Looks like rice crispies in toffee sauce....but I will pass.
I would, but I need that cholesterol-free vitamin K2! Tastes good eventually.
Being able to bake saves me a fortune... and before that breadmakers did the same - I picked mine up in charity shop sales for a fiver - the baked bread was ok eventually, but you can simply use them to make various types of dough, to make delicious edibles with. After awhile, I simply put the bread dough they mixed into baking tins, and those worked out fantastic.
I stick mostly to Aldi and Lidl - you can seriously save money there without being overtly made to feel poor, instead of grubbing around like a peasant for close to out of date soiled or damaged goods at not much cheaper prices, and being limited to how many of the same "Saver" items you can buy. At Aldi and Lidl, they make you feel like royalty. If you can cook, you won't miss much.
It's sounds cool as a job
My company was expanding multimedia at the time, and I got sent on various courses, but I did meet people who's sole aim in life was to be editors, some succeeded. Of course, editing can make or break a production.
Try VSDC (free), it renders faster than Vegas and Premiere. About 10X faster than Vegas earlier today
All-in-one free toolset for working with multimedia. Download a powerful video editor, screen recorder, video converter, audio converter, and CD grabber.
www.videosoftdev.com
with decent light, street and bike lights it should do number plates easy.
Daytime plate capture was no problem for my cheapo camera - the problem is/was that it couldn't expose properly when recording numberplates illuminated very brightly by my headlights at night. And GoPro's Protune/manual settings doesn't have global exposure spot metering lock, but I can while recoding lock exposure to a region, such as the middle (and up a bit), where number plate views end up at some point as my skull swivels the camera about. Trouble is, this needs to be done while recording; has to be activated by touching and holding the selected region on the touchscreen - and the problem with that, is that the cheapo waterproof case, although looking very waterproof (camera is easy to insert and remove, because the camera lens cover doesn't have to be removed, which is a nightware to lever up, using no less than three credit cards in a non-purchasing capacity), the touchscreen isn't accessible... which means as it gets dark, I'd have to stop to set the region for exposure lock on the touchscreen, then put it back into the case... or buy GoPro's "Supersuit" after all. My cheapo camera's functions were all accessible via buttons, which work when encased. I may opt to use the waterproof case only for heavier downpours.
I'll be very annoyed if I can't find some permutation of settings which work - very important, is being able to record numberplates at night.