for easier frying, manufacturers would add some helium at the same time as the sausage meat is introduced to the skins and before twisting the links more tightly than tradition dictates.
producing, I imagine, bouncier sausages in the pan, less likely to stick and burn more evenly cooked & uniformly tanned comestibles.
prick sausages during cooking as usual and high squeaky whistles will alert your family to the table.-- po, May 08 2004 //Assuming you get to consume the helium would it give you high-pitched farts, the next day?// http://www.tacobell.com/They probably use helium in their food [sartep, Oct 04 2004, last modified Oct 05 2004] Sausage aficionados usually recommend not piercing sausages to keep the flavour in don't they? I've got a feeling these snags might explode! No?-- cromagnon, May 08 2004 Well, Ill admit I like the image of these sausages expanding in the pan to an enormous size before finally exploding from internal steam pressure. But the Helium doesnt contribute anything.-- ldischler, May 08 2004 I beg to differ-- Helium, May 08 2004 Isn't Helium flammable?-- kranedawg, May 08 2004 what Helium said...-- po, May 08 2004 Is the idea that helium will lighten the sausage? It won't. Besides, casings are gas permeable.-- waugsqueke, May 08 2004 these babies' aren't.
<restrains myself from enquiring as to the size of american sausages>-- po, May 09 2004 What waugs said.-- DrCurry, May 09 2004 My veggie sausages give me bad enough gas as it is!-- dobtabulous, May 10 2004 //But the helium doesn't contribute anything// the Ideal Gas Law begs to differ [ldischler].-- suctionpad, May 10 2004 Hmmm ... flammable. Try using hydrogen instead of helium, and finished sausages would launch right onto the dinner plate.-- booleanfool, May 10 2004 random, halfbakery