish for. Some of the snark could be a little too cutting; we have to be cautious of that.Priyanka: [laugh]. I'm always scared of your tweets. Like, do I want to read this or not? [laugh].Corey: If nothing else, it at least tries to be funny. So, there is that.Priyanka: Yes. Yes, for sure.Corey: I really—Priyanka: No, I'm excited. I'm excited for when you get a chance to read it and just tweet whatever you feel like, from, you know, all the bits and pieces that I've brought together. So, I would love to get your take. [laugh].Corey: Oh, you will, one way or another. That's one of those non-optional things. It's one of the fun parts of dealing with me. It's, “Aw crap. That shitposter is back again.” Like the kid outside of your yard just from across the street, staring at your house and pointing and it's, “Oh, dear. Here we go.” Throwing stones.Priyanka: [laugh]. I'm excited either way. [laugh].Corey: He's got a platypus with him this time. What's going on? It happens. We deal with what we have to. Thank you so much for being so generous with your time. I appreciate it.Priyanka: Thank you so much for having me. It was amazing. You are a celebrity, and I wanted to be, you know, a part of your show for a long time, so I'm glad we're able to make it work.Corey: You are welcome back anytime.Priyanka: I will. [laugh].Corey: An absolute pleasure to talk with you. Thanks again.Priyanka: Thank you.Corey: Priyanka Vergadia staff developer—but you call it developer advocate—at Google Cloud. I'm Cloud Economist Corey Quinn, and this is Screaming in the Cloud. If you've enjoyed this podcast, please leave a five-star review on whatever platform you're using to listen to this thing, whereas if you've hated it, please do the exact same thing, making sure to hit the like and subscribe buttons on the YouTubes because that's where it is. But if you did hate it, also leave an insulting, angry comment but not using words. I want you to draw a picture telling me exactly what you didn't like about this episode.Corey: If your AWS bill keeps rising and your blood pressure is doing the same, then you need The Duckbill Group. We help companies fix their AWS bill by making it smaller and less horrifying. The Duckbill Group works for you, not AWS. We tailor recommendations to your business and we get to the point. Visit duckbillgroup.com to get started.Announcer: This has been a HumblePod production. Stay humble.
Jordan Clarkson had the most efficient career-best — 45 points on 15-21 shooting. Jazz beat the Kings 134-125.
An analogy on how cooking a Sweet Potato mirrors, how we deal with our own state of well-being. Come along this impromptu cooking lesson. Trust me you will enjoy it! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Today's episode will give you a few basic tips and tricks to turn the most skittish chef into a confident cook capable of making quick, healthy and delicious dishes. Even if you do know your way around the kitchen, you may still learn something new here, so don't miss it! ------------------ Find more from Willpower Not Required and Fired Up Fitness: https://firedupfitness.ca/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCknO0eGWZt4WitWP3fMq6WA Instagram: http://instagram.com/firedupfitnesscoaching Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/firedupfitnesscoaching [episode music courtesy of purple-planet.com] --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/willpowernotrequired/message
https://davidbernsteinmd.com/https://www.kathysconsulting.com/Melissa@thepoweroffivetestKitchen.comk
RJ Harvey joined Potatoes USA in 2017 as its Culinary Director, where he develops flavors, ideas, and concepts for the U.S. potato industry. RJ called into the podcast to talk about his background, role in fueling performance through potatoes, and impacting healthful changes across the culinary industry by adding potatoes to menus. RJ also talks about putting potatoes on center stage at Potato Expo 2022 to showcase their diversity, adaptability, and versatility. Joining him will be Food Network Personality Simon Majumdar for two fun and educational Expo Stage sessions. For RJ's recipes for the holiday season, visit potatogoodness.com. To register for Potato Expo 2022, Jan. 5-6, in Anaheim, California, visit potato-expo.com.
Do you find it difficult to build in activities at home to promote your child's learning and development? Well there's a task that you are likely already doing that can promoted cognitive development while bonding with your child. In this episode we reveal what what that activity is, why it is important, and how you can make it part of your regular home routine with your child. Recap: Let's Get Cooking! Make it fun! Start with having them observe, ask questions, and help with tasks such as grabbing utensils or making the table. prepare simple meals that take less than 15 mins like sandwiches, microwaving food, smoothies, or making lemonade. Find creative ways to challenge your child's creativity and cognitive abilities. Resources/References/Links: Visual Recipes: https://able2learn.com/categories/visual-recipes Cookware set for children https://rb.gy/vsumvm Subscribe to the Podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcast, & Stitcher and Leave a Review Pure Hearts Therapy Website Follow me: Facebook: Facebook Pure Hearts Therapy Facebook Autism Family Toolkit Autism Family Toolkit Facebook Group Instagram
Caitlin & Christina discuss their love of food and the mistakes they've both made in the kitchen! We're this fun all the time, so don't forget to follow us on Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/working.on.it/
Are you hungry to learn English? Then feast right here on some food-inspired idioms which will invoke the Idiomania Paradox. You'll be left satisfied yet wanting more.
Rosemary and Mikah show you some apps and accessories you can use to craft cocktails, bake delicious treats, and cook delicious meals. MEATER Smart Meat Thermometer Twelve South HoverBar Duo Crouton: Cooking Companion Paprika 3 HelloFresh Highball News Unboxing and reviewing Apple's MagSafe Battery Pack Facebook's cloud gaming service hits iOS devices as a web app Ultra Wideband Availability Expands to Argentina, Paraguay, and More You can check your iPhone for Pegasus spyware (unlikely as it is) Mi Temperature & Humidity Digital Clock Aqara HomeKit Accessories Now Available From Online Apple Store in Europe Astronomer shows stunning Milky Way iPhone photo Breathable 1.0 iDOS emulator may be removed from the App Store ↦ Nomad Opens Pre-Orders for $35 Leather Cover for Apple's MagSafe Battery Pack Shortcuts Corner Ms Dee asks for a Shortcut that will create alarms throughout the day for sourdough maintenance and care. Terry needs a Shortcut that will let them schedule timers based on their breaks — either 15 or 25 minutes. Feedback Following up with James regarding lossless audio availability on the HomePod Mini. TJ needs an app for tracking media that makes it swift and easy to add new entries. App Caps Rosemary's App Cap: Fluidics Mikah's App Cap: T-Mobile Test Drive Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can contribute to iOS Today by leaving us a voicemail at 757-504-iPad (757-504-4723) or sending an email to iOSToday@TWiT.tv. Sponsor: sennheiser.com/podcast use code IOS
Rosemary and Mikah show you some apps and accessories you can use to craft cocktails, bake delicious treats, and cook delicious meals. MEATER Smart Meat Thermometer Twelve South HoverBar Duo Crouton: Cooking Companion Paprika 3 HelloFresh Highball News Unboxing and reviewing Apple's MagSafe Battery Pack Facebook's cloud gaming service hits iOS devices as a web app Ultra Wideband Availability Expands to Argentina, Paraguay, and More You can check your iPhone for Pegasus spyware (unlikely as it is) Mi Temperature & Humidity Digital Clock Aqara HomeKit Accessories Now Available From Online Apple Store in Europe Astronomer shows stunning Milky Way iPhone photo Breathable 1.0 iDOS emulator may be removed from the App Store ↦ Nomad Opens Pre-Orders for $35 Leather Cover for Apple's MagSafe Battery Pack Shortcuts Corner Ms Dee asks for a Shortcut that will create alarms throughout the day for sourdough maintenance and care. Terry needs a Shortcut that will let them schedule timers based on their breaks — either 15 or 25 minutes. Feedback Following up with James regarding lossless audio availability on the HomePod Mini. TJ needs an app for tracking media that makes it swift and easy to add new entries. App Caps Rosemary's App Cap: Fluidics Mikah's App Cap: T-Mobile Test Drive Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can contribute to iOS Today by leaving us a voicemail at 757-504-iPad (757-504-4723) or sending an email to iOSToday@TWiT.tv. Sponsor: sennheiser.com/podcast use code IOS
Rosemary and Mikah show you some apps and accessories you can use to craft cocktails, bake delicious treats, and cook delicious meals. MEATER Smart Meat Thermometer Twelve South HoverBar Duo Crouton: Cooking Companion Paprika 3 HelloFresh Highball News Unboxing and reviewing Apple's MagSafe Battery Pack Facebook's cloud gaming service hits iOS devices as a web app Ultra Wideband Availability Expands to Argentina, Paraguay, and More You can check your iPhone for Pegasus spyware (unlikely as it is) Mi Temperature & Humidity Digital Clock Aqara HomeKit Accessories Now Available From Online Apple Store in Europe Astronomer shows stunning Milky Way iPhone photo Breathable 1.0 iDOS emulator may be removed from the App Store ↦ Nomad Opens Pre-Orders for $35 Leather Cover for Apple's MagSafe Battery Pack Shortcuts Corner Ms Dee asks for a Shortcut that will create alarms throughout the day for sourdough maintenance and care. Terry needs a Shortcut that will let them schedule timers based on their breaks — either 15 or 25 minutes. Feedback Following up with James regarding lossless audio availability on the HomePod Mini. TJ needs an app for tracking media that makes it swift and easy to add new entries. App Caps Rosemary's App Cap: Fluidics Mikah's App Cap: T-Mobile Test Drive Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can contribute to iOS Today by leaving us a voicemail at 757-504-iPad (757-504-4723) or sending an email to iOSToday@TWiT.tv. Sponsor: sennheiser.com/podcast use code IOS
Rosemary and Mikah show you some apps and accessories you can use to craft cocktails, bake delicious treats, and cook delicious meals. MEATER Smart Meat Thermometer Twelve South HoverBar Duo Crouton: Cooking Companion Paprika 3 HelloFresh Highball News Unboxing and reviewing Apple's MagSafe Battery Pack Facebook's cloud gaming service hits iOS devices as a web app Ultra Wideband Availability Expands to Argentina, Paraguay, and More You can check your iPhone for Pegasus spyware (unlikely as it is) Mi Temperature & Humidity Digital Clock Aqara HomeKit Accessories Now Available From Online Apple Store in Europe Astronomer shows stunning Milky Way iPhone photo Breathable 1.0 iDOS emulator may be removed from the App Store ↦ Nomad Opens Pre-Orders for $35 Leather Cover for Apple's MagSafe Battery Pack Shortcuts Corner Ms Dee asks for a Shortcut that will create alarms throughout the day for sourdough maintenance and care. Terry needs a Shortcut that will let them schedule timers based on their breaks — either 15 or 25 minutes. Feedback Following up with James regarding lossless audio availability on the HomePod Mini. TJ needs an app for tracking media that makes it swift and easy to add new entries. App Caps Rosemary's App Cap: Fluidics Mikah's App Cap: T-Mobile Test Drive Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can contribute to iOS Today by leaving us a voicemail at 757-504-iPad (757-504-4723) or sending an email to iOSToday@TWiT.tv. Sponsor: sennheiser.com/podcast use code IOS
Rosemary and Mikah show you some apps and accessories you can use to craft cocktails, bake delicious treats, and cook delicious meals. MEATER Smart Meat Thermometer Twelve South HoverBar Duo Crouton: Cooking Companion Paprika 3 HelloFresh Highball News Unboxing and reviewing Apple's MagSafe Battery Pack Facebook's cloud gaming service hits iOS devices as a web app Ultra Wideband Availability Expands to Argentina, Paraguay, and More You can check your iPhone for Pegasus spyware (unlikely as it is) Mi Temperature & Humidity Digital Clock Aqara HomeKit Accessories Now Available From Online Apple Store in Europe Astronomer shows stunning Milky Way iPhone photo Breathable 1.0 iDOS emulator may be removed from the App Store ↦ Nomad Opens Pre-Orders for $35 Leather Cover for Apple's MagSafe Battery Pack Shortcuts Corner Ms Dee asks for a Shortcut that will create alarms throughout the day for sourdough maintenance and care. Terry needs a Shortcut that will let them schedule timers based on their breaks — either 15 or 25 minutes. Feedback Following up with James regarding lossless audio availability on the HomePod Mini. TJ needs an app for tracking media that makes it swift and easy to add new entries. App Caps Rosemary's App Cap: Fluidics Mikah's App Cap: T-Mobile Test Drive Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can contribute to iOS Today by leaving us a voicemail at 757-504-iPad (757-504-4723) or sending an email to iOSToday@TWiT.tv. Sponsor: sennheiser.com/podcast use code IOS
Rosemary and Mikah show you some apps and accessories you can use to craft cocktails, bake delicious treats, and cook delicious meals. MEATER Smart Meat Thermometer Twelve South HoverBar Duo Crouton: Cooking Companion Paprika 3 HelloFresh Highball News Unboxing and reviewing Apple's MagSafe Battery Pack Facebook's cloud gaming service hits iOS devices as a web app Ultra Wideband Availability Expands to Argentina, Paraguay, and More You can check your iPhone for Pegasus spyware (unlikely as it is) Mi Temperature & Humidity Digital Clock Aqara HomeKit Accessories Now Available From Online Apple Store in Europe Astronomer shows stunning Milky Way iPhone photo Breathable 1.0 iDOS emulator may be removed from the App Store ↦ Nomad Opens Pre-Orders for $35 Leather Cover for Apple's MagSafe Battery Pack Shortcuts Corner Ms Dee asks for a Shortcut that will create alarms throughout the day for sourdough maintenance and care. Terry needs a Shortcut that will let them schedule timers based on their breaks — either 15 or 25 minutes. Feedback Following up with James regarding lossless audio availability on the HomePod Mini. TJ needs an app for tracking media that makes it swift and easy to add new entries. App Caps Rosemary's App Cap: Fluidics Mikah's App Cap: T-Mobile Test Drive Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can contribute to iOS Today by leaving us a voicemail at 757-504-iPad (757-504-4723) or sending an email to iOSToday@TWiT.tv. Sponsor: sennheiser.com/podcast use code IOS
Rosemary and Mikah show you some apps and accessories you can use to craft cocktails, bake delicious treats, and cook delicious meals. MEATER Smart Meat Thermometer Twelve South HoverBar Duo Crouton: Cooking Companion Paprika 3 HelloFresh Highball News Unboxing and reviewing Apple's MagSafe Battery Pack Facebook's cloud gaming service hits iOS devices as a web app Ultra Wideband Availability Expands to Argentina, Paraguay, and More You can check your iPhone for Pegasus spyware (unlikely as it is) Mi Temperature & Humidity Digital Clock Aqara HomeKit Accessories Now Available From Online Apple Store in Europe Astronomer shows stunning Milky Way iPhone photo Breathable 1.0 iDOS emulator may be removed from the App Store ↦ Nomad Opens Pre-Orders for $35 Leather Cover for Apple's MagSafe Battery Pack Shortcuts Corner Ms Dee asks for a Shortcut that will create alarms throughout the day for sourdough maintenance and care. Terry needs a Shortcut that will let them schedule timers based on their breaks — either 15 or 25 minutes. Feedback Following up with James regarding lossless audio availability on the HomePod Mini. TJ needs an app for tracking media that makes it swift and easy to add new entries. App Caps Rosemary's App Cap: Fluidics Mikah's App Cap: T-Mobile Test Drive Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can contribute to iOS Today by leaving us a voicemail at 757-504-iPad (757-504-4723) or sending an email to iOSToday@TWiT.tv. Sponsor: sennheiser.com/podcast use code IOS
Rosemary and Mikah show you some apps and accessories you can use to craft cocktails, bake delicious treats, and cook delicious meals. MEATER Smart Meat Thermometer Twelve South HoverBar Duo Crouton: Cooking Companion Paprika 3 HelloFresh Highball News Unboxing and reviewing Apple's MagSafe Battery Pack Facebook's cloud gaming service hits iOS devices as a web app Ultra Wideband Availability Expands to Argentina, Paraguay, and More You can check your iPhone for Pegasus spyware (unlikely as it is) Mi Temperature & Humidity Digital Clock Aqara HomeKit Accessories Now Available From Online Apple Store in Europe Astronomer shows stunning Milky Way iPhone photo Breathable 1.0 iDOS emulator may be removed from the App Store ↦ Nomad Opens Pre-Orders for $35 Leather Cover for Apple's MagSafe Battery Pack Shortcuts Corner Ms Dee asks for a Shortcut that will create alarms throughout the day for sourdough maintenance and care. Terry needs a Shortcut that will let them schedule timers based on their breaks — either 15 or 25 minutes. Feedback Following up with James regarding lossless audio availability on the HomePod Mini. TJ needs an app for tracking media that makes it swift and easy to add new entries. App Caps Rosemary's App Cap: Fluidics Mikah's App Cap: T-Mobile Test Drive Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can contribute to iOS Today by leaving us a voicemail at 757-504-iPad (757-504-4723) or sending an email to iOSToday@TWiT.tv. Sponsor: sennheiser.com/podcast use code IOS
Today on the show we are celebrating Louisville Jess's 29th birthday! She picked the book this week called "With the Fire on High" by Elizabeth Acevedo. Listen as we gush about the beautiful cover art and appreciate all the realities the author wrote into the Emoni's story. We are also serving you up some bad reviews at the end of the show so stick around for that! Thanks for tuning in! We would love for you to subscribe and leave us a review. Find us at www.outtafivestars.com Follow us on Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok we're @OuttaFiveStars. Music: https://www.purple-planet.com
Learn about Container load balancing on Google Kubernetes Engine. Original blog post. Get Cooking in Cloud on YouTubeMore Google Cloud Reader here
Congratulations to Blaney S. and Danielle F., two of East Central High School's Practicum in Culinary students, for their acceptance into The Culinary Institute of America, San Antonio campus.Article Link
Learn about choosing the right load balancer. Original blog post. Get Cooking in Cloud on YouTube More Google Cloud Reader here
TRIGGER WARNING: We do discuss statistics, mental illness, and anxiety and depression in children in case this is triggering for anyone.Parenting issues today are not the same that our parents were faced with when we were growing up. Things have changed drastically, and our amazing kids are getting sicker, with more behavioral issues. What is actually going on? We discuss all of this with HolisticMomMD, Dr. Madiha Saeed! She's a super mom and super doctor and super inspiring. Also, ever wonder what Doctors have in their medicine cabinets? Or, in their pantry? What do they feed their kids? We get into all of this and more! Dr. Madiha even shares her recipe for healthy cake and cookies!
Not a great episode for audio listeners, but since Matt and Adam aren't here I thought why not try something new! A cooking show called Soft Crew Cooking! We make the Soft Crew Bagel Supreme and I know you are going to love it! Enjoy!
Cooking wasn’t always a joyful activity, in fact Carolyn gave up cooking for the two of us within two weeks of being married, so what’s changed in our lives that home cooked meals are seen as a central activity and essential to the health of our family. Join us this week as we talk adapting to a new diet, favorite go-to recipes and kitchen items, and most notably make ourselves hungry with all this food talk.
Trish talks about her favorite pantry staples and gives you ideas for fun, simple meals that make life less monotonous. She also gives her recommendations for great foodies on social media and talks about The Spanish Princess.
The holidays are here! Today on Change Makers we're discussing gift ideas, traditions and support. Hear some great gift ideas for adults and children and what you can look for when picking the perfect present. Then, learn how to modify traditions to be accessible and how you can provide support for loved ones experiencing vision loss. After that, we'll check in with the ConnectCenter.Paul Ferrara: APH FavoritesLisa Lloyd: Seedlings.org, Fighting Blindness, Guide Dogs for the Blind, Toy orchestraMelanie Peskoe: APH GiftsPris Rogers: Vision Aware, Family Handbook, Making Life More LivableConnectCenter: FamilyConnect.com, VisionAware, Foundation for Blind Children Seeitourway.org: Accessible Santa Letter campaign, Jingle Jam Let's Get Cooking with 12 Days of Recipe, Button Trees, Blindfold Twister, Braille Flashcards and Embossed Pictures
Let's Pause Podcast (Nughe and Lola) caught up with Vegan extraordinaire Tomi @vegannigerian. She shares with us her journey on becoming a vegan, mouth-watering dishes and some inspirational tips on how you can become a vegan too. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/lets-pause-podcast/message
Compass Retirement is a place where we like to share our lives with you. We know life isn’t just about retirement. Now more than ever the holidays are a special time. In this special episode Angela share a secret family recipe that you could use for Thanksgiving. Three takeaways: Thanksgiving menus Having the Right Ingredients Time to Get Cooking
Hello Dog Lovers! What an honor it is for us to have Dr. Judy Morgan on the show with us! She is an integrated veterinarian with two award-winning practices in southern New Jersey. She is a sought-after speaker and best-selling author of four books on holistic pet health care and feeding. She has written hundreds of blogs and articles for print and online magazines and been interviewed on hundreds of radio shows. Her goal is to transform the lives of ten million pets worldwide.Dr. Morgan, why are you so passionate about canine nutrition?When many of us think of the best food to feed our dogs, we get overwhelmed with all of the options out there. Is it really that complicated?One food isn’t the right fit for all dogs, right?Seeing food as therapy for our dogs, what health issues can be improved with a good diet?Tell us more about Food Energetics.Can you give us some examples of warm vs cool foods?Why do so many recipes that can be found online fall short?For those of us on a budget, can we still provide a healthy and balanced diet?What are your thoughts on variety?You help people with formulating diets for their dogs?You have some nutritional and easy recipes for meals and treats?For people with more than one dog, how to do feed with the challenge of different ages or medical conditions?Learn more about Dr. Morgan, her books and other products and perhaps reach out to her for a consult by going to. https://drjudymorgan.com/for pup loaf recipe: https://drjudymorgan.com/blogs/recipes/how-to-make-homemade-puploafOFFER: Use code wagoutloud25 for 25% off of any of Dr. Judy’s books at https://drjudymorgan.com/Dr. Judy’s Books:Yin & Yang Nutrition for Dogs: Maximizing Health with Whole Foods, Not DrugsWhat's For Dinner, Dexter?: Cooking For Your Dog Using Chinese Medicine TheoryCanine Kitchen Capers: A Humorous Look at Preparing Food for Dogs (& Spouses)We appreciate our sponsor: ParsleyPet . Be sure to use the code WAG at checkout to receive $50 off of the Nutritional Blueprint Thanks for Listening!Thanks so much for tuning in again this week. Have some feedback you’d like to share? Leave a note in the Bark About it section. Or you can click on the social media buttons to share an episode.Special thanks to Dr. Judy Morgan for being on the show. Catch you next time!Also, don’t forget to Subscribe for FREE: Apple Podcasts | Android | Spotify I Stitcher I iHeartRADIO“The Wag Out Loud pawdcast is supported by listeners like you! The show started as a passion project that would help all of us make well-informed decisions for our dogs’ health and well-being. After many amazing guests, intriguing topics and incredible feedback, the WOL pawdcast is hitting a nerve. If you are interested in having your dog live healthier and longer and are finding value in this podcast, why not contribute to the show’s success? It would not be possible to consistently produce a quality show without the listener support that is received. Thanks to all of the dog lovers out there!”
Vegetable prices surged near YTD highs last month, buoyed by strong demand and lower production. Join Rabobank’s Oscar Tjakra and Michael Magdovitz as they analyze MDE Palm Oil and CBOT Soy Oil supply & demand fundamentals and the price risks ahead. Can the Q3 2020 momentum be sustained? Will slowing demand and stronger supply prospects cool the rally? Michael and Oscar discuss these points and their price outlooks on the podcast. This episode also appeared on our sister podcast RaboResearch Agri Commodities
Vegetable prices surged near YTD highs last month, buoyed by strong demand and lower production. Join Rabobank’s Oscar Tjakra and Michael Magdovitz as they analyze MDE Palm Oil and CBOT Soy Oil supply & demand fundamentals and the price risks ahead. Can the Q3 2020 momentum be sustained? Will slowing demand and stronger supply prospects cool the rally? Michael and Oscar discuss these points and their price outlooks on the podcast.
Speaking with Melanie Raby that has struggled with her weight, fitness and insecurities. Her past has made way for her to catapult her vision and passion to be fit and happy! Melanie Raby linktr.ee/MelRaby Lady Myya Links: Do you want to SAVE MONEY ON YOUR SAME MONTHLY BILLS/// DARE US TO GET YOUR BILLS LOWER. Then Click Here: https://upsocial.justviv.com/ Do you live with PAIN, anxiety, restlessness or just need a BOOST: https://www.winwithmdc.com/cp24/LadyMyya --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ladymyya/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ladymyya/support
Raddish Kids Get Cooking Today Cooking Club Box Pad Thai Noodles. Is this education food cooking box actually worth getting? Watch the hands on test to find out. Find As Seen On TV Products & Gadgets at the 9malls Store: https://www.amazon.com/shop/9malls Please support us on Patreon! Now is a great time if you've been on the fence: https://www.patreon.com/9malls Disclaimer: I may also receive compensation if a visitor clicks through to 9malls, or makes a purchase through Amazon or any affiliate link. I test each product on site thoroughly and give high marks to only the best. In the above video I received a free product sample to test. We are independently owned and the opinions expressed here are our own.
Meet COBs brother Keith - an aspiring quarantine chef, musician and lover of all that is TV. The Office Trivia makes a debut. If your into sibling rivalry, this is the session for you. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
With summer around the corner, and amateur cooks everywhere getting more practice than they ever expected, J.C. and Michael check in with some of their gentlemen friends on what everyone is cooking up at home right now.
Checkoff Contest Challenges Consumers to Get Cooking with American Lamb
We are super excited to share our cooking tips with you. Cooking making and baking is what we love best and we know you do too. It’s a lifelong adventure isn’t it? We’ll be inviting home cooks and professionals to share tips and give insights. We want to hear about your cooking inspiration and help with any questions you have so do get involved. Leave a voice message here: https://anchor.fm/greenwich-pantry/message or send an email to info@greenwichpantry.com happy drooling. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/greenwich-pantry/message
Priyanka Vergadia joins Mark Mirchandani today to talk shop with Travis DePuy about all things digital services. Travis is a product evangelist for xMatters, a company that provides digital services for clients in a way that makes it easy for them to “limit the blast radius” as they build and use their projects. At xMatters, customers can build an incident management workflow for their custom services and integrate the tools of their choice. Travis talks about service degradation and how xMatters helps clients optimize and manage their services to control instances of degradation. With programs like Google Stackdriver, xMatters can set limits and get alerts when thresholds are met, then use that information to fix performance. Later in the show, Travis talks about moving a large enterprise like xMatters to the cloud. Travis DePuy Travis DePuy is a Tinkerer of Things, Master of Hats and Father of Kitties. He is currently Head Product Evangelist at xMatters where he gets to talk to people about how they are doing Incident Management, DevOps notifications and anything else involving humans, processes and tools. Travis balances the stationary computer work with the fluid moving of Chen Taichi and is often found in the sun flowing the forms of the old ways. Cool things of the week Join us for Google Cloud Next ‘20: Digital Connect blog Connecting businesses and educators with advanced Hangouts Meet capabilities blog Interview xMatters site Site Reliability Engineering Book site Stackdriver site Migrating a monolith to GKE - Customer Story (Get Cooking in Cloud) video Question of the week How can I improve reliability/availability with the least amount of work? Codelabs site Migrating a monolithic application to microservices on Google Kubernetes Engine article Migrating a Monolith to Google Kubernetes Engine — An Overview blog Where can you find us next? You can find Priyanka online in her video series Get Cooking in Cloud and her series on Pub/Sub. You can see Mark in recently released Stack Chat videos.
If you want to know the Recipe for Success in your business you have come to the right place. This podcast is for entrepreneurs and business owners, who want to learn how to grow and market your business in a way that gives you a Competitive Edge, Inside each episode Paul shares his Secret Sauce where you will Learn new strategies, incites and ideas to grow and build a profitable business using the RIGHT INGREDIENTS and the CORRECT METHOD So Let's Get Cooking …
Given how heavy this week has been, Pete and I just have fun with how good the Lakers looked the other night, and prepare for the final preseason game. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Given how heavy this week has been, Pete and I just have fun with how good the Lakers looked the other night, and prepare for the final preseason game. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The podcast today is all about conversational AI and Dialogflow with our Google guest, Priyanka Vergadia. Priyanka explains to Mark Mirchandani and Brian Dorsey that conversational AI includes anything with a conversational component, such as chatbots, in anything from apps, to websites, to messenger programs. If it uses natural language understanding and processing to help humans and machines communicate, it can be classified as conversational AI. These programs work as translators so humans and computers can chat seamlessly. We discuss how people interact with conversational AI, maybe without even realizing it. From asking Google Home to set your alarm to getting customer service support at your favorite online store, AI is probably working behind the scenes to help. Priyanka also tells us all about Google’s natural language understanding and processing program, Dialogflow. Designed to simplify the process, Dialogflow allows you to input a simple idea like asking for coffee, and watch as the program automatically includes many of the different ways people would naturally ask for coffee. Coffee would be great right now! Listen in to find out the best (and worst) use cases and practices for this powerful tool! Priyanka Vergadia Priyanka Vergadia is a Developer Advocate at Google. She worked directly with customers for 1.5 years prior to recently joining Google Cloud Developer Relations team. She loves architecting cloud solutions and enjoys building conversational experiences. Her interest in Conversational AI led to the Deconstructing Chatbots YouTube series. Priyanka is currently starring in a new show called “Get Cooking in Cloud” where she will be sharing recipes to cook various business solutions on Google Cloud. Cool things of the week Least privilege for Cloud Functions using Cloud IAM blog Containerizing in the real world … of Minecraft blog Introducing the What-If Tool for Cloud AI Platform models blog Interview Chatbot Fail site Dialogflow site and docs Deconstructing Chatbots videos Codelab: Build your first Chatbot with Dialogflow site Question of the week How do you run a recurring python script? Where can you find us next? Priyanka will be at Codemotion Milan in October and GOTO Copenhagen in November. Brian will be at the office in Seattle, thinking about Compute Engine. Mark will be in Austin and the Bay Area working on new training content! Sound Effect Attribution “Small Group Laugh Set.wav” by Tim Kahn of Freesound.org “Whip Crack 01.wav” by CGEffex of Freesound.org
Pastor Phil Freeman preaches a message entitled "Lets Get Cooking" on July 21st, 2019.
In this episode Greg is joined by the authors of the Azure DevOps Server 2019 Cookbook, Tarun Arora and Utkarsh Shigihalli, where they discuss the book (funny that), its different recipes, their favorite and least favorite pieces, creating Azure DevOps Extensions, plus news, tips, tricks and more... For feedback contact radiotfs@outlook.com, call +1 425 233-8379 or visit http://www.radiotfs.com
In this episode Greg is joined by the authors of the Azure DevOps Server 2019 Cookbook, Tarun Arora and Utkarsh Shigihalli, where they discuss the book (funny that), its different recipes, their favorite and least favorite pieces, creating Azure DevOps Extensions, plus news, tips, tricks and more... For feedback contact radiotfs@outlook.com, call +1 425 233-8379 or visit http://www.radiotfs.com
Book ClubWe’re sharing another Protip from Monique, a listener and avid cookbook club member. If you’re someone who loves a good cookbook, join a group online! Monique shares why she loves an online club and some hashtags to get you connected.Monique recommends Get Cooking (#getcookingcookbookclub) or Rainy Day Bites (#rainydaybitescookbookclub). Food52 (#f52cookbookclub ) and Saveur (#saveurcookbookclub)She also offers the ckbk Club (#ckbkclub) as a way to connect with her and her company ckbk.
In today's episode of the Vegetarian Zen podcast we are joined by Marly McMillen Beelman who is the founder and creative director of Namely Marly, a blog focused on providing resources for healthy lifestyles, creative living, and healthy vegan recipes. Marly just released a book earlier this month called The Everything Vegan Meal Prep Cookbook.
In today’s episode of the Vegetarian Zen podcast we are joined by Marly McMillen Beelman who is the founder and creative director of Namely Marly, a blog focused on providing resources for healthy lifestyles, creative living, and healthy vegan recipes. Marly is also the director of the Chopped Conference, host of the Chopped Podcast, and … The post Let’s Get Cooking with Marly McMillen of Namely Marly! (VZ 306) appeared first on Vegetarian Zen.
Breakfast is a great way to jump start your creativity? What's coming! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/millennialmotivator/support
As evening approaches, we ask ourselves "What should we have for dinner?" Exhausted from a full day of work, we try to come up with something semi-decent to put on the table. Sometimes we punt and order take-out or fast food. Twenty-four hours later, the same scenario crops up again. Cooking instructor and expert Nevra Ledwon suggests that there is a better way to go about providing healthy meals for ourselves and our families. In episode #147, Nevra talked about "why" we should get cooking. Today, she gets into the "how." She walks us through a week of cooking and shows us how simple it can be, with just a little forethought and planning. She gives us strategies for using what food we have on hand, ideas for involving the family in meal planning, and tips for avoiding our perfectionistic tendencies that make us stress about getting a dish exactly right. Novices and cooking veterans alike will glean ideas from Nevra's clear guidance. She shows us how cooking can truly be a joy and a wonderful tool for deep nourishment and lasting health. For more on Nevra, visit her blog: churnyourown.com. Please take our listener survey. Visit our website to learn more or make a donation: westonaprice.org. Check out our sponsors: Vintage Tradition and Ancestral Supplements.
Stainless steel insulated water bottles are commonplace today and have largely taken over from the glass vacuum flasks – the latter are just too delicate, especially for camping and hillwalking. And while the steel bottles are good are keeping stuff warm, the liquid has to be hot in the first place….or does it? Cauldryn Fyre … Continue reading Get Cooking with a Cauldryn at CES 2018 → The post Get Cooking with a Cauldryn at CES 2018 appeared first on Geek News Central.
The Total Tutor Neil Haley will interview Celebrity Chef Paula Deen. She will discuss At the Southern Table with Paula Deen: 150 Classic Recipes to share with Family and Friends Paula Deen has sold over 11 million copies of her 18 cookbooks. Deen's first live tour, “Paula Deen Live!” commenced in June 2014, and featured cooking demonstrations, games, and stories with Paula and her fans. The Lady & Sons, the Savannah, Georgia restaurant Paula founded with her sons, Jamie and Bobby Deen, remains one of the country's most popular regional restaurants. In 2015, Paula launched her first free mobile game, Paula Deen's Recipe Quest, in addition to her podcast, What's Cooking with Paula Deen, and radio show, Get Cooking with Paula Deen. That same year, Paula premiered her first show on EVINE Live and launched a pet food line with Hugs called Paula Deen Hugs Premium Select Pet Food. In the fall of 2015, Paula released her cookbook, Paula Deen Cuts The Fat: 250 Favorite Recipes All Lightened Up, which reached The New York Times Best Sellers List in under a week. Simultaneously, she competed in the twenty-first season of ABC's hit show “Dancing with the Stars,” and successfully made it halfway through the competition.
On this weeks show we have the brilliant Anne-Marie Lambert talking about her company Get Cooking. We talk about cooking, community, how to get started with different foods and so much more! Hope you enjoy the show!
What is the Apothecary Kitchen?! A vegetable only cafe, almost exclusively locally sourced with a casual, homely vibe, situated in Hamilton, Newcastle (Australia). The intention for the customer is to interact with the staff to find out what is on offer (there are no menus), making the experience one of connection and discovery. Ben talks Listen In The post TNN #12 Get Cooking with Ben from Apothecary Kitchen appeared first on The Wellness Couch.
Living with an autoimmune disorder? Let’s talk about The Autoimmune Paleo Cookbook by Mickey Trescott and see what you can do to reverse it. It may be hard to believe, but it is absolutely possible to change your future. Thousands of us have done it, and with nothing more “medical” than eating great food and making... Keep Reading > The post Get Cooking and Get Well With The Autoimmune Paleo Cookbook by Mickey Trescott appeared first on Gluten Free Paleo Health Advice | Beverly Meyer | Podcast & Resources.
Get Cooking With God - March 23, 2014 - Kevin Weatherby
Get Cooking With God - March 23, 2014 - Kevin Weatherby
Mollie Katzen, with over six million books in print, is listed by the New York Times as one of the best-selling cookbook authors of all time. A 2007 inductee into the James Beard Cookbook Hall of Fame—and largely credited with moving plant-based cuisine from the fringe to the center of the American dinner plate—Katzen has been named by Health Magazine as one of The Five Women Who Changed the Way We Eat, and she has been a member of the faculty at Healthy Kitchens, Healthy Lives, the groundbreaking annual symposium co-hosted by The Culinary Institute of America and the Harvard School of Public Health, since its inception. Katzen is a charter member of the Harvard School of Public Health Nutrition Roundtable and an inaugural honoree of the Natural Health Hall of Fame. An award-winning illustrator and designer as well as bestselling cookbook author and popular public speaker, she is best known as the creator of the groundbreaking classics Moosewood Cookbook, and The Enchanted Broccoli Forest. Her other books include the award-winning, best-selling children's cookbook trilogy, dubbed “the gold standard of children's cookbooks” by the New York Times: Pretend Soup, Honest Pretzels, and Salad People. Mollie Katzen has collaborated on several projects with Walter Willett, MD of Harvard, most notably the book Eat, Drink, & Weigh Less. Her other titles include Still Life with Menu, Vegetable Heaven, Sunlight Café, The Vegetable Dishes I Can't Live Without, and Get Cooking. From 2003 through 2011, Katzen was a consultant to Harvard University Dining Services, and co-creator of their Food Literacy Project. Mollie Katzen's newest project (and 12th book) is The Heart of the Plate: Vegetarian Recipes for a New Generation (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, September 2013) – a 500-page tome, reflecting the evolution of her own cooking, and lavishly illustrated with her own watercolors, photos, and collages.