

If you’re responding to me, that was my point. They’re all vegetables.


If you’re responding to me, that was my point. They’re all vegetables.


Other sweet plant parts are also considered culinary vegetables: carrots, squash, red peppers, sweet potatoes, fennel, and onions.
Some of them you do have to cook to perceive as sweet, but non-sweet doesn’t seem to be a good dividing line. Striving for non-overlapping categories instead of just accepting the mess seems like a mistake.


Deafheaven is great, although I’m usually sucked into New Bermuda. I’m not a huge metal person, and I don’t know if it’s their best album, but it’s the one I go back to the most frequently.


This is based off a candy in a book, that I can’t tell if has ever been made:
Under its tamarind glaze, luscious pepsin-flavored nougat, chock-full of tangy candied cubeb berries, and a chewy camphor-gum center.


I think you might be missing an important part of GDP per capita, and be asking a slightly confusing set of questions as a result.
Per capita means per person. “GDP” and “GDP per capita” are each very different numbers.
GDP - tries to measure the total economic output of the country. It might be what you want to use to compare the raw economic might of two economies.
GDP per capita - This is just scaled by the population. You might use it to see if a small country like Monaco is punching above its weight.
Median GDP per capita - This third measure is what you might what to use to see how the average citizen in a country is doing. Ideally you’d want to also control for cost of living, but generally a bigger number here means higher quality of life for its citizens, even if the cost of living is also high.


I sometimes get a Portuguese folk song about trains stuck in my head. It’s called Apita o comboio
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zJs8fNhH3Ik
Also The train from Kansas City by Neko Case
Anything in particular you followed to get it working? I ran into trouble as well.