Yesterday
waxjism baked two cakes! One is a mascarpone-strawberry mousse cake and the other is a maple walnut bundt cake.
(I said, "You're like that meme about how the quality of fanfic doesn't matter*, but all by yourself!")
I also commented that this technically-a-cheesecake (because it's made with mascarpone) (even though it's still mostly composed of whipping cream like a mousse cake) had been made possible by the universal availability of lactose-free dairy products in Finland, and
septembriseur asked why that was true. Wax and I didn't know for sure, so she googled it and ended up skimming somebody's thesis on the subject, lol.
Anyway, here's that long post about the sociology and market dynamics of Finnish lactose-free dairy that nobody really exactly wanted, but it is potentially interesting! And it makes the rest of the world where lactose-free dairy is hard to come by seem egregiously inconvenient by comparison.
*. I hate that meme because it's spreading even further the Compulsory Positivity message that readers universally love everything regardless of quality. To be clear: people do love the things that they love regardless of quality: your favorite thing isn't necessarily identical with the thing you earnestly judge to be the best written. And most of us enjoy reading a variety of types of things, some of them because they seem mind-blowingly good and others because they the author is skilled or simply enthusaistic about some of the same things we are, like tropes and genre conventions or pastiche styles or kinks. But the fact that people usually like or also like things that might not be dubbed 'good' by them or someone else doesn't mean that they like all things, even bad ones, or that they don't think anything is bad, or that they're equally happy to see everything. Personally, even if I'm desperate enough to still open them, my reaction to going to check a fandom tag and finding all the new fics haven't been betaed is disappointment. I would be too embarrassed to post a cake that hadn't been proofread, and rightly so.)
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
(I said, "You're like that meme about how the quality of fanfic doesn't matter*, but all by yourself!")
I also commented that this technically-a-cheesecake (because it's made with mascarpone) (even though it's still mostly composed of whipping cream like a mousse cake) had been made possible by the universal availability of lactose-free dairy products in Finland, and
Anyway, here's that long post about the sociology and market dynamics of Finnish lactose-free dairy that nobody really exactly wanted, but it is potentially interesting! And it makes the rest of the world where lactose-free dairy is hard to come by seem egregiously inconvenient by comparison.
*. I hate that meme because it's spreading even further the Compulsory Positivity message that readers universally love everything regardless of quality. To be clear: people do love the things that they love regardless of quality: your favorite thing isn't necessarily identical with the thing you earnestly judge to be the best written. And most of us enjoy reading a variety of types of things, some of them because they seem mind-blowingly good and others because they the author is skilled or simply enthusaistic about some of the same things we are, like tropes and genre conventions or pastiche styles or kinks. But the fact that people usually like or also like things that might not be dubbed 'good' by them or someone else doesn't mean that they like all things, even bad ones, or that they don't think anything is bad, or that they're equally happy to see everything. Personally, even if I'm desperate enough to still open them, my reaction to going to check a fandom tag and finding all the new fics haven't been betaed is disappointment. I would be too embarrassed to post a cake that hadn't been proofread, and rightly so.)