@ledo7_07: Neymar vai jogar contra a Escócia 🇧🇷🙌🏼 #futebol #foryou #copadomundo #neymar

Ledo7
Ledo7
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Region: BR
Saturday 20 June 2026 14:29:23 GMT
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enzinxk_7
Enzinxk_7 :
nunca tomarei ratio de 1 like
2026-06-20 14:53:03
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girafudo123
~ BryanXZ :
time: brasil. Jogadores: neymar, vini, endrick. placar: 20x0 Ganhador: Brasil.
2026-06-20 17:39:09
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Have you ever tasted a recipe that refuses to be civilized? Mici were never born for white tablecloths. They belong to butcher shops where every cut had a purpose, where beef was stretched with lamb or pork fat, where garlic was crushed instead of measured, where thyme, black pepper and a whisper of baking soda transformed humble minced meat into something that hissed, swelled and wept juices over hot charcoal. No casing. No ceremony. Just smoke, fire and patience. The crust arrives first, dark and crackling. Then comes the impossible part: a centre so loose and succulent it almost pours onto the plate. The potatoes know exactly where they belong. Not baked. Not air-fried. They disappear into pork lard until every edge shatters like brittle glass, carrying the sweet perfume only rendered fat can leave behind. Lift them out while they still sing, bury them under a snowfall of sharp grated cheese and let the heat melt it into every crevice. The salt bites, the fat lingers, the cheese softens the blow, and suddenly the mustard beside the mici is no longer a condiment but a necessity. One cuts through the other, only to make the next bite even more irresistible. This is not food chasing approval. It is food that remembers a Romania before trends, before counting calories, before anyone thought tradition needed improving. Every mouthful tastes of charcoal, butcher’s paper, stained wooden tables and conversations that always lasted longer than the meal itself. If this landed in front of you right now, would you eat one mici or keep going until the plate surrendered? What belongs beside them: mustard, pickles, or nothing at all? Video by @BerilaSulitasul  [ Romanian Cuisine, Mici, Mititei, Charcoal Grill, Pork Lard Potatoes, Grated Cheese, Traditional Recipe, Butcher Craft, Garlic, Thyme, Mustard, Crispy Potatoes, Authentic Romania, Balkan Cuisine, Food Heritage, Rustic Cooking, Street Food, Grilled Meat, Local Flavours, Culinary Traditions ] #romania #travel #food #mici
Have you ever tasted a recipe that refuses to be civilized? Mici were never born for white tablecloths. They belong to butcher shops where every cut had a purpose, where beef was stretched with lamb or pork fat, where garlic was crushed instead of measured, where thyme, black pepper and a whisper of baking soda transformed humble minced meat into something that hissed, swelled and wept juices over hot charcoal. No casing. No ceremony. Just smoke, fire and patience. The crust arrives first, dark and crackling. Then comes the impossible part: a centre so loose and succulent it almost pours onto the plate. The potatoes know exactly where they belong. Not baked. Not air-fried. They disappear into pork lard until every edge shatters like brittle glass, carrying the sweet perfume only rendered fat can leave behind. Lift them out while they still sing, bury them under a snowfall of sharp grated cheese and let the heat melt it into every crevice. The salt bites, the fat lingers, the cheese softens the blow, and suddenly the mustard beside the mici is no longer a condiment but a necessity. One cuts through the other, only to make the next bite even more irresistible. This is not food chasing approval. It is food that remembers a Romania before trends, before counting calories, before anyone thought tradition needed improving. Every mouthful tastes of charcoal, butcher’s paper, stained wooden tables and conversations that always lasted longer than the meal itself. If this landed in front of you right now, would you eat one mici or keep going until the plate surrendered? What belongs beside them: mustard, pickles, or nothing at all? Video by @BerilaSulitasul [ Romanian Cuisine, Mici, Mititei, Charcoal Grill, Pork Lard Potatoes, Grated Cheese, Traditional Recipe, Butcher Craft, Garlic, Thyme, Mustard, Crispy Potatoes, Authentic Romania, Balkan Cuisine, Food Heritage, Rustic Cooking, Street Food, Grilled Meat, Local Flavours, Culinary Traditions ] #romania #travel #food #mici

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