Q: Drying tomatoes in the oven requires the lowest setting on your oven. If it is above 150 degrees, leave the oven door open slightly to reduce the heat. They will have to be turned and tossed periodically through the drying process since there is no air circulation with a baking sheet. This may take 6 to 12 hours.
A: Preheat the oven to 150 °F (66 °C). Arrange the cut tomatoes on a baking sheet so they are not touching one another. Heat the tomatoes in the oven until they have a leathery texture but are not sticky.

Q: Think of crowdfunding as the layers of an onion. Your first layer is family and friends. If they won't donate to you, who will? Your second layer is coworkers (past and present), teammates, business associates, casual acquaintances. Your third layer is the press and general public. Some organizations can provide wide networks of potential donors. Make a list of local organizations related to your cause or field. Ask them if they'd be willing to publicize your campaign through their social media. If you are doing the campaign on your own, you should draft a standard press release as a template. Personal interviews, however, are more likely to  get you coverage. If you use a platform such as mycause.com.au, their publicity team will send your story to the press free of charge. They will work to generate publicity on your behalf.
A: Make sure you have a core team of people promoting the campaign for you. Reach out to organizations and workplaces. Use the media.

Q: Nutrition is one of the biggest and most important facets of bodybuilding. You can lift seven days a week, train hard, and do all the cardio in the world, but if your nutrition is poor, you will not see rapid and mass gains in muscle size and strength. Learn to eat the right amount of the right kind of calories to gain muscle the way you want. To workout the daily calories you need for mass muscle gain, multiply your body weight in pounds by 20 for a rough estimate of what you'll need each day you train. Protein helps to build muscle quickly, and you need to have it present in high quantities in your diet, if you want to become a bodybuilder. Multiply your body weight in pounds by 0.8 to find out how many grams of protein you should consume in a day. Your daily protein intake should be around 20-35% of your calories.  Lean chicken, beef, eggs, and legumes should make up a significant portion of your diet. Most bodybuilders are pretty sick of chicken breasts and broccoli after a couple months, so it's a good idea to invest in a cookbook to help you keep things interesting. Food is fuel. Treat it like business. Carbohydrates are vital for maintaining muscle glycogen stores which elicit maximum training energy, and should make up around 60% of your daily calorie intake. Carbohydrates stimulate insulin release, which is a powerful agent for tissue growth.  Eat the majority of your carbs on workout days, especially post-workout. It is an excellent way to promote lean mass gains and minimise unwanted fat. You should also have a whole food meal with both carbs and protein 1.5 hours after your workout. Simple carbs such as rice, pasta, bananas, and whole grain cereals are excellent during this period. They deliver a rapid insulin spike and maximise muscle anabolism. Limit carbs to small servings of low GI carbs such as oats or a piece of fruit at other times of the day to control blood sugar levels and support lean gains Protein supplements such as whey powders are common among bodybuilders and benefit a wide variety of lifters, especially if you struggle to get your daily amount of protein.  Protein supplements are most effective within 30 minutes after a workout, so that the muscles can rapidly recover and therefore grow. Other times to work a protein shake into your diet can include around an hour before you workout, which can help to stimulate protein synthesis. It is advised you should take no more than 3 servings of protein supplement within a day, otherwise you are wasting your protein supplement, to avoid ingesting excess protein. Healthy fats are an essential component of a hardcore mass gain plan and a healthy diet. Healthy fats include nuts, olive oil, avocados, butter and eggs, which support the production of testosterone, will help you gain and recover faster.  On days that you let your muscles rest and don't work out, it is beneficial to cycle your carbs and fats. Increase fats on rest days and limit carbs because you are not training so you don't need the energy from carbs to perform. Avoid trans-fats and other fattening foods laced with preservatives. Fried foods, cheeses, and anything containing high fructose corn syrup should be avoided during training. Bodybuilders usually carry around gallon jugs full of water for a reason: you have to stay extremely well hydrated to get in shape. During workouts, you need to be drinking at least 10 ounces of water for every 10-20 minutes that you workout.  Avoid sugary sports drinks and other fluids during your workouts. Just stick to water. After workouts, you can have some coconut water to replenish your electrolytes, or use some electrolyte tablets in your own water, making homemade sports drink. Eat bananas and dates after workouts to help replenish electrolyte levels, keeping your potassium levels high and your recovery mild.
A: Calorie load the right way. Eat plenty of lean proteins. Eat slow-digesting carbohydrates. Consider supplementing with whey proteins. Use healthy fat to boost testosterone. Stay well hydrated.

Q: The experience of the interview itself, may well help you later during an interview for a job you really do want. And, you never know what might eventuate at the interview. You may not get that job in the first five seconds, but, you surely can lose it! Clothes in a current style. Hair cut, and dyed if needed (but, carefully, and, no comb-overs or 50's page-boys!) A firm handshake. Look them in the eye and SMILE. Don't brag about your grandchildren, or mention how many years it's been since you graduated from high school. Emphasize what you've been doing the last 10 or 20 years, no need to go any further back. Omit the year you graduated (unless you have a recent degree).
A:
Go to every interview you are offered, even if the commute is impossible, the job isn't what you really want, or the pay is too low. Work on making a good first impression. Don't drop tips that emphasize your age.