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yurionicetrash98 · 4 years
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Happy pride month!
Pansexual stim board
1/2/3/4/5/6/7/8/9
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yurionicetrash98 · 4 years
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yurionicetrash98 · 6 years
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~Yuuri x Viktor NSFW: Sensitive~
Yuuri is so damn sensitive. Viktor wants to see how many times he can get his baby boy to climax without any direct stimulation to his cock. He locks up his boys hands to be sure he doesn’t try to be naughty.
Contains: Kissing, Daddy Kink, Super Light Age Play, Bondage, Talk of Safewords, Dom/Sub play, Rimming, Fingering, Frottage, Nipple play, Multiple orgasms.
Once again I got real squeaky with a Yuuri audio. It just comes out that way now with him I guess, haha. Thanks again so much everyone for being so supportive of me and what I do! 
Also, this is for those of you who wanted more Daddy Kink *wink*
~Audio Transcript Below~
Keep reading
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yurionicetrash98 · 7 years
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Katsudon - Yuri!!! on Ice
You might not want to be a pork cutlet, but with this recipe you can totally eat a pork cutlet!  And, really, what could be more desirable than a steaming bowl of rice, breaded pork cutlet, onions, and egg. Funnily enough, katsu and the word for victory are pronounced the same in Japanese (カツ and 勝つ, respectively), so athletes will often eat some katsudon before or after they compete. So, in honor if Yuri Katsuki’s birthday, make some tasty katsudon!
Feeds 2
Ingredients:
3 cups cooked rice ( following this recipe if you can.  Feel free to make it ahead of time and heat it up before plating, but I’ll let you know when to start cooking the rice if you want to make everything all at once)
2 boneless pork chops (and a meat mallet)
Salt and pepper
Flour for dusting
1 egg, beaten, for breading
1 cup panko
½  cup dashi stock (you can use chicken or vegetable stock if you can’t get a hold of some dashi or dashi powder)
1 Tbsp. soy sauce
2 Tbsp. mirin
2 tsp. sugar
1 small onion, sliced thin
2 eggs
¼ cup peas (alternatively, you can top it with scallions/green onions, thinly sliced nori, sesame seeds, whole snowpeas, and any combination of any of these)
Instructions:
Begin heating up some oil in a deep pan on the stove.  About ½” of oil should do.  Alternatively, if you have a deep fryer and feel comfortable using it, go ahead a use that for the pork katsu.
Use a meat mallet to pound the pork to about ¼” thick.
Season the pork chops with salt and pepper, and dust them with the flour.
Dip the pork into the first beaten egg, then coat them with panko crumbs.
Once the oil is hot (get some water on your hand and flick it into the oil from a safe distance above, if it sizzles and pops, the oil is ready), place the breaded pork into the oil.  Fry them until golden brown on each side.  Once they’re cooked, remove them from the oil, and set them aside on a plate with some paper towels to absorb the excess oil.
If you haven’t already made your rice, start cooking it now, using this recipe.
Add the stock, soy sauce, mirin and sugar to a pan (one big enough to hold both pork chops) and bring it to a simmer.  Add in the onions and cover the pan with a lid.
Once the onions are translucent, slice the pork katsu, and carefully (as to keep the slices together, treating them as if it were still a whole cutlet) add it on top of the onions.
Beat the remaining two eggs and pour them on top of the pork katsu.  Cover the pan with the lid.
Begin portioning the rice into two bowls.
Once the eggs are done (still kind of jiggly and slimy looking, but definitely not liquid anymore.  If you’re squeamish about eggs, feel free to cook it a bit longer, but be careful not to allow the egg to become dry and fluffy), pick up the pan and slide/pour the sauce, onions, katsu, and egg onto the rice in the bowl.
Top with peas or your choice of garnish.
Reward yourself with this delicious meal. (But only after you win the skating competition, of course.)
8K notes · View notes
yurionicetrash98 · 7 years
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Katsudon - Yuri!!! on Ice
You might not want to be a pork cutlet, but with this recipe you can totally eat a pork cutlet!  And, really, what could be more desirable than a steaming bowl of rice, breaded pork cutlet, onions, and egg. Funnily enough, katsu and the word for victory are pronounced the same in Japanese (カツ and 勝つ, respectively), so athletes will often eat some katsudon before or after they compete. So, in honor if Yuri Katsuki’s birthday, make some tasty katsudon!
Feeds 2
Ingredients:
3 cups cooked rice ( following this recipe if you can.  Feel free to make it ahead of time and heat it up before plating, but I’ll let you know when to start cooking the rice if you want to make everything all at once)
2 boneless pork chops (and a meat mallet)
Salt and pepper
Flour for dusting
1 egg, beaten, for breading
1 cup panko
½  cup dashi stock (you can use chicken or vegetable stock if you can’t get a hold of some dashi or dashi powder)
1 Tbsp. soy sauce
2 Tbsp. mirin
2 tsp. sugar
1 small onion, sliced thin
2 eggs
¼ cup peas (alternatively, you can top it with scallions/green onions, thinly sliced nori, sesame seeds, whole snowpeas, and any combination of any of these)
Instructions:
Begin heating up some oil in a deep pan on the stove.  About ½” of oil should do.  Alternatively, if you have a deep fryer and feel comfortable using it, go ahead a use that for the pork katsu.
Use a meat mallet to pound the pork to about ¼” thick.
Season the pork chops with salt and pepper, and dust them with the flour.
Dip the pork into the first beaten egg, then coat them with panko crumbs.
Once the oil is hot (get some water on your hand and flick it into the oil from a safe distance above, if it sizzles and pops, the oil is ready), place the breaded pork into the oil.  Fry them until golden brown on each side.  Once they’re cooked, remove them from the oil, and set them aside on a plate with some paper towels to absorb the excess oil.
If you haven’t already made your rice, start cooking it now, using this recipe.
Add the stock, soy sauce, mirin and sugar to a pan (one big enough to hold both pork chops) and bring it to a simmer.  Add in the onions and cover the pan with a lid.
Once the onions are translucent, slice the pork katsu, and carefully (as to keep the slices together, treating them as if it were still a whole cutlet) add it on top of the onions.
Beat the remaining two eggs and pour them on top of the pork katsu.  Cover the pan with the lid.
Begin portioning the rice into two bowls.
Once the eggs are done (still kind of jiggly and slimy looking, but definitely not liquid anymore.  If you’re squeamish about eggs, feel free to cook it a bit longer, but be careful not to allow the egg to become dry and fluffy), pick up the pan and slide/pour the sauce, onions, katsu, and egg onto the rice in the bowl.
Top with peas or your choice of garnish.
Reward yourself with this delicious meal. (But only after you win the skating competition, of course.)
8K notes · View notes
yurionicetrash98 · 7 years
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What do you think?
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yurionicetrash98 · 7 years
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Katsudon - Yuri!!! on Ice
You might not want to be a pork cutlet, but with this recipe you can totally eat a pork cutlet!  And, really, what could be more desirable than a steaming bowl of rice, breaded pork cutlet, onions, and egg. Funnily enough, katsu and the word for victory are pronounced the same in Japanese (カツ and 勝つ, respectively), so athletes will often eat some katsudon before or after they compete. So, in honor if Yuri Katsuki’s birthday, make some tasty katsudon!
Feeds 2
Ingredients:
3 cups cooked rice ( following this recipe if you can.  Feel free to make it ahead of time and heat it up before plating, but I’ll let you know when to start cooking the rice if you want to make everything all at once)
2 boneless pork chops (and a meat mallet)
Salt and pepper
Flour for dusting
1 egg, beaten, for breading
1 cup panko
½  cup dashi stock (you can use chicken or vegetable stock if you can’t get a hold of some dashi or dashi powder)
1 Tbsp. soy sauce
2 Tbsp. mirin
2 tsp. sugar
1 small onion, sliced thin
2 eggs
¼ cup peas (alternatively, you can top it with scallions/green onions, thinly sliced nori, sesame seeds, whole snowpeas, and any combination of any of these)
Instructions:
Begin heating up some oil in a deep pan on the stove.  About ½” of oil should do.  Alternatively, if you have a deep fryer and feel comfortable using it, go ahead a use that for the pork katsu.
Use a meat mallet to pound the pork to about ¼” thick.
Season the pork chops with salt and pepper, and dust them with the flour.
Dip the pork into the first beaten egg, then coat them with panko crumbs.
Once the oil is hot (get some water on your hand and flick it into the oil from a safe distance above, if it sizzles and pops, the oil is ready), place the breaded pork into the oil.  Fry them until golden brown on each side.  Once they’re cooked, remove them from the oil, and set them aside on a plate with some paper towels to absorb the excess oil.
If you haven’t already made your rice, start cooking it now, using this recipe.
Add the stock, soy sauce, mirin and sugar to a pan (one big enough to hold both pork chops) and bring it to a simmer.  Add in the onions and cover the pan with a lid.
Once the onions are translucent, slice the pork katsu, and carefully (as to keep the slices together, treating them as if it were still a whole cutlet) add it on top of the onions.
Beat the remaining two eggs and pour them on top of the pork katsu.  Cover the pan with the lid.
Begin portioning the rice into two bowls.
Once the eggs are done (still kind of jiggly and slimy looking, but definitely not liquid anymore.  If you’re squeamish about eggs, feel free to cook it a bit longer, but be careful not to allow the egg to become dry and fluffy), pick up the pan and slide/pour the sauce, onions, katsu, and egg onto the rice in the bowl.
Top with peas or your choice of garnish.
Reward yourself with this delicious meal. (But only after you win the skating competition, of course.)
8K notes · View notes
yurionicetrash98 · 7 years
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My Top 10 Animes that Needed a 2nd Season 1. The Devil is a Part-Timer! 2. Problem Children Are Coming From Another World, Aren’t They? 3. No Game No Life 4. Legend of the Legendary Heroes 5. Btooom! 6. Kaze no Stigma 7. Princess Jellyfish 8. Rune Soldier Louie 9. Blue Exorcist 10. Yozakura Quartet
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yurionicetrash98 · 7 years
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progress
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yurionicetrash98 · 7 years
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Katsudon - Yuri!!! on Ice
You might not want to be a pork cutlet, but with this recipe you can totally eat a pork cutlet!  And, really, what could be more desirable than a steaming bowl of rice, breaded pork cutlet, onions, and egg. Funnily enough, katsu and the word for victory are pronounced the same in Japanese (カツ and 勝つ, respectively), so athletes will often eat some katsudon before or after they compete. So, in honor if Yuri Katsuki’s birthday, make some tasty katsudon!
Feeds 2
Ingredients:
3 cups cooked rice ( following this recipe if you can.  Feel free to make it ahead of time and heat it up before plating, but I’ll let you know when to start cooking the rice if you want to make everything all at once)
2 boneless pork chops (and a meat mallet)
Salt and pepper
Flour for dusting
1 egg, beaten, for breading
1 cup panko
½  cup dashi stock (you can use chicken or vegetable stock if you can’t get a hold of some dashi or dashi powder)
1 Tbsp. soy sauce
2 Tbsp. mirin
2 tsp. sugar
1 small onion, sliced thin
2 eggs
¼ cup peas (alternatively, you can top it with scallions/green onions, thinly sliced nori, sesame seeds, whole snowpeas, and any combination of any of these)
Instructions:
Begin heating up some oil in a deep pan on the stove.  About ½” of oil should do.  Alternatively, if you have a deep fryer and feel comfortable using it, go ahead a use that for the pork katsu.
Use a meat mallet to pound the pork to about ¼” thick.
Season the pork chops with salt and pepper, and dust them with the flour.
Dip the pork into the first beaten egg, then coat them with panko crumbs.
Once the oil is hot (get some water on your hand and flick it into the oil from a safe distance above, if it sizzles and pops, the oil is ready), place the breaded pork into the oil.  Fry them until golden brown on each side.  Once they’re cooked, remove them from the oil, and set them aside on a plate with some paper towels to absorb the excess oil.
If you haven’t already made your rice, start cooking it now, using this recipe.
Add the stock, soy sauce, mirin and sugar to a pan (one big enough to hold both pork chops) and bring it to a simmer.  Add in the onions and cover the pan with a lid.
Once the onions are translucent, slice the pork katsu, and carefully (as to keep the slices together, treating them as if it were still a whole cutlet) add it on top of the onions.
Beat the remaining two eggs and pour them on top of the pork katsu.  Cover the pan with the lid.
Begin portioning the rice into two bowls.
Once the eggs are done (still kind of jiggly and slimy looking, but definitely not liquid anymore.  If you’re squeamish about eggs, feel free to cook it a bit longer, but be careful not to allow the egg to become dry and fluffy), pick up the pan and slide/pour the sauce, onions, katsu, and egg onto the rice in the bowl.
Top with peas or your choice of garnish.
Reward yourself with this delicious meal. (But only after you win the skating competition, of course.)
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yurionicetrash98 · 7 years
Conversation
yuri, arriving at the airport in russia: god i missed u
viktor: you talkin to me or my ass
yuri: both
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yurionicetrash98 · 7 years
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Katsudon - Yuri!!! on Ice
You might not want to be a pork cutlet, but with this recipe you can totally eat a pork cutlet!  And, really, what could be more desirable than a steaming bowl of rice, breaded pork cutlet, onions, and egg. Funnily enough, katsu and the word for victory are pronounced the same in Japanese (カツ and 勝つ, respectively), so athletes will often eat some katsudon before or after they compete. So, in honor if Yuri Katsuki’s birthday, make some tasty katsudon!
Feeds 2
Ingredients:
3 cups cooked rice ( following this recipe if you can.  Feel free to make it ahead of time and heat it up before plating, but I’ll let you know when to start cooking the rice if you want to make everything all at once)
2 boneless pork chops (and a meat mallet)
Salt and pepper
Flour for dusting
1 egg, beaten, for breading
1 cup panko
½  cup dashi stock (you can use chicken or vegetable stock if you can’t get a hold of some dashi or dashi powder)
1 Tbsp. soy sauce
2 Tbsp. mirin
2 tsp. sugar
1 small onion, sliced thin
2 eggs
¼ cup peas (alternatively, you can top it with scallions/green onions, thinly sliced nori, sesame seeds, whole snowpeas, and any combination of any of these)
Instructions:
Begin heating up some oil in a deep pan on the stove.  About ½” of oil should do.  Alternatively, if you have a deep fryer and feel comfortable using it, go ahead a use that for the pork katsu.
Use a meat mallet to pound the pork to about ¼” thick.
Season the pork chops with salt and pepper, and dust them with the flour.
Dip the pork into the first beaten egg, then coat them with panko crumbs.
Once the oil is hot (get some water on your hand and flick it into the oil from a safe distance above, if it sizzles and pops, the oil is ready), place the breaded pork into the oil.  Fry them until golden brown on each side.  Once they’re cooked, remove them from the oil, and set them aside on a plate with some paper towels to absorb the excess oil.
If you haven’t already made your rice, start cooking it now, using this recipe.
Add the stock, soy sauce, mirin and sugar to a pan (one big enough to hold both pork chops) and bring it to a simmer.  Add in the onions and cover the pan with a lid.
Once the onions are translucent, slice the pork katsu, and carefully (as to keep the slices together, treating them as if it were still a whole cutlet) add it on top of the onions.
Beat the remaining two eggs and pour them on top of the pork katsu.  Cover the pan with the lid.
Begin portioning the rice into two bowls.
Once the eggs are done (still kind of jiggly and slimy looking, but definitely not liquid anymore.  If you’re squeamish about eggs, feel free to cook it a bit longer, but be careful not to allow the egg to become dry and fluffy), pick up the pan and slide/pour the sauce, onions, katsu, and egg onto the rice in the bowl.
Top with peas or your choice of garnish.
Reward yourself with this delicious meal. (But only after you win the skating competition, of course.)
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yurionicetrash98 · 7 years
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Love & Life | NekoCake *Permission to share was granted by the artist.
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yurionicetrash98 · 7 years
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Mosspaca Advertising Department’ by @坛九 and @old先, translated by Yaoi-blcd. We have just opened a yaoi-blcd general discord chatroom! We will post releases here and you can ask scanlation related questions here, too.
Previously 1/ /2/ /3/ /4/ /5/ /6/ /7/ /8/ /9/ /10/ /11/ /12/ /13/ /14/ /15/ /16/ /17/ /18/  /19/ /20/ /21/ /22/ /23/ /24/ /25/ /26/ /27*/ /28/ /29/ /30*/ /31/ /32/ /33/ /34/ /35/ /36*/ /37*/ /38/ /39*/ /40*/ /41*/ /42/ /43/ /44/ /45/ /46/ /47/ /48/ /49/ /50/ /51/ /52/ /53/ /54/ /55/ /56/ /57/ /58a/ /58b/ /59/ /60/ /61/ /62/ /63/ /64a/ /64b 64c/ /65a/ /65b/ /66/ /67/ /68/ /next/
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yurionicetrash98 · 7 years
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I know that it was intense but guys
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yurionicetrash98 · 7 years
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yurionicetrash98 · 7 years
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daily reminder to click a button so you can give free food to a shelter!!
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