There’s nothing worse than bringing bread home from the grocery store, only to find out that it’s moldy a few days later. It’s disappointing to have to abandon your morning toast or your midday sandwich, but there’s a simple hack that could potentially prevent it from happening again — and everything you need might already be in your refrigerator. Believe it or not, it’s all about celery. This common vegetable holds the secret to keeping bread fresher longer on the counter because of its high moisture content. Adding celery to increase the relative humidity inside the bag slows down staling issues. The celery trick will work across any bread product, as long as the celery is fresh and not dried out. It’s recommended that you use a pre-washed celery root with the leaves cut off. The only potential negative result is that your food might taste like celery if you let it touch the bread. You’ll have to decide if the celery flavor is a deal-breaker. It’s probably okay for your sandwich, but maybe not for your kid’s quesadilla. There are a couple of points to remember. First, this trick won't prevent mold, so if your bread bag already has condensation inside, skip the celery stalk because that means your bread is already on its way to developing mold. The trick also won't revive stale bread. To prevent bread from becoming stale, the best thing to do is store it in the freezer. The celery trick also works on brown sugar, but don't bother trying it with crackers.
This Quirky Trick Can Keep Your Bread from Going Stale
There’s nothing worse than bringing bread home from the grocery store, only to find out that it’s moldy a few days later. It’s disappointing to have to abandon your morning toast or your midday sandwich, but there’s a simple hack that could potentially prevent it from happening again — and everything you need might already be in your refrigerator. Believe it or not, it’s all about celery. This common vegetable holds the secret to keeping bread fresher longer on the counter because of its high moisture content. Adding celery to increase the relative humidity inside the bag slows down staling issues. The celery trick will work across any bread product, as long as the celery is fresh and not dried out. It’s recommended that you use a pre-washed celery root with the leaves cut off. The only potential negative result is that your food might taste like celery if you let it touch the bread. You’ll have to decide if the celery flavor is a deal-breaker. It’s probably okay for your sandwich, but maybe not for your kid’s quesadilla. There are a couple of points to remember. First, this trick won't prevent mold, so if your bread bag already has condensation inside, skip the celery stalk because that means your bread is already on its way to developing mold. The trick also won't revive stale bread. To prevent bread from becoming stale, the best thing to do is store it in the freezer. The celery trick also works on brown sugar, but don't bother trying it with crackers.
McDonald’s McNuggets Sauces Now Have a McPrice
McNuggets fans who live by a sacred nugget-to-sauce ratio will soon have to cough up some extra dough to dip their chicken. That’s because McDonald’s has implemented a new policy that provides for one “courtesy” sauce per order. Even a huge order of 40 McNuggets comes with only 6 sauces. That means roughly 6-7 nuggets per packet, assuming there’s no double-dipping and zero spillage. The price for extra dipping sauces varies by location. In New York City at the Madison Square Garden location, it’s 22¢ per packet, while the location in Belleville, New Jersey, charges a whopping 39¢ per packet. McDonald’s defended the move by pointing out that some customers grab excessive amounts of condiments. Needless to say, there was plenty of outrage on social media, where users pointed out that they shouldn’t have to pay extra for sauces to go with their already-overpriced food. One user pointed out that at Taco Bell, they give you about 15 packets of sauce at no charge. Even Chick-fil-A’s policy is to provide up to 10 dipping sauces free of charge. Sauce uproar aside, McDonald’s remains among the world’s franchise giants, even after a poor showing in a survey of America’s favorite fast food chains.
Man Who Lived Rent-Free in New Yorker Hotel Pleads Guilty to Fraud
A New York City man who attempted to claim ownership of the New Yorker Hotel has pleaded guilty to fraud, ending a lengthy legal saga involving an obscure tenant law that allowed the man to live rent-free for years in the Manhattan hotel. Mickey Barreto entered the plea on February 18, admitting that he had forged property records in an effort to take ownership of the hotel. That effort was, at least on paper, partially successful. According to Barreto, he paid $200 in 2018 to rent one of the more than 1,000 rooms in the towering, oft-photographed Art Deco hotel. Barreto then requested a lease, claiming his one night stay entitled him to protections under a city housing law that applies to single-room occupants of buildings constructed before 1969. When the hotel rebuffed him, he took his case to housing court. After the hotel failed to send a lawyer to a key hearing, Barreto was awarded “possession” of the room. However, Barreto then went a step further, defrauding the state by uploading a fake deed to a city website that purported to transfer ownership of the entire building to him. Barreto then attempted to collect rent from a hotel tenant and demanded that the hotel’s bank transfer its accounts to him. He was eventually evicted from the premises in 2024 and charged with multiple counts of felony fraud. He was later found unfit to stand trial and ordered to undergo psychiatric treatment. As part of the plea, Barreto was sentenced to a 6-month prison sentence that he has already served, along with 5 years of probation.
Grave Diggers Get Down and Dirty at International Competition
Funerals are grave experiences — grave digging competitions, not so much. At least not in Trencin, Slovakia, where the annual International Grave Digging Championships takes place. Eleven 2-member teams from Slovakia, Poland and Hungary get down and dirty to see who can dig the best grave in the fastest time using only shovels and picks. Speaking of picks, grave digging judges are pretty picky about what makes a good grave: It has to be 5 feet deep, 6.5 feet long and 3 feet wide. First held in 2016, the championship has only been interrupted by the pandemic. Hungary’s Association of Cemetery Operators and Maintainers created it not for spectacle, but to honor a profession that usually goes unseen. Digging graves demands strength, accuracy, and mental stamina, yet the people who do it often get little acknowledgment. The contest is meant to change that — and maybe even convince a younger generation to pick up a shovel. Spectators watch as competitors shape perfectly straight walls in the earth, toss dirt with practiced efficiency, and build mounds as uniform as anything in landscaping. The contest reframes routine cemetery work as something technical and exacting, equal parts muscle and craft. The event closes with medals and trophies, symbols that mean more than the hardware itself, because they recognize skill and endurance in a profession most people never stop to consider.
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