h a l f b a k e r yThe mutter of invention.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
|
Not a bad idea actually. They would probably need baking after cutting, but that's ok. |
|
|
I thought about that, maybe once cut just 10 mins in the oven/microwave - it should be pretty easy to do |
|
|
Have you tried baking those canned croissants? (link) You might use a similar trick for your cereal. |
|
|
//On a hungover Sunday morning, it's like finding a fairy in your fridge... // |
|
|
[wagster] Ah, I see you have been to one of my parties. |
|
|
[GC], do you have cannibal dinner parties at your house then? Does gay meat taste nicer? |
|
|
I picture a giant brittle corn flake, the size of a sheet of paper, which crumbles to bits the moment the roller touches it. |
|
|
If it was soggy enough to roll punch, you wouldn't want to eat it, and having to put all the soggy bits into the oven to bake is terribly inconvenient. |
|
|
A single, large Cornflake that you could disassemble with a baseball bat in the morning would be a great start to the day. |
|
|
not a corn flake, more of a sheet of pressed maize/wheat which is plyable and soft enough to cut with the puncher. When punched you quickly bake it and there you have your cereal shapes |
|
|
If the dough sheet was designed to shrink a lot when cooked, and the shapes happen to be tessellations, then they would seperate whle cooked with minimal waste. |
|
|
If it doesnt shrink, just break it apart when the sheet is cooked. |
|
|
[They would probably need baking after cutting, but that's ok.] |
|
|
you could make your cereal at night and eat it the next morning. |
|
|
I was imagining townie visitors working the wheatfields with scythes for the joy of labour, like Tolstoy. |
|
| |