Here Are Some Berries Worth Looking Into. You Should Try Using These In Your Next Simipe (breakfast)
Here are some berries worth looking into. You should try using these in your next simipe (breakfast) with rice, especially should you want to cool off, these are very tasty after all. One suggestion for serving with these is millet pancakes as a syrup or jam/jelly, or even cooked in the batter. I hope you can take the time to look around for the food around you in the outdoors. Iyayraykere.
-
strangenightofomnificence liked this · 7 years ago -
devilishlycutemew-blog liked this · 7 years ago
More Posts from Oroichonno
Tan henne=askar eaykap, wa tan pinumma=siyeye ne, korkay iwanke ne nankor. Korkay sumsupa nok, opitta kur ya?
(This can’t be clean, and this stallion is sick, but will get healthy. Even so, fried eggs, anyone?) Poor Thunderlane, I hope he would be healthy soon, I bet the flu season was terrible this year, especially in the West from what I’ve heard. I’m glad I dodged this bullet, as has my editor (mostly).
This flag is the unofficial flag of our main people here, designed in 1973 by the famous figure of Bikki Sunazawa in the ratio of 2:3. As strange as the white here looks (even rather like a squid), it symbolizes snow, the red the arrow & aconite poison used in hunting, & the blue the sea & sky. All this under the traditional Yaunsir (now Aynu Mosir in Sisamsir, Karapto wa Kurir sin rit in Nucasir), it is used mainly in Aynu Mosir in certain settings.
Across the strait is a race to preserve the good of the people & adapted traditions in the modern times against the increasing poison in the waters. Энэ видеог үзээрэй, гуйж байна.
(Watch this video, please.)
Rayosi kamuy yukar sonno katupirka ne.
(Korean mythology is very cool.) These are only some of the beings from within this mythology & the pantheon carries much more.
After hearing a little more about diabetes from a Filipino classmate today, it got me thinking about the rising temperatures & health problems. This seems to particularly affect the Polynesians & Melanesians even more than it does for most of us, or even West Asians--who are particularly vulnerable to it--and their famously strong sweet tooth. In any case, a few weeks in the cold should do wonderfully if this is true.