I bought cast iron pan which I think is the best ever purchase I made.

  • CrimeDad@lemmy.crimedad.work
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    My house. Even though we have to pay taxes and mortgage interest, it beats paying rent to a landlord. Also, we bought it in 2020 and it has appreciated it value significantly since then. However, that appreciation is kind of fictitious to me, because if we sold the house it’s unlikely that we’d be able to buy a similar one in the same area for less. So, it’s just a nice house.

    • books@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Yeah housing gains do nothing for you if you want to stay in the same area.

      Theoretically you’ll have more equity so you can take out loans, but with high interest rates you’ll likely avoid that… and your property taxes will eventually go up since your home value has gone up.

      Hate the fact that my house has gained so much.

      • CrimeDad@lemmy.crimedad.work
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        1 year ago

        At least property tax increases usually aren’t as bad as rent increases, at least in my experience.

        My apparently controversial take is that flat property taxes should be abolished and the imputed rent of a given property should be progressively taxed as income instead.

      • no banana@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        For anyone reading this, do not “get into” pocket knives. You’ll not know what to do with all the damn knives!

        • teawrecks@sopuli.xyz
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          1 year ago

          Give them away to friends and family who aren’t into knives. There are a lot of garbage knives out there, so it helps to have a friend who knows what I should be using and how I should take care of it.

    • PeepinGoodArgs@reddthat.com
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      1 year ago

      This and knife sharpening kit. I brought back two Farberware pieces of crap and use them more than my Wusthof chef’s knife now.

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          1 year ago

          It is worth learning. A single two sided whetstone and some basic skill will give you sharp knives for the rest of your life.

          Bonus, keep your cheap knives. They are typically a softer metal that will require maintenance more often so you can practice.

          Also learn when you need to sharpen and when you need to hone. Your knife may be sharp but the edge is out of shape (folded, bent over). A few swipes of a hone and you could be back to 80-90% sharp.

          At this point I use medium value knives and sharpen them once a year. I have no regrets regarding learning to sharpen with a whetstone. I also typically don’t sharpen beyond 1000 grit and it’s still enough for people to remark on how sharp the knives are.

          Best of luck.

          • Scratch@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            Instead of a hone you could make a strop. A 2”x10” bit of leather, buy a stick of stropping compound and you get to feel like an old timey barber.

          • Sagifurius@lemm.ee
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            1 year ago

            That’s no longer true. A dishwasher safe trend took over, most cheap knives are extremely hard now. I’ve a nice old set of not quite stainless that sharpen very easily and the ten thousand grit polish stone I have actually does something. Most new knives I sharpen for people I don’t even go over 3000 because they are far too hard to take much effect. My personal favorites are old Wiltshire 70s wood handled inox cleavers and Opinel knives, those opinel especially turn into a razor incredibly easily.

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          1 year ago

          If you know how to use it. If you do not know got to use it a kit that you just stick in the knife is going to be way better.

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        1 year ago

        Couldn’t agree more sharp knives don’t slip. Yet some people out there are purposely blunting kitchen knives.

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        I bought some knife set that cost like 1000 dollars. It was an impulsive buy when I won an award at work.

        Damn I learned expensive knives are worth every penny. I’ve had them twenty years. Normally I’d buy a knife and have to throw it away after a couple of years because they couldn’t be sharpened as they were cheap.

        I cook every day and it makes it so much easier.

  • Margot Robbie@lemm.ee
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    The best purchase I’ve made this year has to be the tickets for the “Barbie” movie on opening day July 21st. As I watched the movie in theater (the best way to watch a movie), I was literally moved to tears by the performance of the lead actress, whom I might add, deserves an Oscar this year.

    Fellow lemmings, I, for one, will definitely be buying “Barbie” on Blu-ray to have it in my collection.

    Multiple copies, in fact.

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      Two questions for you!

      1.) What is the most useful thing we in the Lemmy community can do to help you get that Oscar?

      2.) I have a secret Santa this year coming up in a month that I am a part of with some friends. Would you be interested in leaving a comment for a friend of mine in response to this that I can show them a month from now for the secret santa?

      “Hey Rome, this is Margot Robbie wishing you a merry Christmas and happy new year?”, or something like that?

      Thanks for being cool either way and good luck getting nominated this year!

    • 1984@lemmy.today
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      1 year ago

      You are the opposite of me, I got bored in 10 minutes and I turned it off after 30 minutes.

      It’s cool that people can enjoy so different things.

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    1 year ago

    Lasik. Being able to wake up in the morning and just see things with zero effort was life changing.

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      I’ve gotta chime in here with an opposing viewpoint. I got all laser lasik and while it mostly corrected my myopia (went from -5 to -0.5 sph), it gave me really bad astigmatism, to the point where night driving is much more dangerous for me. Glasses were a pain in the ass but at least they made things crystal clear. Post surgery everything except bright sunlight now has an annoying halo. I’m 3 years post surgery btw, and went back under the laser twice to try to get it corrected.

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        That scares me. I also have family members who got it decades back and for the most part they all still have to use glasses.

        I have ridiculously bad vision (-9.5 contact prescription) and bad astigmatism already, thankfully every optometrist ever has told me I’m a horrible candidate for it so I’ve never even had the possibility in my mind.

        • Chilly@sh.itjust.works
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          I just asked my eye doctor about this yesterday. She said LASIK would correct myopia for 10-15 years, then it’ll start coming back. She also said everyone loses up close eyesight about 45 so you’ll have to wear glasses or contacts anyway. Said it’s only worth it if you really want to see without putting on glasses.

    • FireTower@lemmy.world
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      It was shocking just how simple of a procedure it was when I got it. The actual surgery was under 3 minutes, the doctor joked about it he could complete it before a song finished at the start. Then my eyes were only recovering for like 36hrs if you don’t count eyedrops.

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    I bought a rice cooker, and it easily earns it’s permanent space on the countertop. Having the ability to cook 5 (dry) cups of rice and have it stay warm for days is so convenient.

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        I haven’t experienced any mold in mine. It’s a sealed unit (outside of it venting during cooking) and I’m no mycologist but I’m sure that mold spores wouldn’t be too appreciative of the cooking process.

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            Some times, also left over rice can be put in the refrigerator and then used for fried rice. Sometimes I’ll just make as much as I need on that occasion. Either way it comes out perfectly every time.

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        I’m guessing it’s a “keep warm” mode.

        I’m paranoid about it going bad or attracting pests…or even just using energy unnecessarily. But apparently it’s not bad for any of those things!

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        Otp got it. I have some in it right now that I made two nights ago. Texture wise, if I press down on it, it slowly springs back up. If that gives you a good sense of how it’s holding up. & it’s a sealed unit water can’t escape once it’s done cooking (it vents steam during that process)

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      This is one I thoroughly do not understand, maybe because I have not tried it, but cooking rice is already so easy, why would i need a separare appliance for it?

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        I have one and it’s a little easier to prepare, keep warm, and clean. If you eat a lot of rice, it’s worth it.

      • Pirate_lemmy_arrrrR@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        I thought the same thing for 20+ years. A nice rice cooker is great though. Ours has a yumcarb setting that my wife likes, which has a separate basket with holes in it. Most of the starch leaks out of the rice and pools below it.

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        I have a tiny kitchen so I appreciate being able to conveniently cook rice in the corner of one countertop, especially when I’m cooking with two pans on the stove.

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        1 year ago

        I’ve got a tiger jbv-a10u. I’d imagine there’s some other good competition in this space too though.

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      An opposing viewpoint here, from a couple of rice snobs – I’ve spent 30+ years (my entire life) with a rice cooker so I’ve never questioned not owning one.

      Ours broke (the gasket did, after 10 years), and the company that made it no longer exists (Sanyo), so we tried just cooking rice on the stovetop for a year before we bought a new one. It’s now been 2 years without a rice cooker, and we don’t plan on buying one of those fancy Korean ones I’ve been eyeing.

      We found the rice tastes better (a bit of burning at the bottom adds flavour), and we don’t need another appliance taking up space. The only thing I miss is the keep warm functionality, but now we just freeze the leftover rice and microwave it (or make fried rice with it).

      And now we have more counter and cupboard space to buy other gadgets, as we’re cooking enthusiasts.

      For large amounts of rice we luckily have a pressure cooker.

  • The Giant Korean@lemmy.world
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    Our air fryer. I thought it was all hype. I just didn’t know. It’s so convenient for so many things.

    Along similar lines, our Instant Pot. So covenient for so many things. We cook rice in it, chili, stews, my dog’s food, stock, etc.

    Our bidet. I cringe at how dirty my asshole used to be. It’s amazing.

    • electric_nan@lemmy.ml
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      Hell yeah. We got a ‘Ninja’ that is an air fryer and pressure cooker. We use it so much. We are also on team bidet. The worst thing about having a bidet is the feeling of disappointment you get whenever you take a shit somewhere else.

      • The Giant Korean@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        We’ve got a Ninja also. They’re great! I roast veggies in it, prep my meals for the week, all kinds of stuff.

        We were on vacation for a week and very much missing our bidet.

        • Question. We were gifted a Ninja air fryer ages ago and never use it because it’s giant and we live in a tiny apartment. The basket barely fits in the sink, the whole unit is like 3x the size of the basket, and having to shake it every few seconds so stuff doesn’t burn is a pain in the butt.

          I think we’ve used it like twice in three years. What exactly am I missing here? Did they fix these issues in newer models?

  • Macaroni_ninja@lemmy.world
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    Steam Deck - I know I’m not supposed to promote a specific product (change SD to a handheld gaming device if you must), but after my son was born, moved to a different country and changed jobs my life was rather hectic. I had no time to play videogames at all, which was my go-to method to unwind since I was a little kid. As an almost 40 years old responsible adult I can now still enjoy gaming in bite sized bursts, in bed, instead of scrolling through social media or watching mindless videos. The best thing is I can be next to my SO while she does something else I can work through my backlog.

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    One of my favorite purchases in terms of usefulness, cost, and fun (relative) was these frigging ceiling fan pull chains. I saw them on some “things you didn’t know you needed” list or something. But for less than $10, they have made my life infinitely easier and they do give me a little joy every time I pull on them.

  • MrFunnyMoustache@lemmy.ml
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    Vasectomy. Before I got my vasectomy, I had a lot of anxiety that the condom might fail and an unwanted pregnancy would occur. That’s not to say vasectomies can’t fail, they can, even years afterwards, recanalization can happen so I get tested every year.

    Annual failure rate of condom (average use) is 18%, and with perfect use it’s 2%. This means that over a span of 20 years, even with perfect use, there is a 33% chance for a pregnancy which is too high for me. A vasectomy with annual testing of sperm count is as close to zero as possible.

      • MrFunnyMoustache@lemmy.ml
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        Pretty smart. Hope it wasn’t too difficult for you to get it (many doctors treat their patients with condescension and dismissal about sterilisation, especially towards women).

        • klemptor@lemmy.ml
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          Oh man it was a nightmare finding someone who would sterilize me. I was 24 when I started seriously looking, and I can’t tell you how many doctors told me I’d change my mind about not wanting kids (insert huuuge eyeroll here), and one doctor even said that he thought my boyfriend was forcing me into it and that I didn’t understand how permanent it was. Thankfully I did finally find someone to take me seriously but man, what a pain in the ass!

  • Rentlar@lemmy.ca
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    Electrical tape, anything I don’t know how to otherwise fix, electrical tape fixes it in a pinch. Haven’t tried it with relationship issues yet, though.

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    My synology NAS. It’s great being able to have a central place for all my files that’s platform agnostic.

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        Mine is quite old now but has always been slow a molasses. Maybe I should upgrade.

        • jrbaconcheese@yall.theatl.social
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          I went from 212j to 920+ and it’s night and day in terms of what it can do. It was also $400 more so there is that.

          It has been a fun hobby to nerd out learning Docker, networking magic, VPNs, and such. It may tun into full-blown Linux on a PC at some point.

          • Dr. Jenkem@lemmy.blugatch.tube
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            1 year ago

            If you go the full Linux desktop route, I recommend installing a hypervisor like proxmox to make it easy to spin up and manage VM’s and containers off the bare metal.

            A lot more work to setup than a NAS like Synology, but having some more control over the setup and tailoring it to your needs makes it worth it imo.

            • jrbaconcheese@yall.theatl.social
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              Thanks for the tip, i didn’t actually 100% understand what proxmox was until you said that it is a hypervisor.

              I have a NUC that I accidentally stole from my last job that may become my hobby PC. I will probably try a distro on bare metal to get my feet wet but then take it to there. Or maybe a USB distro to start? I haven’t put much thought into it yet.

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                1 year ago

                Yeah, just try some stuff, then wipe it and try something else. Do that until you have an idea of what you want to try more of.

    • demesisx@infosec.pub
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      1 year ago

      I have a Synology NAS too but YSK they’re an absolute shit company who only does well because they’re the only game in town. They used to be great but they’ve started doing some questionable things in recent years with “official” drives and their customer service is SO bad.

      Also, they’re closed source.

        • demesisx@infosec.pub
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          1 year ago

          Spec-wise QNAP has always at least had parity but where they sucked was customer service. That’s why I didn’t even mention them.

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            1 year ago

            Never needed aupport, I just spin them up, create the disk groups and shares, setup the offsite backup and they do their thing.

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    My house. I am constantly stressed now, but it’s something I can work on, improve, and builds equity.

    The medicine cabinet in my bathroom. I know it sounds stupid, but of all the improvements in my house I’ve made in the last year, this one has had the most impact. It looks great and gives me tons more storage. And since I use it every single day, I can appreciate it every single day.

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      Yeah, my girlfriend and I were telling people, it’s great. We can just put holes in walls and no one can stop us. We don’t have to stress about a deposit or anything like that. It’s so freeing.