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Question:

What am I doing wrong?

Every time I make a cheesecake it’s tastes horribleI tried 2 different recipes and the first one (baked) was inedible and the second (no-bake) was just gross too although preferable to the first one because the base was pretty niceBoth went in the bin immediately thoughYou might be thinking clearly I’m improving since the second turned out a bit better, but I think any other recipe I try will fail similarlyThe main issue is the cream cheese, I’m using the recommended Philadelphia one, isn’t nice on its own and over powers the vanilla bean and sugar completely and is justVileI don’t see how using a different brand, which would be a supermarkets own, would helpI love cheesecake, I wanted to make one because it’s not common I find one I REALLY like but even the worst supermarket ones are far superior to mineThe second one was a recipe that had loads of good reviews on the BBC and the first was a Mary Berry recipe! Does ANYONE HAVE ANY advice I just want a nice or even half way decent tasting cheesecake.

Answer:

i think of you may desire to blanket him, with a non-wool non-itchy fabricThe blanket might desire to be very heat, then slowly artwork right down to a no longer so chilly blanket to get him adjusted to the chillyultimately artwork right down to no blanked.
Well I would blanket her if i were youI blanket my horses, and I live in virginia, so it doesn't get near as cold as it does thereThe general rule if you will, is that 25 degrees and below a horse should have a blanket on, even if they have a winter coatnot to mention when it starts snowing the snow that gets on her back will stay that and make her freezing! I would definitely get a blanket for herGood luck!
I've always liked Rambo blanketsI have two for my TB (although granted, he is a wimp)I've got him a lightweight one that is basically a raincoat to keep him dry (since he gets a chill if he gets wet) and a heavy weight one for when it's cold (around here, that means 0 or so)I've recently discovered just HOW wimpy he is, so I'll probably end up layering the two blankets in January for himWatch your horseIf she is cold, put a blanket on herYou can tell because they'll hump their back a little, tuck in their tail, and generally stand with their hind feet under them a little more than normalThey can start shivering (you can see it in the hip area)Try to check on her after sunset or before sunrise - she'll be coldest in the dark, so you can accurately gauge whether she needs a blanket or notIf you know it's going to be wet (snow or rain), make sure she has a blanket onI'm sure you'll get the hang of it - good luck!

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