h a l f b a k e r y(Serving suggestion.)
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MRE cans don't heat themselves, do they? I have a bunch of MRE heaters, and they're a bag that you pour water in...some sort of chemical reaction makes heat and hydrogen. That would probably work, but you'd have to put warnings about how the donuts may be explosive... |
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I assumed he was talking about pre-made donuts which had already been fried, and are now being merely reheated. |
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Not all donuts are fried, though. Cake donuts are more dense than the kind you're talking about...Not as good, though. |
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Bagels <GOOD bagels> are actually boiled, not baked. |
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that explains why they taste like nothing. |
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Are you insinuating that boiled foods like new England boiled dinner...oh, right. Never mind. |
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I'm not sure that donuts would ever make it as survival food, but as anybody who as ever spent several weeks hiking through the wilderness could tell you, a grease laden donut, cakey or not, cold or hot, would be heaven. Of course keeping them dissolving into a can of crumbs would be another task. |
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why hot?
why not cold donuts
very cold |
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And top them with roll-on hollandaise, cream cheese rings, or (yum) spravy. |
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You can get croissants in a can, but they are not as nice as they would sound. |
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[Basically it's a large can of dough] |
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why not use the handwarmer chemicals? |
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You can already get those cellophane-wrapped packages of chocolate-covered or powdered "donuts"; I can see putting those in cans to prolong shelf life (if they don't already outlive most humans). |
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um... bagels: every recipe i saw was you boil them, *then* you bake them (sorta like soft pretzels)... |
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so far as donuts: i thougth this was like canned biscuit, but sweeter and maybe cinnamon-flavored or studded with raisins or something, with holes in them, that you then fry... but this idea *might* work too. but only if you somehow made sure they didn't get weird... sounds like it would involve lotsa preservatives.. |
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This is a truly grand halfbaked product. Not as good as fresh donuts to be
sure, but would certainly be an improvement on the supermarket shelf
variety. |
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I think two items are missing from the original
proposal. |
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1)A sealed environment for proper convection. To
get the donut nice and thoroughly warm they
should be sealed in the carrying device. |
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2)Anticipation!!! The opening of the can is
occuring way too soon. If you pop the top and then
wait for the donuts to warm it will never happen.
You'll eat the donuts well before. I propose a
self-popping can. A pull-top or other triggering
device starts the warming process. As the
temprature in the can rises, the warmed air
expands. The engineering would be difficult but
based on the temprature and duration(this need
not be too finite) the top would pop open
revealing warm, moist donuts. Enjoy! |
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Ah, like pre-packaged popcorn! In fact, there could be a seperate campers' version that omits the chemical heater and is heated over the campfire or in a solar furnace. When it reaches optimal donutality, it pops open releasing the enticing scent and fatty goodness. Also, without the chemical bit, the can would be lighter, allowing campers to carry them more easily. |
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The self-heating kind would still be needed for people without campfires. |
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Following the backpacking/hiking genre of inventions, this could work through an ingenious inner pouch in ones hiking pants or shirt. The donut "can" or similar storage device could be zipped into a pouch near the inner thigh or possibly the underarm. The pursuant hiking activity would generate enough energy (heat) to warm the donuts to the preferred temerature. This could be determined by distance or elevation hiked for example. Then one would simply remove the donut storage device and "pop" open and enjoy! |
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I was just wondering how you get them out of the can? I worked as a kitchen hand for a while and I know that dough, water and heat is a recipe for benchtop gluey mess. |
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How about a jaffle iron donut shape with one of those tealight candles underneath, it would be the kind of aromatherapy I would definately go for |
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