Chicken broth is really warm chicken bath water
Chicken broth is really warm chicken bath water
And we don't even need to subscribe to their onlyfans
oh no you fucking don't.
BATHING DOES NOT THERMALLY DENATURE THE PROTEINS IN YOUR MUSCULAR TISSUE AND FUCKING KILL YOU.
Furthermore there is no recipe for broth that involves SOAP nor do you bathe in LITERALLY BOILING WATER.
Boiling is NOT bathing and I will FIGHT anyone who tries to argue otherwise.
I WILL DIE ON THIS HILL
FUCK IT, I WILL KILL ON THIS HILL
THIS HILL IS MADE OF THE DEAD MOTHERFUCKERS WHO WERE WRONG55 1 ReplyIdk, Japanese onsen baths are really, really hot. Maybe not literally boiling, but I felt like it was. And hot baths for sore muscles wouldn't be a whole thing if it wasn’t producing some kind of tenderizing effect.
(I'm mostly saying this in jest. Mostly.)
15 0 ReplyYou're correct, this is why you should avoid going to ramen shops near onsens. They use the people broth from the onsens in their ramen to add a mushroomy, cheesy, porky flavor.
4 1 Reply
Best chicken broth is salty. Best baths are salty.
7 0 ReplyI've never killed a chicken by making soup out of it.
6 0 ReplyI will defend this hill with you, brother! You have my sword!
4 0 Reply
Goddamnit.
I haven't been able to eat eggs ever since someone explained they were chicken menstruation. And now, I have to contemplate avian necrobestial bathwater.
Fuck all you people, unsubbed.
resubbed... Damnit.
35 3 ReplyAll those words are poetry.
9 0 Replyall those words are poultry
9 0 Reply
Eh, this won't stop me from making Jewish penicillin
2 0 ReplyGreat. Now I'm hungry and pitching a tent.
2 0 Reply
Isn’t it technically a fertilized egg at that point? Otherwise, when in the process could the egg get fertilized
3 2 ReplyHens producing eggs for consumption aren't exposed to roosters. Their eggs (typically) aren't fertilized.
You're eating chicken period, not aborted fetuses.
11 0 Reply
Let he who doesn’t bathe with onions, carrots, celery, bay leaves, salt, and pepper cast the first stone.
16 0 ReplyI were to give a corpse a bath at what point does the water become broth?
11 0 ReplyAbout an hour after it starts boiling.
12 0 ReplyExcuse me, but you should really reduce that to a simmer after bringing it to a boil.
12 0 Reply
Warm corpse water
7 0 ReplyJohn Oliver once called chicken soup "salty bird water."
5 0 ReplyAssuming you remove your bones and skin for a good soak as part of your bathing process, sure.
5 0 Replywhy would you remove the bones and skin to make a broth? that's where all the flavor is
1 0 ReplyGets a bit hard to chew If you don't.
1 0 Reply
Only if the marrow from one's bones normally leaches out, and fat deposits between muscle fibers melt, in a bath, otherwise it's cooking
5 0 ReplyDepends on how hot your bath water is.
3 0 Reply
I want to carbonate chicken broth to make chicken soda.
4 0 ReplyIs that served cold or heated?
3 0 ReplyChilled drinks hold on to carbonation much better. I would vote for cold, personally.
4 0 Reply
Arrested development - Hot Ham Water (Sorry YouTube link)
3 0 ReplySo watery!
3 0 ReplyAnd yet there’s a smack of ham to it!
3 0 Reply
You've apparently never had to give a chicken a bath for real.
It ain't something you'd eat or drink
3 0 ReplyI don't bath like you
2 0 ReplyWhat are you doing with your chickens???
2 0 ReplyFor the record, all my chickens are over 18 weeks old and everything we do is consensual.
1 0 Reply
This belongs in Unpopular Opinions
1 0 ReplyOr BathThoughts.
2 0 Reply
More overcooked chicken soup.
1 0 Reply