Donmai

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Guardian45 said:

Far from it. It seems she only made it exactly as the recipe dictates and couldn't add her "own touches." She's still as bad of a cook as she was before.

Well, she was never meant to be a cooking droid after all....

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    She's celebrating Lent, which means no eating land based meats like chicken, beef and pork. However, fish is allowed since it's from the sea.(Iirc, some people in the past use this ruling as a loophole to eat water mammals like Seals, Otters and Capybara during Lent).

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    fsnfanboy said:

    She's celebrating Lent, which means no eating land based meats like chicken, beef and pork. However, fish is allowed since it's from the sea.(Iirc, some people in the past use this ruling as a loophole to eat water mammals like Seals, Otters and Capybara during Lent).

    This loophole was used to classify beavers as fish for French Catholic trappers and traders working in pre-Canadian French territories of North America.

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    game2009 said:

    Contrary to popular belief, nowhere does it says Catholics and Christians must be vegetarian. The new testament even says anything is allowed to be eaten as long as it isn't blood, food worshipped to idols, strangled animals.

    Since when is that a popular belief? I have literally never heard anyone Christian/Catholic or otherwise claim that meat is forbidden for practitioners of the religion.

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    At least for Catholics lent is the only period meat and pork ("red meats") were advised not to be eaten because of past century traditions. Fish and chicken ("white meats") are fine. Even today that tradition still exist, however it has been 15 or so years Catholic church advises is not longer necessary. It can be replaced by not doing any other luxury you enjoy as a small sacrifice and an imitation of that time Jesus crossed the desert.

    Updated

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    ANON_TOKYO said:

    Artist mentioned using a nib pen in post #6873008, though I can't say with 100% certainty that it's also used here.

    I can make out most of the text on the implement shown in the picture on this post:
    On the body is "激しく振るとインキがもれる場合があります" ≈ "Ink may leak if shaken vigorously"
    On the sticker, I can't read the third character but based on the rest, the sticker refers to water-based ink.

    Based on that, it could be a fountain pen or roller ball (but not an oil-based ballpoint) which use the same sort of ink as a nib pen.
    It may not technically be a nib pen but I believe that is the closest medium tag we have.

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