@laura_rutledge: My favorite pasta 😍 #JBLGreekOut #CustomersMostLoved #AEHolidayForever #fypシ゚viral #cooking #HolidayAesthetic #fyp #foryoupage #HolidayAesthetic

Laura Rutledge
Laura Rutledge
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Region: US
Sunday 12 December 2021 16:58:52 GMT
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flipflip2001
J Jones :
do you have a boneless wings recipe? gonna try this!
2021-12-12 23:41:49
3
domm087
D-Mac :
You might be the pretties broadcaster I’ve ever seen. And there are a few in Canada. And you can talk the talk.
2021-12-25 15:47:15
0
linds4112
Lindsey :
Pasta facials are the best!
2021-12-12 20:55:02
3
garnetgirl64
Leslie :
I make this and love it. Add fresh basil when I have it.
2022-01-02 01:05:32
0
shakiemjeanjoseph
shakiemjeanjoseph :
So Amazing
2021-12-13 17:23:35
1
justin.c.reed
Justin Reed :
4 oz of butter…Move over Paula Deen
2021-12-13 00:12:01
1
jrloyalbeatles
J R. :
I didn't know u were SO good..awesome
2022-02-27 12:24:49
1
wdm115
Will :
Looks great !!! May have to try tonight !
2021-12-12 21:20:34
3
pirateeyeke
Pirate Ike :
Looks good. I need more sauce than that though. I’m a 2 parts sauce 1 part pasta kinda guy
2021-12-12 22:44:32
5
toc_tik69
toc_tik69 :
Didn't know you were quite the cook. Enjoy you on ESPN.
2021-12-12 21:44:49
3
john1806453
John1806453 :
Good posting, Go COWBOYS!!!
2021-12-12 21:03:40
2
jonjon5702
Jonathan Gayman :
looks so good! love your cooking videos and wonderful recipes!
2021-12-13 00:00:33
3
averileex3
AveriLee :
A grating queen!
2021-12-12 20:56:47
2
user056823565
Kenton Richardson :
you're so beautiful
2021-12-14 14:40:01
3
vincecaruso2
Vince Caruso261 :
either way, LOOKS GREAT ! BTW, please tell Dan to sharpen his jokes up lol.
2021-12-13 00:00:09
2
alabamafootball16
user2893403651062 :
Multi talented U super!
2021-12-12 21:03:42
2
michaelk42701
MichaelK78 :
When’s dinner 😂
2021-12-13 00:22:29
2
troodet
user165936759756 :
That looks good. I might have to make that for my daughter. Thanks !
2021-12-12 22:27:22
2
woodsmookie
Mookie :
Looks good
2021-12-13 05:18:13
2
flun1321
flun1321 :
You forgot your hat
2021-12-12 22:39:56
3
mikeohio3
Mike Gamble :
Keeping slayin in that snake skin 🥰🥰
2021-12-13 02:13:10
4
josh_rutledge
Josh Rutledge :
🤌🏻🤌🏻🤌🏻
2021-12-12 20:54:24
4
kc2020kc2020
Kurt :
Looks amazing…I’ll pay a million for it!
2021-12-21 16:23:52
2
To see more videos from user @laura_rutledge, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

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Amidst the wild greenery of Mehrauli Archaeological Park lies a small, forgotten pavilion, its stone columns still holding firm though its dome has long since vanished. Structures like this were once an integral part of Delhi’s medieval landscape, built during the Sultanate and Lodi periods when rulers commissioned countless tombs, mosques, stepwells, and pleasure gardens across the capital. This particular ruin likely served as a chhatri, a domed canopy raised over a grave, or as a resting pavilion within a larger garden complex. Such monuments embodied both religious devotion and the rulers’ desire to leave enduring marks upon the land. They were designed in a style distinct to the Delhi Sultanate—using locally available quartzite stone, often left rough on the surface, but arranged with remarkable precision. Mehrauli itself is the oldest continuously inhabited area of Delhi, home to over a thousand years of history. From the Tomaras and Chauhans to the Delhi Sultanate and the Mughals, each dynasty left its architectural imprint here. The area around the Qutub Minar became a necropolis, where even minor nobles and officials commissioned small tombs like this one, hoping for remembrance close to the city’s spiritual and political heart. Now overgrown and silent, the pavilion is one of more than a hundred monuments scattered across the park, its crumbling stones a reminder of Delhi’s rise as the seat of power in medieval India. What was once a place of reverence now sits as a ruin, half-swallowed by nature—yet still carrying the memory of dynasties long gone. #AncientRuins  #IndianHistory  #MedievalIndia  #HistoricSite  #AncientHistory
Amidst the wild greenery of Mehrauli Archaeological Park lies a small, forgotten pavilion, its stone columns still holding firm though its dome has long since vanished. Structures like this were once an integral part of Delhi’s medieval landscape, built during the Sultanate and Lodi periods when rulers commissioned countless tombs, mosques, stepwells, and pleasure gardens across the capital. This particular ruin likely served as a chhatri, a domed canopy raised over a grave, or as a resting pavilion within a larger garden complex. Such monuments embodied both religious devotion and the rulers’ desire to leave enduring marks upon the land. They were designed in a style distinct to the Delhi Sultanate—using locally available quartzite stone, often left rough on the surface, but arranged with remarkable precision. Mehrauli itself is the oldest continuously inhabited area of Delhi, home to over a thousand years of history. From the Tomaras and Chauhans to the Delhi Sultanate and the Mughals, each dynasty left its architectural imprint here. The area around the Qutub Minar became a necropolis, where even minor nobles and officials commissioned small tombs like this one, hoping for remembrance close to the city’s spiritual and political heart. Now overgrown and silent, the pavilion is one of more than a hundred monuments scattered across the park, its crumbling stones a reminder of Delhi’s rise as the seat of power in medieval India. What was once a place of reverence now sits as a ruin, half-swallowed by nature—yet still carrying the memory of dynasties long gone. #AncientRuins #IndianHistory #MedievalIndia #HistoricSite #AncientHistory

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