h a l f b a k e r yGuitar Hero: 4'33"
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Ju-Ice
multi-layered, three course, fruit hail for dynamic flavor and color | |
Ice spheres of three different fruit juices in concentric layers could be commercially produced to add to a glass of water or a cocktail. A few Ju-Ices, the size of ice cubes, would give a changing taste and look to a drink, as they melted.
For example, lemon followed by apple (giving taste
of lemonade plus apple juice) with a core of grape juice, or a mango then pineapple then kiwi combo might be popular.
ooh look what I found...
http://www.polsci.w...cream/Icecream.html N2 for ice cream [po, Oct 05 2004, last modified Oct 21 2004]
Blitz Barbeque
http://www.halfbake...ea/Blitz_20Barbeque Another of the Farmer's ideas. [8th of 7, Oct 05 2004]
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Annotation:
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How do you make fruit hail? |
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One way is to make increasingly larger ice balls in spherical molds in three steps. |
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I got keep juicin'
I've got to keep juicin'
blueberries fallin' down like hail
blueberries fallin' down like hail
Umm mmm mmm mmm |
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You could use a small ice-cube (sphere!) mould to freeze a core. Then place the frozen sphere on a spindle, in a mould of a larger size - the spindle would hopefully hold the sphere in place while the surrounding juice freezes. Repeat for each stage. |
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But then there would be a cylindrical hole where the spindle had been and 'core juice' could melt... |
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So perhaps use two, very thin, horizontal bars to rest the core on as the coating freezes. That way the holes do not run straight through another juice. |
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build it up like a pearl. by dipping it into required liquid and alternately into that liquid gas, the name of which escapes me :) N2 ? |
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If you made the spindle out of a thin cylinder of pure ice, it would become part of the structure. Its volume would need to be small with respect to the overall size of the finished sphere, to avoid dilution. |
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Or do this: just keep the spindle in it. Use a stirring stick, toothpick, or one of those funny umbrellas. |
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What if you rolled the inner core on supercooled laterally moving rods (like my old meatball cooker adaptation of a hot dog roller) immersed in moving juice? |
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Shoot, I thought you were talking about winter in Jerusalem. |
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// What if you rolled the inner core on supercooled laterally moving rods // |
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I've started to think about how old fashoned shot-towers work. Molten lead is poured through a grating, and freefalls through air. On the way down, it solidifies into a perfect sphere, then lands in cooling water to preserve the shape. Maybe this is what's needed for this application; the idea is effectively to duplicate in a manufacturing process the method that Cu-Nim clouds use to make hail, which is layered in the same way. The hailstones recirculate in the updraughts, collecting water droplets at the lower levels which then freeze on at the higher levels. |
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A google for "artificial hail" might be productive. |
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Not only do I love this idea, but, (with your permission of course), I would love to try to make it work in my house (minus the N2). If its okay, I will let you know what happens. |
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Be careful, [Isis]. Last year I tried out one of [FarmerJohn]'s ideas ("Blitz Barbeque") in our lab, and ended up splattered with lumps of burnt sausage. |
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funny [8th] you say you are a dab hand with explosives and yet you can't cope with a humble sausage. |
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Go for it Isis. I never did hear how that halvbaked, 200% BBQ'ed sausage tasted. |
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Another fabrication technique. First make a middle sphere from a mold. Then make two second layer half-spheres with a smaller half-sphere indentation from a mold. Pour a bit of second layer juice in one indentation, add the middle sphere and the other half and freeze. Then repeat for the outer layer. |
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