As much as you love pulling your hair out and spending days to figure out your video editing software, that's just not going to happen with Stupid Raisins. These plugins are as simple as can be, and lightning-fast installation with FxFactory gets you in the game now instead of later.
Not a chance. My plugins are faster than a Mako shark with a jetpack. They're also fully optimized to leave the teeniest, tiniest footprint using Final Cut Pro X's simple plugin structure. Oh, one more thingeach plugin renders in 5 seconds or less.
No way. Stupid Raisins plugins are faster than a cheetah driving a Ferrari, are optimized to have the smallest footprint possible, and use Final Cut Pro X's plugin structure. Oh, and they also render in less than 5 seconds.
Hi, Alauna! Great question. My book, The Ultimate Guide to the Daniel Fast, contains a good number of recipes from the website (100+). It also has 21 daily devotions, fasting tips, three weeks of meal plans, and grocery shopping lists. It provides several helpful tools and resources that are NOT available on my website. You can purchase the book in your local bookstore or order it online. Thanks for asking!
Thank you so much for that thoughtful response. It really helped me. I have done the Daniel fast for four years now, and as I was thinking about the coconut sugar, I was feeling really convicted about it. So it is sitting in the pantry unopened. The date honey proved to be more than enough sweetness. Thank you so much for this great resource and your nonjudgmental and non-dictatorial responses. May God bless you!
These were very yummy and that is even coming from my husband. If it passes his taste buds, you nailed it. I did tweak it, though, just because of what I had on hand. I used coconut milk instead of almond milk and craisins instead of apricots. They were a little soft, but we can still pick it up like a granola bar to eat. Thank you for the recipe.
These were a excellent way to start a Sunday morning when your on the go. These are and will now become a great addition to my regular breakfast routine. I blended a banana ( 1 banana 1/2 coconut water) and used that instead of almond milk. I also added chia seeds, coconut, pumpkin seeds and flax seed. They were amazing.
My daughter and I are doing the Daniel fast for the first time. I found your websibe while I was doing recearch for recipies so I signed up for your devotionals too. To honour God this way is such an honour and a priviledge!
Made these on the second day of our fast. My husband loves them. I made a double batch then froze the rest in bread sized pieces. Now my husband reheats it for breakfast, spreads peanut butter on it and finishes it with sliced banana on top. He loves it! Thank you for all of your recipes, your book has definitely blessed us through this fast!
These were really good, I made them for all my kids last night. Even my 17 month old liked them. A good little dessert if you are on the Daniel fast or if you are just using the Daniel fast to lose weight.
Second sweet component of the recipe is raisins. It is no secret that apples and raisins are a match made in heaven. But together in this recipe, they helped me round up the earthy flavors of the baby spinach and walnuts.
Initially, I had no intention of adding any type of cheese into this apple salad recipe. However, even with the addition of yogurt (fat + acid), mayonnaise (fat), lemon juice (acid), and a generous amount of salt and pepper, once the sliced apples were mixed in with the rest of the ingredients (spinach, celery, red onion, apples, raisins, and walnuts), it was just not complete.
Where are you getting this calorie info? The apple alone is about 60-70 calories (depending on how big your small apple is) A small handful of raisins would be about 1/4 cup or 45 calories. The cornstarch adds about another 10. So you are looking 115 calories.
If you add, sugar, honey or raisins, your calorie count will be more. Of course, using a bigger apple will increase the calories but then you probably will have more than one serving. Hope that helps.
Some thought the effects of poisoning may be due to individual dogs having different levels of susceptibility, or perhaps it was due to grapes and raisins containing various levels of a toxic substance.
If you can make your dog vomit immediately after seeing them consume grapes/raisins/or foodstuffs, it will speed up the decontamination process and reduce the risk of poisoning and subsequent kidney damage.
And the best part, it tastes like walnuts. I know it's a bit of a stupid comment, it is walnut bread after all, but I've found that these quick bread many times taste the same, whether you use walnuts or blueberries. Not this one.
In the second experiment Doyen et al. were able to replicate the Bargh results. Namely, when using the stopwatch, the nominal experimenters reported that the group primed to walk slow did walk slow and they reported that the group primed to walk fast did walk fast. The results, however, were not entirely due to subtle experimenter bias because in the slow prime case the infrared sensors also found that the slow-primed group walked slow. The infrared sensors, however, did not report an increase in speed when the nominal experimenters expected an increase in speed.
I just made this and it turned out great! I actually made a few mistakes and still got a great result (I put 55ml of oil directly into the dough - whoops!). I went with raisins which may seem a bit weird but it was a nice sweet/salty situation with lots of tasty sea salt complimented further by the olive oil. Great use of discard starter!
Right after the Big Bang, the universe had a monstrous growth-spurt called inflation. The whole thing was over in less than a trillionth of a trillionth of a second, but the universe grew exponentially in that brief blip, repeatedly doubling in size. At the end of inflation, although the universe was still smaller than a car, the outer edge had traveled many times faster than the speed of light. Since then, the universe has continued its expansion, but at a more reasonable, steady pace.
To better visualize the theory, astronomers often illustrate the expanding universe as a loaf of raisin bread rising in the oven. The raisins are galaxies and the rising dough represents space-time. As the dough expands, the raisin galaxies find themselves farther apart from each other, even though they are not moving relative to the dough between them.
So in conclusion, the expansion happened at a speed faster than light. But if so then the expansion has decelerated because universe expansion now is not at that speed not even by a fraction. Which means that the notion that the universe is expanding now at an acceleration rate is incorrect.
Something is not adding up at all.
Thanks for your question. Astronomers and physicists interpret the result that all distant galaxies are flying away from us as evidence for the uniform expansion of the Universe. In this case, any observer, at any location in the Universe, observes the same general motion: that the further a galaxy is from us, the faster its relative velocity with respect to the observer is. The famous (and very illustrative) example of this is to imagine a loaf of raisin bread as it is baking. The raisins in the bread spread away from one another as the loaf rises and expands during the baking. Pick any raisin and pretend you are standing on it (you're very small now!) and measuring the rate at which the other raisins are moving away from you. You will find that, no matter which raisin you choose, all other raisins appear to be moving away from you, with the furthest raisins receding the fastest.
One observable effect of this geometry for the Universe is if we look far enough in any direction, we see the same thing. Because light does not travel infinitely fast, the farther into the distance that we look, the farther back into time that we look. In astronomy there is something called the cosmic microwave background. This radiation is left over from the "big bang", the event at the start (in time) of our Universe.
Other books use the analogy of rising raisin bread dough (where the raisins represent galaxies). This has different problems (e.g., the Universe doesn't have anything analogous to the crust), but it doesn't raise questions of inside and outside.
Hubble's Law has a very interesting implication for the history of the Universe. If we know how fast something is traveling away from us, it is a simple matter to calculate how long it has taken that thing to reach its present distance. If we assume the velocities of the galaxies we measure have been constant in time, then we can conclude that at a time= 1./(Hubble constant) all the galaxies were virtually at the same location, starting their expansion. This time turns out to be about 13 billion years (using a value of the Hubble constant of 75 kilometers per second per megaparsec). It is this beginning that is known as the Big Bang.
Your question touches on one of the fundamental concepts of relativity. Observers moving relative to each other have their own 'time' in the sense that they may not agree whether two events happen at the same time. So there is no way to set up a single time system for the whole universe. Since the universe is expanding the relative speed of galaxies increases with distance. This means that there may be galaxies far enough away from us that the distance to them is increasing faster than the speed of light. This might seem to conflict with Special relativity but it happens because space itself is expanding. We are completely cut off from these regions of spacetime. There is no way to communicate with them because that would require us to send information faster than the speed of light. Maybe this is what you mean by parallel worlds, but they are not really parallel worlds. They are just regions of our universe that we can never reach or communicate with.
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