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Here's the problem: say you want to cook something fast, but healthy, and the microwave makes the food (such as chicken strips) kind of soggy. In comes the Impale Cooker.
The idea is to have a cooking device that simply impales the food item(s) with sharp, skinny metal spikes inside a container,
like a miniature oven. Then, heat up this mini oven and the spikes to the desired temperature, such as a common 350 degrees F as recommended for fried foods. The result will be food cooked oven quality, but at the speed of frying.
This device obviously wouldn't replace a fryer, nor an oven, but could be a nice complement to those devices.
Spud spikes
http://www.asktoolt.../potato-spikes.html [ldischler, Jun 24 2006]
(?) Infernal cooker with spike retraction.
http://upload.wikim...en_of_Nuremberg.jpg [ldischler, Jun 25 2006]
Impala Cooker
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impala Would keep you fit - assuming you had to go out and catch one of these before using it. [zen_tom, Jun 26 2006]
"Set it and forget it"
http://www.ronco.com The Ronco Showtime Rotisserie [Freefall, Jun 26 2006]
(?) http://media.putfile.com/Electric-Sausage
http://media.putfile.com/Electric-Sausage Cooking a sausage on a fork using mains electricity [monojohnny, Jun 27 2006]
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Long ago, I tried to use a hotdog cooker that had stubby spikes for each end of the frankfurter. It ran electric current through the sausages, and scared the heck out of me. |
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You have pretty much described the Ronco Rotisserie. |
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Isn't this just a motorized fire spit? |
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That's what I thought at first, too, but this contraption would have lots and lots of small spikes, not one big one. Think bed of nails, not shish kebab. |
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It's well established that things cook much quicker if you cook them from the inside as well as out, even in conventional ovens. |
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But if your food was impaled on lots of little spikes, wouldn't it be kinda difficult to get it off once cooked? |
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Yes, there's going to need to be a spike retraction feature. |
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so if I want to cook some rice I have to
impale each individual grain... sighs -
better get started now - got friends
coming for dinner next week. [+} |
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It doesn't really compare to frying, since the heat capacity of air is so small compared to oil - oil cooks faster than air at the same temperature (unless you also make this a convection oven). Also, immersion in hot oil leaves food moister, in part by replacing lost moisture with yummy oil. |
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I'm imagining a George Forman Grill with about a eight hundred little spikes total (that's 20x20 per side if my quick math is right). |
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I remember one of those hot dog cookers that [baconbrain] mentioned. You stuck each end of the dog onto a spike. They came out yucky, as I like mine with the skin burnt, if I eat one at all. |
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Sounds intriguing - but doesn't piercing food allow juices to escape. What about two heated plates sort of like a large tenderizing mallet - would give lots of surface area against the food - help get the heat in fast, but not let the juices leave. |
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Impale the food and place it in a small oven, you say? |
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Why does the phrase "Set it and forget it" come to mind? (see link) |
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Just glanced at this and saw "Impala Cooking". Not a recipe I'm liable to need soon, and if I did, I probably wouldn't be fussy. |
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My guess is that Impala would probably taste something like venison. |
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Impala tastes like kudu. It's very gamey and you have to tenderise it quite a bit. |
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but can you describe the taste of kudu
without reverting to a who's on first
routine? |
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I suppose that [Freefall]'s guess is a pretty good description. It wasn't that hard to find in South Africa. |
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Check out the sausage link I attached, which isn't the way I would recommend you go with your idea...but looks like great fun.. :-) |
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This isnt really a new concept, Probably half the people on the planet have a set of aluminum baking nails, or as in the link Spud Spike(as is thier most common usage) I think this is baked. |
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