
The Evolution of Cutting Boards
If you’re like most homeowners, you probably have a cutting board in your kitchen. This essential tool has been used for centuries, originally designed for breadmaking. Pull-out cutting boards provided a clean, stable surface for bakers to knead dough, let it rise, and prepare it for the oven.
Modern Uses of Cutting Boards
Today, cutting boards serve many purposes beyond breadmaking. They are indispensable for chopping, slicing, and dicing meats, vegetables, and fruits. Made from various materials like plastic, bamboo, and wood, cutting boards are crucial in any kitchen. However, wood cutting boards, especially those made from maple, are considered the best for several reasons.
The Benefits of Maple Cutting Boards
Maple is a hard, durable wood that withstands frequent use and knife cuts. It resists bacteria growth better than plastic or bamboo, which can develop grooves and scratches that harbor bacteria. Maple cutting boards are also easier to maintain.
Maintaining Your Cutting Board
Proper cleaning is vital for your cutting board’s longevity. After each use, scrub it with a mixture of baking soda or kosher salt and lemon to remove stains and odors. Rinse thoroughly with hot water and dry with a clean towel. Applying a food-grade cutting board oil keeps the wood from drying out and prevents crackin
Cutting Boards: A Kitchen Essential
Despite their evolution, cutting boards remain essential for home cooks and professional chefs. With proper care and maintenance, a quality cutting board can last for years, providing a clean, safe surface for food preparation.
Explore Breadmaking at Home
If you’re interested in breadmaking, try making your own bread at home. The rise of home baking during the pandemic has led many to discover the joy of homemade bread. Numerous recipes and tutorials are available online, including on the popular YouTube channel “Becca Beach.”
Discover Becca Beach’s Breadmaking Tips
Becca Beach, a passionate home cook and baker, shares her recipes and cooking tips with her followers. In her video “Homemade Bread – SUPER Easy and Delicious!” she demonstrates how to make a simple loaf at home.
The Benefits of Homemade Bread
Making your own bread is fun and rewarding, and it’s healthier and more economical than buying store-bought bread. You can control the ingredients, ensuring your bread is free from preservatives and additives.
Cutting Boards and Culinary Adventures
Cutting boards have evolved from their original breadmaking purpose to become kitchen essentials made from various materials for multiple uses. Proper cleaning and maintenance ensure their longevity and safety. If you’re looking for a new culinary adventure, try making your own bread at home. With online tutorials and a quality cutting board, you can become a breadmaking expert in no time!
Late Titanic star Bill Paxton revealed true feelings about his own fearful experience of submersible dive for movie
In 2003, years after the Titanic film was released to the public, actor Bill Paxton opened up about how he went on a submersible ride to experience everything firsthand as well.
The interview was ahead of the documentary Ghosts of the Abyss release. The documentary showed director James Cameron discussing his inspiration for the film and taking several people, which included Paxton, on unscripted dives to the Titanic’s site.

“Each dive, I had to kind of look myself in the mirror and go ‘OK, are you ready for this?’” Paxton said in the 2003 interview. “It’s one of those things where Jim [Cameron] asked me in passing to go and…the opportunity of a lifetime. I jumped at it,” the actor explained.
“But then you start thinking about physically what’s going to be required of you to get into a three-man, deep-sea Russian submersible for a 13-hour dive,” he shared. “To go down two and a half miles to a place where the sun has never penetrated. And you’re starting to think ‘OK, I’ve got young kids. I need to get them to an age where they can support themselves before I do something this crazy.’”
“Jim is an infectious guy. And also, God, who wouldn’t go on this adventure?”

He even went on to even talk about how comfortable the inside of the submersible he dived in was. He said it was “relatively comfortable,” before noting that “certainly there are things that can go wrong.”
“If they do go wrong, it’s not going to matter anyway. And it’s going to happen so quickly that you’re not even gonna know it happened, probably,” he noted. “These are the thoughts you have going in.”
He even explained how to him, “the price of admission” seemed “kind of low” given the “great experience” you got in return.
“You approach the bow, and then you rise up over it. And you’re looking down on the ship, and you are a ghost of the abyss. And the images stay with you. The images, they really have an effect,” he said before he talked about the “personal story” attached to the sunken ship.
Posted by R.I.P Bill Paxton on Sunday, June 13, 2021
“I think all of us at some time in our dreams or even our waking moments have pictured ourselves: What would it have been like to be on that deck? Knowing that the lifeboats had gone away. What were you gonna do? Contemplating your own fate. It’s this ultimate parable of, how would you measure up?” he questioned, calling the Titanic “a perfect tragedy.”
“You think about the people on the water. You think about the people on the boats looking back and seeing the stern of that ship come up out of the water like a city rising up out of the sea,” the actor said. “You think about the people in the water. I swam in the water out there, which was a very disconcerting experience because you think there’s that much ocean underneath you.”
It was clear that the actor knew of all the risks before going into the experience. As for the five men aboard the submersible that dominated headlines in the last week, the U.S. Coast Guard announced that they discovered “presumed human remains.”
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