I AM retweetledi
I AM
30.2K posts

I AM retweetledi

Focaccia is proof that Italy makes the best bread on earth, and honestly, absolutely nothing beats a perfect focaccia sandwich.
Layer savory mortadella, fresh pesto, sun-dried tomatoes, peppery arugula, and a ball of creamy burrata onto a crispy slab of olive-oil-baked focaccia. Just like that, you’re looking at the most delicious sandwich combination ever created.
🎥 thenaughtyfork | IG
English
I AM retweetledi
I AM retweetledi
I AM retweetledi
I AM retweetledi

Crispy Shrimp Tacos with Creamy Slaw & Fresh Mango Salsa 🌮🥭
Ingredients
For the Shrimp
1 lb large shrimp, peeled and deveined
1 tsp paprika
1 tsp chili powder
1/2 tsp garlic powder
1/2 tsp cumin
Salt & black pepper to taste
2 tbsp olive oil
8 small corn tortillas
For the Creamy Slaw
2 cups shredded cabbage
1/2 cup shredded carrots
1/4 cup mayonnaise
2 tbsp sour cream or Greek yogurt
1 tbsp lime juice
1 tsp honey
Salt & pepper to taste
For the Mango Salsa
1 ripe mango, diced
1/2 red onion, finely diced
1 small tomato, diced
1 jalapeño, finely chopped
2 tbsp chopped cilantro
Juice of 1 lime
Salt to taste
Optional Toppings
Lime wedges
Extra cilantro
Hot sauce
Avocado slices
Instructions
1. Make the Mango Salsa
In a bowl, combine mango, red onion, tomato, jalapeño, cilantro, lime juice, and salt.
Mix gently and refrigerate while preparing the tacos.
2. Prepare the Creamy Slaw
In another bowl, whisk together mayo, sour cream, lime juice, honey, salt, and pepper.
Add cabbage and carrots, then toss until evenly coated.
3. Cook the Shrimp
Pat shrimp dry and toss with paprika, chili powder, garlic powder, cumin, salt, pepper, and olive oil.
Heat a skillet over medium-high heat. Cook shrimp for 2–3 minutes per side until golden, slightly crispy, and fully cooked.
4. Warm the Tortillas
Heat tortillas in a dry skillet for about 20 seconds per side or lightly char them over a flame.
5. Assemble the Tacos
Layer creamy slaw onto each tortilla.
Top with crispy shrimp and spoon over plenty of mango salsa.
Finish with extra cilantro, avocado, hot sauce, and a squeeze of fresh lime.
Serve immediately and enjoy the perfect balance of crispy, creamy, sweet, and zesty flavors!

English
I AM retweetledi
I AM retweetledi
I AM retweetledi
I AM retweetledi
I AM retweetledi
I AM retweetledi
I AM retweetledi
I AM retweetledi
I AM retweetledi

Chicken Avocado Melt Sandwich
Ingredients
2 chicken breasts, cooked and sliced
4 slices sourdough or thick sandwich bread
1 avocado, mashed
1 cup cheddar cheese, shredded
1/2 cup mozzarella cheese, shredded
1 small tomato, diced
1/4 cup red onion, finely diced
2 tablespoons mayonnaise
1 tablespoon butter
1 teaspoon garlic powder
Salt and black pepper, to taste
Fresh parsley, for garnish
Instructions
In a bowl, mash avocado with a pinch of salt and pepper.
Mix diced tomato and red onion together.
Spread mayonnaise on one side of each bread slice.
Layer chicken, cheddar cheese, mozzarella, avocado mixture, and tomato-onion mix onto two slices of bread.
Top with remaining bread slices.
Melt butter in a skillet over medium heat. Sprinkle in garlic powder.
Grill sandwiches for 3–4 minutes per side until golden brown and crispy, and cheese is melted.
Slice in half and garnish with parsley if desired.

English
I AM retweetledi
I AM retweetledi

Her name was Wang Xiao, and at twenty-four years old, she was running out of time.
Doctors told her she had roughly one year left to live unless she received a kidney transplant. She suffered from uremia, a severe condition where the kidneys stop filtering waste from the blood, slowly poisoning the body from the inside. Her family had already been tested. None of them matched. Every normal option had failed.
So Wang did something almost nobody around her would have dared to do.
In 2013, she posted a message inside an online cancer support group. Her words were painfully direct because she no longer had the luxury of pretending.
She was searching for a terminally ill man with her blood type who would be willing to marry her and donate his kidney after his death.
In return, she promised she would care for him through the rest of his illness with everything she had.
“I just want to live,” she wrote.
Most people would have scrolled past the message.
One man did not.
His name was Yu Jianping.
He was twenty-seven years old, a former business manager and university graduate whose life had already been devastated by myeloma, a serious cancer affecting plasma cells. He had gone through a bone marrow transplant once already. The cancer had returned. His father had sold the family home to pay medical bills. A girlfriend had left after the diagnosis. Yu had quietly stopped fighting emotionally long before he stopped breathing physically.
Then he saw Wang’s message.
Their blood types matched.
He responded with remarkable simplicity:
“I can marry you.”
They met in a park for the first time.
And something unexpected happened almost immediately.
They liked each other.
One day during an online conversation, Wang suddenly disappeared for a while. Then she replied with dark humor that perfectly captured her spirit:
“On dialysis now. My arm is fixated. Here is a single-handed monster.”
She sent him a video from the dialysis machine smiling despite the tubes and blood moving beside her.
Yu laughed.
He later admitted he had not truly laughed in a very long time.
On July 16, 2013, they officially registered their marriage with a formal written agreement.
The contract was practical and emotionally detached on paper.
They would not live together.
They would not combine finances.
Their families would not know about the arrangement.
If Yu died and his kidney matched, Wang would receive it. In exchange, she promised she would care for his elderly widowed father for the rest of the man’s life.
It began as a survival agreement between two people who believed death was approaching.
But life complicated the arrangement.
Wang started accompanying Yu to hospital appointments.
Yu cooked soup for her after dialysis sessions.
They walked hospital corridors together.
They joked about sickness and death with the strange humor people develop when they genuinely understand mortality.
Without realizing it fully, the contract slowly became love.
Then Yu needed another bone marrow transplant — one his family could not afford.
Wang refused to stand still.
She opened a small flower bouquet stall on the street. Beside every bouquet she placed handwritten cards explaining their story: two sick people trying to save each other one day at a time. Customers returned. Strangers spread the story. The tiny stall slowly became something much larger through simple human compassion.
Eventually, Wang raised around 500,000 yuan — more than $90,000 — for Yu’s surgery.
And then something almost impossible happened.
Yu’s condition stabilized after his second transplant.
Meanwhile, Wang’s dialysis treatments began decreasing. Doctors told her she might not need a kidney transplant after all.
The two people who met expecting death were somehow both still alive.
In February 2015, they held a real wedding celebration with friends and family who finally learned how their relationship had truly started. Not as a romance at first, but as two desperate people trying to save each other.
Their story later inspired the 2024 Chinese film, which won multiple national awards. Today, Wang and Yu run the “Yongsheng Flower” shop in Xi’an — built from the same flower stall Wang once used to raise money for the man she believed she would someday outlive.
People often describe stories like this as miracles.
And maybe they are.
But what makes this story feel unforgettable is not only that two sick people survived.
It is that Wang Xiao refused to surrender her sense of agency even when almost every normal path disappeared.
She wrote down exactly what she needed.
She asked honestly.
She found another person who was equally broken by circumstance.
Then they slowly gave each other reasons to continue fighting.
The kidney was never donated.
Because in the end, neither of them needed it.
They were too busy learning how to live.

English
I AM retweetledi
I AM retweetledi











