• @beerclue
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    2011 months ago

    Also, who in the metric hell measures grams with decimals? No recipe ever tells you to add 14.xy of something. Everything is rounded, usually around 5 or 10 grams.

    650g of flour, 500g of sugar (one small pack), 400g of mascarpone, 250g butter (one pack), 500g of fresh raspberries, 8 (unsterilized, room temperature) eggs, 2 packets of baking powder, 2 vanilla pods = 30 delicious muffins. No decimals or fractions needed :)

      • @beerclue
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        211 months ago

        Yeah, but I buy them by fractions of oz.

        • @Plopp
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          311 months ago

          Make life easier for yourself and buy whole k’s. It’s just a simple 1 followed by kg. Most people can count to one.

    • Admiral PatrickOP
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      fedilink
      English
      511 months ago

      Ya know, I debated rounding the conversion. Figured someone would “ackshually” it. So I rounded it to two places and someone still complained. Can’t win. It’s a meme. Chill out.

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        611 months ago

        By the way, 1 tablespoon of peanut butter does not weigh 14.79 grams. 1 US tablespoon is a unit of volume that’s equal to 14.79 milliliters(mils). Grams are a unit of mass. In order to convert between them we need the density. Because the metric system is great, the density of water is 1g/mil, so 1 US tablespoon of water weighs exactly 14.79 mils. However the density of peanut butter is a bit higher, so the US tablespoon of peanut butter will weigh a bit more.

        Additional pedantry, yes I did have to write US tablespoon every time. A US tablespoon is 14.79mils, a metric tablespoon is 15mils, a traditional Australian tablespoon was 20mils although now they mostly use metric tablespoons.

      • @beerclue
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        411 months ago

        I am really chill, just smoked a 0.5g (or 1/56 oz).

        (I know it’s a meme, I wasn’t trying to make something else out of it, sorry if it came out that way)