These might take 3-5min to construct for first-timers:
https://www.tiktok.com/@ricegrains_manual/video/7428573915364019486
I'm not a big fan of TikTok (surveillance issues), but I couldn't find this one posted anywhere else besides... the other place. I suppose it first popped up on Chinese social media sites like Douyin or Weibo before making it over to TT. Or something.
Now, origami animals aren't something I'd ordinarily post even here, but they totally had me at the flapping action! So cute, and reminded me of moving hand-held paper objects we used to make as kids. For example, I seem to recall a sort of 'right-angled-Pacman' paper choosing device we'd use on our fellow schoolmates. You'd use your fingers to make the Pacman gobble, revealing some inner regions in the device based on your choice of flaps, I guess it was. IIRC they were all the rage for me when I was 9yrs old or so, but I'm guessing they're obsolete now in the age of pocket digital devices.
Btw, I extracted the raw video link, if that helps anyone. You should be able to save it locally from that link.
Cootie catcher?
Hmmm... this is going to be an interesting one to translate.
When kids are in that 8-10 year old range and think it's gross to touch the opposite sex, it is often joked they have mythical bugs called "cooties." They're supposed to be like lice (polls/piojos), but you catch them from touching someone of the same age but opposite gender. I guess the pinching of the paper fortune teller is supposed to remove them from your friends. 😄
We mainly used them as a fortune tellers, sometimes as little animals themselves if they were done with eyes and such. Doing some reading on the origin, it seems it first got tanslated to English to be used as a salt cellar. This Reddit post has people from a bunch of places saying what the origami thing is called where they're from. I thought "cocotte" in French was interesting. (olla de ferro colat) I can see the points looking like the little legs on the bottom of the pot if it were used upside down.
Cocotte en fonte , or 'casserole dish made of cast iron,' literally.
I'm curious as to why they're Dutch ovens in (US) English. What makes them so "Dutch" that we call them that over just calling it a "cast iron pot" like everyone else seems to?
Dunno, are they exactly the same things?
I cook a lot as a (mostly) vegetarian, but cookery & crockery like that seem like they're primarily for meat-oriented dishes. But again, I'm not really sure...
It gives me pics of the traditional Le Crueset/Staub pots when I search them.
They've got a COVID era resurgence from people using them to bake their artisanal breads, and the cooking shows always use them for stews/braises and sometimes frying so all that mass provides better temperature stability.
Is there something specific you're aiming to cook?
Oh, no. It was just one of the names that came up for the cootie catcher in the post I linked! People from diff parts of the world were saying what they called it, and the one French person said cocotte, and I liked that was different than the other things people saw it as.