@elburritomonster: Was playing around with the idea of Mozzarella Stick Taco Shells and thought I’d start with these Pesto Popcorn Chicken Caesar Belters 😋 #tacos #italianfood #americanfood #mozzarellasticks #caesarsalad #popcornchicken #comfortfood #scran

Elburritomonster
Elburritomonster
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Region: GB
Tuesday 30 January 2024 18:22:41 GMT
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upliftingthehomies
upliftingthehomies :
Most underrated food TikTok
2024-01-30 19:55:21
381
jokerdewitt101
JokerDeWitt :
When you opening a restaurant in the US dude?? Need this!
2024-01-30 18:26:19
40
ionlikealion3
Ionlikealion :
Damn. That looks good
2024-01-30 18:55:23
36
howmanybeanzmakefive
howmanybeansmakefive? :
This appreciation of world cuisines, ambition without pretentiousness, is British food at its best
2024-02-03 07:28:07
56
jaeko_dj
JAEKO :
How on earth do you think of this
2024-02-01 09:54:34
7
jamescody766
jamescody766 :
I would pay a lot of money for your food. Open a restaurant ASAP
2024-03-02 12:10:52
1
dillann777
Dillan Scott :
Do you do birthdays
2024-02-19 11:37:29
11
youareloudanddumb
youareloudanddumb :
Holy perfection.
2024-01-30 18:40:54
7
aus_fin_explorer
Rhiannon :
Now this is my type of rap music 👌🏼😂 🎵
2024-02-12 07:35:10
1
calamityprofanity
Riley :
My mouth always waters so much watching these videos 🤤
2024-01-30 21:48:32
9
kattalyst070
Kattalyst70 :
you sir, are a monster, and I'm here for it.
2024-03-02 11:04:50
0
jarjardonquaviousbinks
jarjardonquaviousbinks :
I'm too early
2024-01-30 18:29:55
2
pezzy084
Pezzy :
Bro this is the earliest I’ve ever been here
2024-01-30 18:27:18
1
onkardhamu
Onkar :
This dude's food is 🔥🔥🔥🔥 Followed...
2024-02-10 17:49:41
0
0idekwhattoputhere
Huh? :
gaaaalick
2024-01-31 01:44:35
1
paranoidpangolin
paranoidpangolin :
When is the book coming out!?;
2024-01-30 19:12:47
1
molliebrown5
Mollie Brown| Books 📚| Life ✨ :
10/10 😍
2024-01-30 18:59:19
2
drme69
🅓🅡🅜🅔 :
Oh wow!!! Ratatouille wrap please 🙏
2024-01-30 18:26:45
0
jesslouisek
Jess :
Need to open a restaurant
2024-02-12 07:17:44
0
cheeseismybusiness
Cheeseismybusiness :
That ‘bendy mozzarella’ is brilliant! How did you come up with that technique?! 😳
2024-01-31 05:05:13
0
dave38123
Dave :
damn
2024-03-10 01:10:35
0
gentuuiam
gentuuiam :
I'm coming to UK because of you😭😭😭
2024-03-17 01:32:47
0
christianblandford
CHIICH :
Wow
2024-02-03 15:15:30
0
pablitofrito
Mike :
Idk if people sleep on your videos because they’re kinda silly but your food always looks unbelievable
2024-03-03 18:03:23
0
ejr1993xoxo
Em Jane ✌🏽 ✨ :
WOWWWWWW AMAZING
2024-01-30 18:41:04
0
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#unsolved #mystery #History #truecrime #disappearance History records wars, kings, inventions, and revolutions. But sometimes, it records something far more unsettling: disappearance without closure. These are not cold cases with clear suspects or solved crimes. These are true historical vanishings where no confirmed body was found, no definitive explanation was proven, and no final answer exists. Amelia Earhart disappeared in 1937 during her attempt to fly around the world. Massive searches followed. Decades of investigations. Multiple theories. Yet no confirmed wreckage or remains have ever conclusively ended the mystery. The Pacific Ocean kept its secret. In 1872, the Mary Celeste was discovered drifting in the Atlantic Ocean. The ship was seaworthy. The cargo was intact. Personal belongings remained. The crew was gone. No signs of violence. No clear distress. Just absence. In 1587, the Roanoke Colony vanished from the coast of what is now North Carolina. An entire settlement erased. Only a single carved word remained. No confirmed archaeological conclusion has fully solved their fate. In 1971, D.B. Cooper hijacked a plane, demanded ransom, and parachuted into the night. Despite a decades-long FBI investigation, his identity was never officially confirmed. No body was ever recovered. Louis Le Prince, a pioneer of early motion picture technology, boarded a train in 1890. He never reached his destination. No remains. No confirmed evidence. His disappearance remains one of the strangest in technological history. Ambrose Bierce, famous writer, traveled to Mexico during the revolution in 1913. He was never seen again. Rumors exist, but no confirmed documentation closes the case. In 1945, as Berlin collapsed, Heinrich Müller disappeared. Despite post-war investigations, no conclusively identified remains were verified beyond doubt for decades. Across centuries, across continents, one thing remains constant: uncertainty. These cases remind us that history is not complete. It contains gaps. Silence. Unanswered questions. And sometimes, that silence is more haunting than any explanation.
#unsolved #mystery #History #truecrime #disappearance History records wars, kings, inventions, and revolutions. But sometimes, it records something far more unsettling: disappearance without closure. These are not cold cases with clear suspects or solved crimes. These are true historical vanishings where no confirmed body was found, no definitive explanation was proven, and no final answer exists. Amelia Earhart disappeared in 1937 during her attempt to fly around the world. Massive searches followed. Decades of investigations. Multiple theories. Yet no confirmed wreckage or remains have ever conclusively ended the mystery. The Pacific Ocean kept its secret. In 1872, the Mary Celeste was discovered drifting in the Atlantic Ocean. The ship was seaworthy. The cargo was intact. Personal belongings remained. The crew was gone. No signs of violence. No clear distress. Just absence. In 1587, the Roanoke Colony vanished from the coast of what is now North Carolina. An entire settlement erased. Only a single carved word remained. No confirmed archaeological conclusion has fully solved their fate. In 1971, D.B. Cooper hijacked a plane, demanded ransom, and parachuted into the night. Despite a decades-long FBI investigation, his identity was never officially confirmed. No body was ever recovered. Louis Le Prince, a pioneer of early motion picture technology, boarded a train in 1890. He never reached his destination. No remains. No confirmed evidence. His disappearance remains one of the strangest in technological history. Ambrose Bierce, famous writer, traveled to Mexico during the revolution in 1913. He was never seen again. Rumors exist, but no confirmed documentation closes the case. In 1945, as Berlin collapsed, Heinrich Müller disappeared. Despite post-war investigations, no conclusively identified remains were verified beyond doubt for decades. Across centuries, across continents, one thing remains constant: uncertainty. These cases remind us that history is not complete. It contains gaps. Silence. Unanswered questions. And sometimes, that silence is more haunting than any explanation.

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