I always heard 165 too, but I looked at the chart on the meat thermometer and it said 155 for breast. I tried it out and it's much juicer.
BanjoShepard
Yes. Especially for chicken breasts. It's easy enough to know for sure they're done, but they're much easier to eat as soon as they hit 155F. My immune system has never questioned my chicken, but my taste buds are very thankful for the meat thermometer.
Your shirt has two Sleeves and one Collar. Haven't messed it up since I heard this.
Loop in The Atlantic for good measure.
Maybe the entire Musk strategy is to appeal to conservative consumers to save the planet from ICE emissions. 5D chess. /Satire.
I'm hoping the whole administration is a situation of Hanlon's Razor, but that might also just be me huffing copium.
And here I thought I'd never see my '95 Cavalier again!
I think I'm the odd man out here, I'm always fully dressed at home. My wife never understands why I wear shoes in her house, but my feet are cold and I'm not going to buy another pair of shoes (slippers) when I already have shoes that are perfectly warm and comfortable.
This is how I learned to stop misspelling necessary: your shirt has one collar and two sleeves.
They weren't braking; they were driving highway speeds in front of me.
Quick Googling puts snow at 1-20 pounds per cubic foot, depending on moisture content. Using conservative numbers of one foot of snow, 7 feet wide, and 15 feet long that could be 105-2100 pounds. On the low end, I can't see that being enough weight to matter, and on the high end, that might seriously strain some vehicles suspensions.
Also as someone in the Midwest that got hit by snow flying off the top of an uncleaned car this morning from several hundred feet away, I don't care how much weight it is. Clean off your car.
And suddenly I'm standing on a rooftop in Orgrimmar again. I just want to find a healer for my dungeon, but it's anal [eviscerate] as far as the eye can see.