h a l f b a k e r yactual product may differ from illustration
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The pancake loaf is made by using spinning 3 dimensional
pans,
these pans are boxshaped with a teflon inner coating, the
pancake mix is poured into the pans wich are spun at high
velocity inside a specially designed oven. So that the
pancakes bond together into a loaf the core pancake must
first be inserted into the next largest 3d spinning pancake
pan
russian doll style, this must be done at exactly the right
time
when the mixture is cooked on the side touching the pan
but
still gooey on the outside, this will form a bond. This
russian
doll style bonding process will continute untill the largest
outter pancake is bonded to all the middle ones in the
shape
of a loaf.
At this point the pancake loaf is packaged and sealed in a
bag.
A person may take the loaf home and cut a slice off, the will
find that the pancake is only half cooked because only the
sides touching the pan got cooked and because of the
extremely high tempreture of the oven, there is a layer of
pancake mixture sandwiched between each cooked layer,
after slicing a peice off it has enough structure to lift and
put
down on a pan to cook the remainder and properly fuse the
layers together into a single pancake.
Serve with maple syrup and icecream or lemon juice and
sugar.
The Pancake Parlour
http://www.pancakeparlour.com/ Seems kinda relevant. Maybe you should pitch this idea to them. [RoboBust, Oct 04 2004, last modified Oct 05 2004]
[link]
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And all to allow you to slice off variable-thickness slices. Can't you just cook them yourself, or try and buy thick or thin ones? Or do you just want to chow the whole block, you greedy guts. Hmm, now you're talking... |
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Counldn't you get this machine to put cherries in sauce, or chocolate, or lemon in between each of the layers ? |
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Well... not sure how it would taste, but that's definitely half-baked. |
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so this thing would would produce a square pancake loaf? Couldn't they also be cylindrical pans? Or is the square quality part of the novelty? |
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hey, here's another idea. how about a long, non-stick conveyor belt style gridle? the hot belt would cook the batter on one side, and then a sort of a curved spatula could come down and cut, scrape off the gridle, and role the "loaf" up. then it could be sent on through a cooler, and then packaged. |
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this would give you a spiral pancake, sort of like a jelly role. |
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Lemon juice and sugar on pancakes: strange. |
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Anything can be put between the layers. When I think of
a loaf I think of somthing square, thats why I decided on a
square shape it would be much easier to make a round
pancake loaf. |
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Well this invention couldn't be more timely |
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Heh, well you seemed to have done it, I will now award your original pancake loaf idea with a croissant. Maybe they should be round pancake loaves though, so as to give the illusion you are still eating a normal ol' pancake (even if it happens to be 10cm thick). |
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No Pericles, lemon juice and sugar on pancakes is lovely, I assure you. If you think that's strange, you should check out The Pancake Parlour [link], one of my favourite restaurants. |
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Oh, and I don't know if you're joking or not [bobofthefuture], but apparently March 4th is international pancake day. First I've heard of it. |
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March 4th is Shrove Tuesday. Chance to use up all your eggs and lard prior to the start of Lent. Also known as Pancake Day in the UK. Many towns and villages have pancake races, run carrying a frying pan and flipping a pancake. |
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I give this a vote just for sheer, unblemished creativity, but you need to start drinking decaf. |
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