Margaret
By VicentaLakin
Tuesday is a week's dew day and there's nothing to see on TV. Basically, at this point, four people are entwined around Netflix, and it's a hard job to choose a movie and nobody wants to make a decision. Grandma couldn't watch anymore, so she made a tablet for us, read The Butler. The movie begins with the lead man's childhood. The Sisol family lives on a cotton plantation in the south. The male white farmer insulted his mother and killed his father. After having worked as a servant for the farmer for some time, Cissol fled to the north for fear of suffering the same fate as his father. He found a job at the hotel, learned how to make his services perfect, and was finally hired by the White House, which, for 34 years, served eight presidents and experienced many American events during that period. The film itself is more like a beautiful melody film, but it provides an overview of the modern history of America. I'm more interested in Sissol's son Louis. Louis was keen on the civil rights movement and insisted on going south to college. His father served the white man with caution and fought for the rights of the black man himself. Before I came to the United States, I only discussed the situation of black Americans with Miss Mac. As a white male, McQueen's students are actually very angry with black people. Because he feels that sometimes blacks are too protected and have priority in terms of access to education and employment, compared to them, whites become second-class citizens. And a lot of niggers are lazy, and they're not moving, and you owe me the way you're white. I went out with my mother-in-law the day after the movie. My mother-in-law then gave her opinion. Mother-in-law was born and raised in L.A., unlike in Southern States where racial discrimination is high, such as Georgia, Louisiana and Arkansas, where black California is not seriously discriminated against. She had been educated and believed that the United States was the most equitable country in the world until she saw on television news of the repression of the black movement in the South. Blacks were beaten to death in the streets, many of them even local mayors, parliamentarians and the most prestigious people in the area. Many people in the northern states were horrified, and they could not believe that such a terrible thing had happened in a country that had always characterized democracy and freedom. A massive civil rights campaign had broken out in the United States, with many young people travelling to the south to participate in a campaign for black people. Grandma was younger, so she did not go south. However, many around her have participated in civil rights movements in various forms. She believed that McQueen had not experienced those years, so he could not understand why black people were being protected so much. Soon after, they suffered a lot. Those memories are not far away. For blacks, especially in the south, the unequal treatment they receive continues to this day. Written and legal protection sometimes does not extend to reality, and invisible discrimination persists. There is no absolute equity in this world, and all we can do is fight for equity. But the process of achieving equity is long and painful. Black Americans have been fighting for equality since the 1950s, and 60 years have passed. Everyone knows it's best to have a ride when someone else gets a ride. But the reality is never so good, you won't fight, I won't fight, we will endure oppression and inequality. Not in silence, but in silence. His words still apply today. It's over. Eat it. That's the point. Today it's Margaret's cookie. I've been making cookies for a long time, because it's really something to fatten up meat, so basically I'm doing it when I'm giving it away. I've done a lot of it this time, and I've done 80 because I have to leave something for my family. The material listed below is 40. In general, 40 small ovens are more reliable in the country. Materials: Flour 100 g (low-banded or ordinary flour), corn starch 100 g, butter 100 g, egg yolk two, sugar 40 g, salt small and almonds 40. Ps: It's sugar powder, but I like the way it feels, so it's sugar. You don't like sugar。
Recipe Recommendations
- sweetening
- roast
- an hour
- simple
Steps for Margaret

1
Everything except yolk
2
The butter room is softened, with sugar. It's a softer, darker color. Just like in the picture。
3
Put yolk in a net screen, squeeze it with your hands and turn yolk into powder。
4
You squeeze like this
5
Squeeze like this. Get the yolk and butter evenly
6
The starch and flour are mixed and sifted into a bowl of yolk and cream。
7
The mixture in the bowl is evenly mixed by hand. The last noodles are dry, not sticky. Pack the dough with a membrane and put it in the fridge for an hour
8
Take the dough out and squeeze a little piece into a ball. It's as big as it looks. It may be dry when the noodles are frozen and it is not easy to make a ball. You can put it in your palm, and then you can soften it。
9
Press the ball with your finger and put an almond on it。
10
It's like this。
11
Put it in the middle of the oven, fire 170 degrees up and down, about 20 minutes. The temperature of the small oven is not stable, and it would be preferable to set the time for 15 minutes before watching the oven. A little yellow on it。