will byers stan first human second
Cosmic Funnies
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❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Jules of Nature
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

Discoholic 🪩
Claire Keane
Today's Document

pixel skylines

shark vs the universe

#extradirty

Kaledo Art
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
noise dept.
Show & Tell
Peter Solarz

ellievsbear
seen from Germany

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@nebbiolo830106
Browned Butter Toffee Chocolate Chip Cookies
A Witchy Pot Luck
There is a recipe in the Navarro family that is passed down from one young woman to another for generations. Mami’s Famous Tamales. They were for special occasions, usually holidays or for Cara’s birthdays. Her grandmother would spend days making them, preparing everything so they were just right.
It’s not often that she gets to make them. And she usually buys the corn husks from the older lady down the hall - who slips her a few every once in a while when she comes home late from work. It’s not an uncommon sight to see Cara pacing her home with a tamale in hand, scarfing down one after another.
Cara starts just like her grandmother does: With pork fresh from the butcher, corn husks from the farmer’s market, a little extra chili in the broth for some extra kick, and cooked low and slow until perfectly tender.
Her mouth waters just from thinking about them. She’ll probably make a bakers dozen for herself.
“El amor no tiene cura, pero se cura con tamales”….
¿O cómo era? v:
r-a-l-r
Christmas Eve 2016
-making tamales
Better late than never.
«LA TAMALERA» Arte popular mexicano.
TheCannibalForReal
via Trackosaurusrex
Thor: Ragnarok (2017) dir. Taika Waititi
Obento(お弁当)Lunch box
“Then I turned around, and there he was, standing on the bottom of the pool. I mean, that’s very hard to do, and he’s in a perfect boxing pose. So I swam over real quick and I got about six pictures of him. He was holding his breath all this time and not making any movement. The only regret I have is, when Life ran the story, they didn’t select that picture. More people have requested that picture worldwide than any single picture I ever shot.”
Photographer Flip Schulke on his 1961 session with Muhammad Ali (then still known as Cassius Clay) at the Sir John Hotel, Miami. One of my favorite photos.
(source)