I usually get the amaryllises started in February. I’m a bit behind this year, but they’re still gorgeous.
Torta a ciambella al cioccolato e arancia
https://blog.giallozafferano.it/lacucinadisusana/torta-a-ciambella-al-cioccolato-e-arancia/
A casa nostra non festeggiamo l’Epifania, ma dico sempre che ogni scusa è buona per mangiare dolci.
Volevo creare un thread pieno di cose, ma a casa mi hanno chiesto di farlo al cioccolato e senza così tante decorazioni.
Anche se la Rosca de Reyes ha una ricetta base, che sia spagnola o messicana, può essere preparata in molti modi e decorata a piacere.

Your weekly, slightly chaotic guide to what’s worth watching. Ranking three top TV and movie picks, rated with oddball observations of what to add to the watchlist you never knew you needed.
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Time to vote on next month's #rec theme!
🔹 Just Like Canon
🔹 Power Dynamics
🔹 Whump
Pop by Dreamwidth and vote if you're a comm member. If you're not a member, but want to be, join up and then vote! 🎂 #fandom https://fancake.dreamwidth.org/2459968.html
Record Low Temperature in Canada: −63°C Recorded in Snag, Yukon in 1947
📰 Original title: On February 3, 1947: The Lowest Temperature Ever Officially Recorded in Canada Was −63°C (−81.4°F) at Snag, Yukon
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👥 Users: It's not clickbait ✅
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On February 3, 1947, the small village of Snag in Yukon, Canada, experienced the coldest temperature ever officially recorded in the country and all of North America, reaching an astonishing −63°C (−81.4°F). To put this extreme cold into perspective, it is roughly equivalent to the average surface temperature of Mars. The temperature was so severe that the alcohol in thermometers fell below the measurable scale, requiring the weather observer, Gordon Toole, to manually mark the thermometer so it could be sent to Toronto for precise calibration. The air, dense and still due to the extreme cold, carried sounds over extraordinary distances; dogs barking from over 6 kilometers away could be clearly heard. The freezing conditions caused exhaled breath to solidify instantly, producing a hissing sound and forming fine white powder in the air. People walking outside left visible streaks of frozen breath that lingered for minutes. The Snag weather station operated from 1943 to 1966, and this record has remained unbroken since. The name 'Snag' originates from the Klondike gold rush era, referring to submerged tree trunks that posed hazards to boats navigating the silty waters nearby.