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2023-11: Warosu is now out of extended maintenance.

/ck/ - Food & Cooking


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File: 54 KB, 965x924, romanescobroccoli.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
17874964 No.17874964 [Reply] [Original]

I'm a burger with a bong gf. I enjoy cooking, while she doesn't but generally cooks for herself. We share meal pictures a lot, and every time she has broccoli, it's romanesco broccoli. I asked her if that was common in britbongland, but she isn't really a cooking hobbyist so had no answer for me. To bongs here, is romanesco broccoli a very common thing there and where does the regular, normal broccoli stand in terms of popularity? I'm curious because I rarely see romanesco here unless I go to an actual produce market and I doubt 95% of burgers even know it's real.


Instead of wasting a thread for this dumb question, this thread is also for cool looking foods.

>> No.17874985

The romanesco broccoli has a naturally pleasing pattern that resembles the fibonacci series. It's pretty cool and every single person will think it's cool so maybe you are seeing it more because of social media.

>> No.17875148

>>17874964
How can people still believe in evolution after seeing this?

>> No.17875168

>>17875148
broccolis are the product of human breeding at much as they are evolution. read about the cauliflower family (species).

>> No.17875180

>>17875148
Well, fractals are actually a pretty basic concept and commonly associated with computer science and mathematics. There's nothing very random about them and are more of a "beep boop im preprogrammed" idea that makes a lot of sense when you examine how evolution works. Also, who says you can't believe in evolution and religion? Are you trying to say that you understand how your god/gods have chosen to do things more than they do?

>> No.17875187
File: 25 KB, 596x441, 1651959643523.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
17875187

>>17874964
This poor lad has to endure bong "cuisine"

>> No.17875257

>>17875187
Nah, we already planned out that when we move in together I'll handle a lot of the cooking since I enjoy it. She does make some good looking meals though.

>> No.17875336

>>17875257
>move in together
>gf
Pick one and only one heathen. I sure hope you're marrying her before moving in.
>But if they do not contain themselves, let them marry. For it is better to marry than to be burnt.
- 1 Corinthians 7:9

>> No.17875358

>>17874964
No it is not common, ordinary broccoli is far more common in the fresh and frozen aisle.

>> No.17875493

>>17875148
math is everywhere in nature. this is not unusual

>> No.17876531
File: 85 KB, 705x900, theman.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
17876531

>>17875148

>> No.17876611

>>17875148
This is literally exactly what you'd expect to see if evolution is real. Fractals appear a lot in nature because that kind of growth pattern is easy to encode in DNA with very simple instructions.

>> No.17877262

>>17875180
>christcuck cope
I don't understand evolution better than God but I understand the church's definition of God, it's incompatible with several scientific facts.

>> No.17877272

>>17875148
based. daily reminder that macroevolution has never been demonstrated (except in the case of mayonnaise obviously which is a fundamental and radical step forward in the development of savory dips and sauces).

>> No.17878255

>>17874964
>To bongs here, is romanesco broccoli a very common thing there and where does the regular, normal broccoli stand in terms of popularity?
For actual buying and cooking, it's almost always the ordinary stuff (with either purple-sprouting or tenderstem as backups). Romanesco broccoli is a thing for fancy pictures, but not really more than that.