USDA Announces Opening of Application Period for Regional Agricultural Promotion Program

WASHINGTON, Nov. 29, 2023 – Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack today announced the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the first tranche of funding under the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) new Regional Agricultural Promotion Program (RAPP). USDA is providing up to $300 million in funding in its first year to support eligible projects that enable exporters to break into new markets and increase market share in growth markets.

Today’s NYT Connections Hints (and Answer) for Wednesday, November 29, 2023

Today’s puzzle will keep you on your TOEs! If you’re looking for the Connections answer for Wednesday, November 29, 2023, read on—I’ll share some clues, tips, and strategies, and finally the solutions to all four categories. Along the way, I’ll explain the meanings of the trickier words and we’ll learn how everything fits together. Beware, there are spoilers below for November 29, NYT Connections #171! Read on if you want some hints (and then the answer) to today’s Connections game. 

If you want an easy way to come back to our Connections hints every day, bookmark this page. You can also find our past hints there as well, in case you want to know what you missed in a previous puzzle.

Below, I’ll give you some oblique hints at today’s Connections answers. And farther down the page, I’ll reveal the themes and the answers. Scroll slowly and take just the hints you need!

NYT Connections board for November 29, 2023: DOG, HORN, SOLE, DOWN, BASS, BALL, COME, SNAKE, TOE, HARP, HEEL, SIT, ORGAN, STAY, ARCH, JERK.

Credit: Connections/NYT


Does today’s Connections game require any special knowledge?

Nothing too unusual today.

Hints for the themes in today’s Connections puzzle

Here are some spoiler-free hints for the groupings in today’s Connections:

  • Yellow category – You’ll find these in socks and shoes.

  • Green category – These make beautiful music together.

  • Blue category – What you say before giving a dog treat.

  • Purple category – Bad guy.

Does today’s Connections game involve any wordplay?

Not in any traditional sense, but one of the words could fit in three different categories, so guess carefully. 

Ready to hear the answers? Keep scrolling if you want a little more help.


BEWARE: Spoilers follow for today’s Connections puzzle!

We’re about to give away some of the answers. Scroll slowly if you don’t want the whole thing spoiled. (The full solution is a bit further down.)

What are the ambiguous words in today’s Connections?

  • Depending on how you pronounce it, a BASS can be an instrument or a fish. (A SOLE can also be a fish, but there are no fish in today’s puzzle.) 

  • A JERK is an Olympic weightlifting move (the first place my mind went, obviously) or a sharp sudden movement (hence the name for the weightlifting move) but here you want to think of the “asshole” meaning. 

  • HEEL is the trickiest word here today–it’s part of your foot, it’s a command that tells a dog “walk nicely by my side, please,” and it’s a word you might use to describe something unpleasant. All three meanings could work in different categories today. 

What are the categories in today’s Connections?

  • Yellow: FOOT PARTS

  • Green: MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS

  • Blue: DOG COMMANDS

  • Purple: BADDIE

DOUBLE BEWARE: THE SOLUTION IS BELOW

Ready to learn the answers to today’s Connections puzzle? I give them all away below.

What are the yellow words in today’s Connections?

The yellow grouping is considered to be the most straightforward. The theme for today’s yellow group is FOOT PARTS and the words are: ARCH, BALL, SOLE, TOE.

What are the green words in today’s Connections?

The green grouping is supposed to be the second-easiest. The theme for today’s green category is MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS and the words are: BASS, HARP, HORN, ORGAN.

What are the blue words in today’s Connections?

The blue grouping is the second-hardest. The theme for today’s blue category is DOG COMMANDS and the words are: COME, DOWN, SIT, STAY.

What are the purple words in today’s Connections?

The purple grouping is considered to be the hardest. The theme for today’s purple category is BADDIE and the words are: DOG, HEEL, JERK, SNAKE.

How I solved today’s Connections

SIT, STAY, DOWN, and COME are DOG commands, but so is HEEL. I figure HEEL is more likely to go with TOE, BALL, and ARCH as parts of the feet, so I leave it out of this first grouping. 🟦

That’s when I notice I still have too many words for parts of the feet; SOLE is in there too. What else are we looking at? Aha–a HEEL can be a dislikable person (as in wrestling, or that song about the Grinch). JERK, SNAKE, and DOG fit with it. 🟪

That leaves us with TOE, BALL, SOLE, and ARCH as parts of feet (or shoes) 🟨, and four musical instruments: HORN, BASS, HARP, and ORGAN. 🟩

Connections 
Puzzle #171
🟦🟦🟦🟦
🟪🟪🟪🟪
🟨🟨🟨🟨
🟩🟩🟩🟩

How to play Connections

I have a full guide to playing Connections, but here’s a refresher on the rules:

First, find the Connections game either on the New York Times website or in their Crossword app. You’ll see a game board with 16 tiles, each with one word or phrase. Your job is to select a group of four tiles that have something in common. Often they are all the same type of thing (for example: RAIN, SLEET, HAIL, and SNOW are all types of wet weather) but sometimes there is wordplay involved (for example, BUCKET, GUEST, TOP TEN, and WISH are all types of lists: bucket list, guest list, and so on).

Select four items and hit the Submit button. If you guessed correctly, the category and color will be revealed. (Yellow is easiest, followed by green, then blue, then purple.) If your guess was incorrect, you’ll get a chance to try again.

You win when you’ve correctly identified all four groups. But if you make four mistakes before you finish, the game ends and the answers are revealed.

How to win Connections

The most important thing to know to win Connections is that the groupings are designed to be tricky. Expect to see overlapping groups. For example, one puzzle seemed to include six breakfast foods: BACON, EGG, PANCAKE, OMELET, WAFFLE, and CEREAL. But BACON turned out to be part of a group of painters along with CLOSE, MUNCH, and WHISTLER, and EGG was in a group of things that come by the dozen (along with JUROR, ROSE, and MONTH). So don’t hit “submit” until you’ve confirmed that your group of four contains only those four things.

If you’re stuck, another strategy is to look at the words that seem to have no connection to the others. If all that comes to mind when you see WHISTLER is the painting nicknamed “Whistler’s Mother,” you might be on to something. When I solved that one, I ended up googling whether there was a painter named Close, because Close didn’t fit any of the obvious themes, either.

Another way to win when you’re stuck is, obviously, to read a few helpful hints–which is why we share these pointers every day. Check back tomorrow for the next puzzle!

How to See the Geminid Meteor Shower

Sky watchers: Do not miss the Geminid meteor shower this year. This annual collision of the trail of asteroid 3200 Phaetho and the Earth’s atmosphere will provide a show for anyone who looks skyward at night from now until Christmas Eve.

The peak of the Geminids will occur in mid-December, and viewing conditions will be close to perfect this year. Since the new moon rises on December 12, the sky will be extra dark during the Geminid peak, meaning you might be able to see as many as 50 shooting stars per hour.

When and where to see the Geminid meteor shower

The Geminid meteor shower has been visible since mid-November, and it will continue until Christmas, but the peak of the shower is likely to be on December 13 or 14. Shooting stars should be visible around 9 or 10 p.m. local time, but if you stick around until much later, the show will get better. As the night progresses, the radiant point of the shower will appear to climb higher into the sky, and you should see a ton of fast moving, yellow meteors. The best time for viewing will likely be around 2 a.m. local time.

As you might expect from the name, the meteors of the Geminid shower seem to originate from the constellation Gemini. The easiest way to find Gemini is to locate Orion’s Belt. Follow the line from Orion’s right foot (that’s Rigel, the brightest star in the constellation), through the belt, and up towards Betelgeuse (Orion’s left shoulder). Keep following that line to Castor and Pollux, the main stars in Gemini. (You could also make this much easier by downloading a constellation-finding app like Star Walk 2.) Don’t sweat the direction too much, though. These meteors will likely be visible all over the sky.

For the best meteor spotting results, go to an area with a wide, unobstructed view of the sky and as little light pollution as possible. Give your eyes about a half hour to fully adjust to the dark, look toward Gemini, and wait.


Geminid Meteor Shower watching starter kit

All you’ll need is your eyes to check out the shooting stars during the Geminid meteor shower, but if you want to make the experience better, here are some meteor-peeping accessories.


Asteroid 3200 Phaethon: a space oddity

Widely regarded as the most impressive meteor shower of the year, the Geminids are unique because they are the result of an asteroid instead of a comet. The celestial father of Geminid shooting stars is 3200 Paethon, an asteroid that acts like a comet. Comets are made of ice and asteroids are made of rock, so most asteroids don’t have tails and don’t leave behind a trail of debris that causes shooting stars. But 3200 Phaethon has a tail that scientists believe is sodium gas.

That doesn’t explain where the material that creates the Geminid meteors comes from, though. There isn’t a solid answer for why the asteroid left so much material in its wake, but scientists speculate that a “disruptive event” a few thousand years ago could have caused the asteroid to break apart and eject the billions of tons of floating debris that make up the Geminids.

This App Makes It Easier to Keep Track of Everything on Your Watchlist

Frankly, there’s too much content out there to keep up with. I don’t know how anyone stays on top of new episodes of the buzziest shows rather than rewatching the same comfort shows over and over again. But, still, there’s new TV and movies to catch up on, and if you don’t want to lose your mind trying to keep track of it all, you’d be well served to turn to a platform to help curate your interests.

JustWatch has always been on my radar as a solid option for finding new shows and movies to watch, as well as keeping track of the titles you complete. The company hosts a giant compendium of shows and movies, including which streaming services you can find them on. Think of it like a TV Guide for the streaming era. It’s available as a website, as well as an app for iPhone and Android.

Recently, the company added some cool updates to its Watchlist feature that seem worth checking out. The JustWatch Watchlist is now broken into three different categories:

  • My Lists: This section is similar to the original Watchlist you may be familiar with, but there are some key new features here. You can now use it to build different lists of shows and movies you want to watch, which should work great for separating lists of titles to watch with your family from the ones you want to watch by yourself or with friends. (After all, Bluey and Oppenheimer don’t need to be on the same list.) You can also import lists from other JustWatch users or from IMDB, which should make finding something new to watch a little easier, and you can share your lists with other users. These imported lists will tell you which streamers each title can be found on, so you don’t need to go hunting for each one.

  • Public Lists: This section is where you can go to find lists of TV shows and movies from JustWatch curators. JustWatch says you’ll be able to find lists for categories from the Academy Awards, to lists about specific actors, directors, or franchises.

  • TV Show Tracking: This section should be a welcome addition to anyone who wants to keep tabs on the many, many shows that are out there to binge. You can add shows in your queue, then check them off as “Continue Watching”, “Haven’t Started,” or “Caught Up,” depending on their status.

In addition to the changes to Watchlist, JustWatch also updated its streaming service selection feature. According to the company, it should be easier to know how much each streamer costs, what you get with each, and where you can rent or buy content (as well as where you can watch that content for free).

The Specialty Cleaning Tools That Are Actually Worth It

This shopping season, you should invest in your home by upgrading your standard cleaning tools to something a little snazzier—and something with more features that make sense. Some of these save you time, some of these get your stuff even cleaner, and some of them will save you money by reducing the single-use products you rely on. No matter whether you want to make the place cozy for the holidays or get a head start on New Year’s resolutions, these are a good jumping-off point to get your home in order.


If you’re shopping for tools make home cleanup more convenient, here are some recommendations from this article:


Upgraded cleaning tools for the kitchen

Around your kitchen, it might be time to replace the tools that will help you clean everything from the floor to the countertops. In the kitchen, everything gets dirty way faster than you expect it, so it’s important to have the tools to help you keep the mess at bay. Regular old brooms and mops are fine, but a little upgrade can make a big difference.

  • It’s finally time to invest in a mop bucket with a wringing attachment, but it turns out it’s not a huge investment at all: These things have become so popular that the O-Cedar set is just $24.99 at Target (and that includes a cloth mop and refill head, too). You can also use the wringer on washcloths before you clean with them so you’re not getting your granite or hardwood too wet. 

  • Upgrade your Swiffer to a mop option that combines old-school techniques with a modern, eco-friendly approach: The Joymoop mop and bucket set ($37.90) features a flat head similar to a Swiffer, but you put reusable fabric pads on it and wring them out in the accompanying bucket. The bucket has a wet and dry chamber so you can squeeze dirty water out away from the clean stuff. 

  • Another superior broom swap is the silicone sweeper from Burferly ($32.99). One head has traditional bristles while the other is solid silicone, so you can round up floor debris super easily. Use this in your kitchen for broken glass, crumbs, and whatever else, but drag it along carpets all over your house to dislodge pet hair, too.

Upgraded cleaning tools for the living room

The living room presents its own set of cleaning challenges, ones that require all kinds of cleaning tools and techniques to keep it looking presentable. Here are some tools that might make things easier.

  • Pick up a blinds cleaner ($12.60) to easily clean between individual blinds on your window. You can use a tongs with microfiber cloths rubberbanded around the sides, but isn’t having a specific device just a little more elegant? 

  • Upgrade your lint roller to the Chom Chom roller ($22.46), which captures hair and lint in an internal chamber, making it easy to clean out like a vacuum. It never needs refills and can be used over and over again.

Upgraded cleaning tools for the bathroom

Bathrooms are the dirtiest and the grossest room in the house, so they require the most work to clean. You have plenty of tools for the task, but some could probably use a little update. 

  • Stop using an old toothbrush to scrub nooks and crannies when you could be using a special gap-cleaning brush, like this one from Rienar ($5.97). Unlike the poor old toothbrush that’s become your go-to scrubber, the handle on this is actually designed for you to scrub things, plus the bristles are really long, so you can get into cracks more easily. 

  • Upgrade how you clean the shower altogether with a cordless spin scrubber ($39.99) that revolves 500 times per minute and features a long pole that will stop you from ever needing to crouch down and try to scrub the inside of your shower again. It has brush heads to clean everything from tile to windows. 

  • Leave streaky glass cleaner behind with the cordless window vacuum from Sharper Image ($80). You fill it with water, kind of like what you do with a mini steamer, and it sprays the water onto your glass, then sucks it off and puts it in a separate reservoir for dirty water. It comes with a removable, washable filter and an extension handle for larger surfaces. 

The Good and the Bad of the 800-Gram Fruit and Vegetable Challenge

Diet “challenges” are, by their nature, strict and not sustainable. (That’s what makes them challenges.) They usually demand you restrict your food choices in some way, such as cutting out entire food groups. But what if there was a diet challenge that just wanted you to eat more vegetables? That’s the idea behind the 800-gram challenge. 

What is the 800-gram challenge? 

The basic idea is simple: You eat 800 grams of fruits and/or vegetables each day. That’s it, that’s the challenge. 

Surely it can’t be that simple! you might object. Well, you’re right. There is an official website for the challenge, and if you sign up for the newsletter, you’ll get a free guide telling you the rules for the challenge. This includes a big list of “Yes they count!” foods and a smaller list of “No, they don’t count” foods. (You can also view those lists at the main website.) Corn and potatoes count. Raisins, juices, and nuts do not.

It also includes a note that the hashtag #800gChallenge is trademarked, and “cannot be used for organized programs, challenges, or coaching without licensing from OptimizeMe nutrition.” 

Why 800 grams?  

The 800-gram challenge website cites a 2017 meta-analysis on fruit and vegetable consumption. The authors concluded that the more fruits and vegetables you eat, the lower your risk of cancer, cardiovascular disease, and “all-cause mortality” (which makes it sound like if you eat enough vegetables you’ll live forever, but they just mean you’ll live longer). The benefits level off at 600 grams per day for cancer risk, and 800 grams per day for everything else. If you eat more, that isn’t a bad thing, it just isn’t necessarily any better than eating 800 grams. 

They write: “An estimated 5.6 and 7.8 million premature deaths worldwide in 2013 may be attributable to a fruit and vegetable intake below 500 and 800 g/day, respectively, if the observed associations are causal.” That is, I will note, a big if

Despite what a few contrarians on TikTok want you to believe, fruits and vegetables are associated with good health—in this study and in others. Will you personally avert death by eating 800 grams of fruits and veggies? Nobody can guarantee that. But it isn’t likely to hurt. 


Need a food scale? 


How much fruit and vegetables does it take to hit 800 grams? 

I had to try the challenge, of course. The prescribed 800 grams sounded like it would be a lot, since that’s 28 ounces, or about 1.75 pounds. Per day. 

The OptimizeMe website helpfully offers that this amount of fruits and veggies is about six cups, typically totals 400 to 500 calories, and can fit on a dinner plate. You would split that up over your full day of eating, of course—so about two cups per meal. And it’s up to you how much of that you want to be fruit and how much will be vegetables. 

Here’s what I ate on the first day of the challenge: 

  • Banana, 199 g

  • Two small apples, 215 g

  • Carrot, 80 g

  • Black bean soup, ingredients 381 g (beans, onions, etc.—I weighed these as I made the recipe and then divided the total by the number of servings)

  • Total for the day: 875 g

In addition, I had a slice of pizza, some Sour Patch candy, a package of pork bao from Trader Joe’s, a leftover Olive Garden breadstick, a small portion of steak, and an Old Fashioned cocktail.  Total: 2,580 calories, which is neither unusually high nor low for me. 

I did have to work to get those veggies in. The soup was a meal I had already planned for the day, and I might normally have an apple or a banana at some point, but on this particular day I had two apples, one banana, and one carrot as snacks. It took extra effort, but not enough to be onerous. 

I kept up the challenge for over a week, with totals of 875, 804, 830, 838, 877, 777, 745, 765, and 756 grams. You can see I stopped worrying so much about meeting the magic number of 800. I also got a bit lazy about weighing: Bananas usually came out to around 200 grams, so instead of weighing a banana, I would just log it as 200. There’s an asterisk on those banana numbers, though, which we’ll get to.

How realistic is the 800-gram challenge?

Based on my experience—as a person who routinely buys fruits and veggies, preps meals on the weekend, and has a decently large calorie budget to work with—it wasn’t hard at all to do for a week. It was getting old by the end of the week, though. Here are a few things you should consider if you want to give this challenge a try: 

Weighing isn’t hard, but the way they want you to weigh things is annoying

I’m no stranger to the food scale, but come on, do I really have to weigh the onion that I’m about to chop to make some soup? If I’m following the challenge, I do. And then I have to jot it down on a piece of paper somewhere, because this isn’t something that apps do automatically (unlike calories, where I can scan the barcode on that pack of Trader Joe’s bao and have the data saved instantly to my phone). 

Another thing that annoyed me: I don’t think you’re supposed to count the peel on the banana, or the core of the apple. My 200-gram bananas were likely only supposed to count as 120 grams or so. But who is going to weigh their banana peel when they’re done? Or their apple core? The beauty of an apple as a snack is that you can eat it on the go. I’m not saving the core to weigh when I get back home. 

The rules don’t always make sense

And another thing! The rules of the challenge are arbitrary and—yep, I’m going to say it—stupid. Hummus only counts if you make it yourself, not if you buy it. (Sorry, I counted my store-bought hummus.) Applesauce and pickles  don’t count if there’s any sugar in them—what? Like the sugar somehow cancels out the fact that applesauce is made of apples? 

You could defend these rules by saying you want to make sure that the 800 grams only counts fruits and vegetables, not oil that might be added to the hummus or sugar that is added to the applesauce. But does that really justify not counting those items? It sounds more like an opportunity to restrict foods or to make foods less accessible. How many of us make our own hummus? 

The rule about juice had the same feel to it, too. Juice counted as fruit in at least some of the studies that the meta-analysis was based on. Striking it from the list for an internet challenge sounds like an attempt to make the challenge fit with other rules beyond just meeting a total. I’m not a huge fan of juice, nutritionally speaking, but it seems unfair to add an anti-juice rule. Even myplate.gov allows juice in your daily servings of fruit (they just recommend that you don’t allow it to be all your daily fruit, and cap it at half). 

Going from 0 to 800 grams may make your tummy unhappy

This isn’t an issue I had, but one I see reported a lot: Not everybody’s gut is ready to handle that amount of fiber all at once. It’s an 800-gram challenge that people tend to jump into all at once, not a “slowly work up to eating 800 grams every day” plan. Your intestines might prefer the latter.

You may be tempted to turn it into a weightloss diet

The challenge’s website asks if you are “sick of the lack of results” from restrictive diets,  which seems to imply that this challenge is a pathway to “results” that you have not heretofore gotten. Sure sounds like they’re talking about weight loss. PopSugar, in writing about the challenge, presents it as a “simple solution” for “trying to lose weight.” 

There seems to be a temptation to think of eating more vegetables as another way to say “eating fewer calories.” We’ve seen this in “healthy eating” talk in general (see my rant about how healthy eating is not the same thing as dieting). Fruits and veggies are great, but you also need protein, healthy fats, and other nutrients they don’t provide. If you’re chasing the 800 gram number, and allowing that to displace other foods on a low calorie diet, you may not be eating very “healthy” after all. 

Every time somebody says “800 grams by weight,” I want to scream

Finally, if you’ll allow me one pedantic quibble, the website and many of the people who talk about the #800gChallenge talk about getting 800 grams “by weight” of fruits and veggies. Unlike ounces, which come in both a measure of weight (“ounces”) and a measure of volume (“fluid ounces”), grams only work one way. And technically they are a measure of mass, not weight, but that’s a physics lesson for another time. 

Final thoughts on the 800-gram challenge

I feel conflicted about this whole thing. On the one hand, getting more fruits and veggies is a good thing, and I like that the challenge has you focus on what you are including in your diet, rather than encouraging you to cut things out. It also gives you credit for what you already eat, rather than demanding you add a certain amount; if you already eat 600 grams of fruit and veggies most days, you only need to add another 200.

I also like that the focus isn’t on body size, but on healthy eating. Even if you ignore the formalized challenge and just take the results of the fruit-and-vegetable research to heart, you’re eating veggies to make yourself healthier, not to lose weight. Not everybody needs to lose weight, but we can all benefit from working a variety of plant foods into our diet. 

Ultimate I think my biggest problem with the challenge is the challenge format. The OptimizeMe website promises an “antidote to dieting nonsense” and then tells you to weigh your food and consult yes/no lists. That sounds like dieting nonsense to me. 

But then again: If somebody told you it’s good to get 800 grams of vegetables, you’d probably agree and then ignore them. If your whole Crossfit gym is doing a “challenge” together for a limited time, you now have a structure encouraging you to see how much plant matter you’re actually eating, and take the recommendation seriously. Maybe the human brain needs silly challenges to thrive. 

I Investigate Yet Another Internet Egg-peeling Hack

The art of peeling a boiled egg is one that people seem to take quite personally. It’s an inexplicable phenomenon in which every person on planet Earth has to do it differently, and so-called fool-proof methods don’t seem to work for everyone. It’s like reaching enlightenment when you finally crack the code, when karma bestows upon you your “perfect method.” Mine is steaming a hard-boiled egg and dropping it in cold water. It peels like a dream every time. But like the sun rises every day, a new method has crossed my path: boiling eggs in oily water for easy peeling. Does it work? I grabbed a few pots to find out.

The oil-boil method in question

Since boiling eggs can vary dramatically in time, cold-start versus boiling-start, or how to cool it, egg boiling tests can quickly blow out of proportion with details. This particular method comes from Tasting Table and leaves everything up to the user except for the simple addition of oil. Simply add a tablespoon of any oil (that you don’t mind pouring down the drain later) to the pot of water, and set it to boil. Then add the eggs and boil them how you normally would. According to the post, the oil seeps through the egg’s porous shell and “separates the shell from the membrane and the egg…” If this is the case, an egg rubbed with oil to ensure even coating should do well when dropped into boiling water too.

It seems plausible, so I set up three pots of water. Each pot had water in it and was set to boil. One pot with a tablespoon of canola oil added to it would get an egg, another pot with no oil added would get an egg that I rubbed with oil, and the last pot was the control with no oil involved in the water or on the egg. 

The method didn’t indicate what temperature the eggs should start at, so I used fridge-cold eggs. One egg cracked upon entering the boiling water from thermal shock. Obviously that one would peel differently than the others so I added a second one to that pot that did not crack. I boiled the eggs for nine minutes each and took them out to cool on plates.

The results

Hardboiled eggs on plates with labels

Credit: Allie Chanthorn Reinmann

The control egg. Honestly, peeling this egg was frustratingly fine. I haven’t boiled an egg like this in a while, so I was hoping it would be a horrible experience with ripped out chunks of white and membranes flapping in the wind. As you can see in the picture, the egg looks good. Actually, all of the eggs look good. I would totally use them all for deviled eggs. Since that’s a non-answer to the peeling issue, I had to make myself incredibly sensitive to the ease of peeling. From that lens, although there were no torn bits, peeling the control egg was slow going. I had to peel carefully and break off small pieces of shell to ensure the egg stayed perfect. The membrane was stuck to the egg white at times, so I had to go back and carefully peel it off in a few sections. A careful, patient hand was needed. If I had to rate the ease of peeling on a scale from 1 to 10, I’d put this at a 7.

The eggs in oily water. As I mentioned, I had two eggs in this pot because one of them cracked. I started with the cracked egg and peeling was stupendously easy. I was surprised that not much egg white had breached the shell when it cracked. There is an imperfection on that egg where the air bubble deflated, but it didn’t really ruin the shape inside the shell. Although I cracked the egg in multiple areas in order to peel it, the shell came off easily in only a few sections. It’s hard to tell if any oil seeped through the shell like the Tasting Table post claims, or if the water and oil only entered through the large crack, but the oil present made the egg shell and membrane feel looser. On my egg-peel scale, I’d rate this as a 9. Unfortunately, it’s impossible to duplicate it because the crack was out of my control.

Luckily, the uncracked egg in oily water was pretty darn easy to peel too, and I’d rate it as an 8. The shell came off in very few sections and I didn’t have to go back to remove much of the membrane. The oil that came off of the shell onto my fingers also helped me loosen the shell and membrane as I went along peeling. A small piece of the white came off, but hardly something to get upset with.

The oil-coated egg. I was able to peel this egg easily too. I cracked the shell in a few areas and set off to peel as I normally would. I think this one peeled as easily as the un-cracked egg dropped in oily water with the shell loosening and releasing in only three or four sections. This egg scores an 8 as well.

The easiest way to peel an egg 

The results from this oily water boiling experiment were too close for my liking to declare oil-tinged water the best way to boil your egg for optimal peeling results. Although I noticed a difference with added oil, adding absolutely no oil gave me nearly the same results as long as I didn’t rush it.

However, there might be something to having a little bit of oil coating the egg shell simply because it gets on your fingers. Even if the oil doesn’t make it through the shell and through the tacky membrane beneath, having some on my fingers did help me loosen the unwanted parts as I went along. My thumb was able to glide along the white without accidentally ripping into the egg, and that felt easier than normal. 

If you can’t seem to find the peeling method that works for you, then I’d encourage you to try this trick. It might be just the thing you’ve always needed. But if you already have a boiling method that leads to easy egg peeling, stick with it. What is your never-fail method for the perfect boiled (or steamed) egg? Write it in the comments; I’d love to try it out.

I Am Once Again Urging You to Wander Into a National Forest to Chop Down a Christmas Tree (but Legally)

Most of the time, it’s illegal to wander into a national forest to chop down a tree. Right now, however, the U.S. Department of Agriculture is all for it—provided you get yourself a Forest Service-issued permit first.

Cutting your own tree on federal land actually turns out to be a pretty affordable way to source a Christmas tree, but there are specific guidelines you need to follow to avoid running afoul of the Forest Service (which is as much a law enforcement agency as it sounds). So before you grab your axe and head into the woods this holiday season, here’s what you need to know about the USDA’s tree-cutting permit program.

Why you should cut your own tree from a national forest (besides the fact that it’s really cheap)

According to Recreation.gov, cutting down and carrying out your own holiday tree helps contribute to good overall forest health. Through this permit program, you’ll be helping to thin densely populated stands of small-diameter trees. Removing the trees already designated for removal by the Forest Service allows other trees to grow bigger and stronger. Plus, you’ll get the pride and satisfaction of chopping down the perfect Christmas tree for your home. It’s a true win-win. 

But this is Christmas we’re talking about. Who cares about the environment? This is about your needs and experiences. As the Recreation.gov team explained to me, in addition to helping maintain a healthy forest, cutting a holiday tree is a special tradition that can be shared with families and friends to create memorable holiday experience. For many families, venturing into the forest to cut a Christmas tree for the holidays is a treasured tradition carried on for generations. It’s also a lot cheaper than buying one from a tree lot!

How to cut your own tree from a national forest

The USDA Forest Service sells Christmas Tree permits through Recreation.gov. Prices range from $5 to $20, depending on the location of the forest. To buy your permit in advance and find your local participating forest, use this site, which also provides guidelines for the allowable cutting areas that you’ll need to review before you start choppin’.

In three simple steps, you can begin your quest to find and bring home your own “government Christmas tree.”

  1. Choose your forest. Determine which participating forest works best for your Christmas tree outing. Each forest will have specific guidelines and season dates for cutting a holiday tree.

  2. Be safe and prepared. Carefully read the details and rules of the applicable permit, and consider the Need to Know suggestions to prepare for your visit.

  3. Buy a permit. Purchase and print your permit before heading out to the forest.

Tips for cutting your own tree

I spoke with the Recreation.gov team to get some additional tips as families looking to prepare for their Christmas tree cutting adventure.

  1. Measure the space in your house so you can pick the right size tree once you are in the forest. (Don’t assume you can eyeball it, or you’ll find yourself with a Griswold Situation on your hands.)

  2. Check road and forest conditions and prepare for adverse weather.  

  3. Before cutting, make sure you are in a designated cutting area, and follow all guidelines for locations where tree cutting is allowed. Avoid venturing onto private property.

  4. Choose a tree in an overcrowded stand to help thin it out.

  5. Cut your tree close to the ground. The stump you leave behind should be about 6 inches tall.

  6. Bring a rope and tarp to move your tree from the cutting area to your vehicle.  

  7. Secure your tree to your vehicle to ensure it remains in place for your trip home.

What else you need to know 

Christmas tree permit sale dates may vary by national forest. Recreation.gov encourages families to check local forest guidelines to gather all information before purchasing to ensure they are prepared. A new permit is required each year to cut your own Christmas tree.

Again: You can only cut down trees located in designated and approved areas in the forest. This permit program is run by the USDA Forest Service, which is not the same thing as U.S. National Parks. If you’re unsure whether you’re allowed to snag a tree in a certain area, visit this page on Recreation.gov and type in either the name of your state, or the name of the forest you have in mind.

These Are Walmart’s Best Cyber Monday Deals on Fitness Equipment

Walmart’s Black Friday fitness deals were great, and the deals continue for Cyber Monday. All of the deals below are still available, giving you a cheap way to equip your home gym, or to help someone on your gift list upgrade their gear.

Quick-select adjustable dumbbells for $150 each

The ultimate home-gym buy is a set of quick-adjustable dumbbells, but they’re pricey. Even on sale for Black Friday, a pair of Bowflex SelectTech 1090s will run you $299 each. (That’s 25% off the regular price, though, so definitely snap those up if you want the name brand.) This FitRX Smartbell is a similar design, adjusting from 10 to 90 pounds with the turn of a dial. 

GET THE DEAL:

This XTERRA rower is 80% off

Is this a Concept2? No. But can you get a new Concept2 for 300 smackers? You cannot. This XTERRA rower looks like a pretty solid alternative, and it’s a whopping 80% off. 

GET THE DEAL:

Get a barbell set with bumpers for just $250

A barbell is a fundamental component of a “real” home gym in my opinion, but it can be hard to find a good set on the cheap. Bumper plates, especially, are great for home gyms (less noise and floor damage), but they tend to be expensive. 

Good thing, then, that this weight set is affordable to start and dirt cheap now that it’s on sale. For the price, you get a full-size barbell with one pair each of 45-pound, 25-pound, and 10-pound bumper plates. That will let you build a barbell that weighs up to 205 pounds—yes, you count the weight of the bar. To round out the set, I’d recommend getting one pair each of 2.5-pound and 5-pound plates, and another pair of 10-pounders, and this way you’ll be able to make every 5-pound increment from 45 up to 205. 

205 pounds is plenty for most beginner lifters to get started (especially kids and lightweight women), but eventually, you’ll outgrow the set. If you’d rather buy a bigger set to start with, there’s also a 370-pound set that works out to 415 pounds including the barbell. 

GET THE DEALS:

A squat rack for just $170

Now that you have your barbell, how are you going to squat it? Consider this budget power cage your entry-level option. (Don’t forget the spotter arms, which have a 400-pound capacity and are sold separately for $34.99.)

GET THE DEALS:

$300 off a two-cable functional trainer

If you’re interested in a cable machine, the style sometimes known as a “functional trainer” makes a ton of sense for a small space. These have two vertical cable stacks, which you can use together or separately, and they’ll come with a variety of attachments that you can use for tons of different exercises. These types of machines are a staple of hotel gyms because they really do let you do a lot of different exercises, especially for the upper body, in a small footprint. 

This machine from Centr (Centr by Chris Hemsworth, I’m told) comes with a 165-pound weight stack on each cable, and includes a tablet holder if you’d like to follow along with Centr’s digital workouts. (The machine comes with a three-month free trial.) That said, we have plenty of ideas for how to use a cable machine to build your own workouts. 

GET THE DEAL:

A trap bar for under $100

The trap bar, or hex bar, is an excellent tool for deadlifting. If you need to compete in a sport that requires straight-bar deadlifts, fine; but if you just want to pick something up off the ground without thinking about it too much, a trap bar is the perfect piece of equipment to do that with. This trap bar is only $75 for the traditional kind, and $70 for the “open” type that not only allows you to carry it while you walk, but also lets you prop it up to change the plates. This would be a great addition to the bumper plate set above.

GET THE DEAL:

A folding bench for just $100

Whether your home gym uses dumbbells, barbells, or both, you’ll want a bench to sit on for bench presses and seated exercises. This bench has six incline settings and can even be folded for storage. It’s got a padded top and a 600-pound capacity, counting both you and the weight you’re lifting. 

GET THE DEAL:

The Best Tech Deals From Best Buy’s Cyber Monday Sale

Best Buy was the retailer with the best tech deals on Black Friday, and they are keeping my vote for my favorite retailer with the best deals for Cyber Monday.

Best Buy’s Cyber Monday deals are underway

The physical Best Buy stores are open on Cyber Monday and will also have in-store deals available. Here is what they’re doing for Cyber Monday:

  • Nov. 26 and 27: On Sunday, Nov. 26, Best Buy kicked off their Cyber Monday savings event. This sale will be in-store and online.

Best Cyber Monday deals at Best Buy right now: TVs, headphones, more

Remember that not all deals are as good as they look on paper. I noticed two of their front-page TV deals, the LG 48″ Class A2 Series and Insignia™ – 55″ Class F30 Series, use the hidden price hike ploy to trick shoppers into thinking they’re getting a better deal than they actually are (both TVs have been about the same low price for most of the second half of the year). You can see their price history from Honey here and here, respectively. Remember always to use price-tracking tools to avoid being taken advantage of. The following deals are ones I’ve verified to be, indeed, good deals:

Other Cyber Monday deals by category: Laptops, tablets, more

Better Cyber Monday deals for loyalty members

Best Buy has exclusive deals for their paid loyalty programs that members of My Best Buy Plus or My Best Buy Total can take advantage of. Keep in mind most of those deals will only show their discounted price once you put them on your cart with the “save $X with Plus or Total” option. For example, you can get an extra $50 off on this Samsung Galaxy Book3 360 to match the lowest price it reached during October Prime Day, according to Honey’s price history.

What you can expect this year

Best Buy says you’ll see deals of “up to 50% on top gifts,” specifically during their Cyber Monday Sale. In past years, they’ve done multiple 24-hour “flash sales” similar to the “deal of the day” they have every day. The best sales always have limited quantities and are not guaranteed to get re-stocked. Remember, you can always return it if you find it cheaper at another retailer or even at Best Buy again at a later date.

The price-matching and return policies are different

Best Buy is known for its price-matching policy, where they’ll match the price of most products you find cheaper from a list of other retailers. But until Nov. 27 (Cyber Monday), you won’t be able to take advantage of their price-matching policy. However, if you do find a specific product to be cheaper somewhere else during those blackout periods, you can always return it. In fact, they’re extending their return and exchange policy through Jan. 13 for most products (including online) bought between Oct. 27 and Dec. 30.