I've come up with what is probably the greatest business idea in the history of the universeIt's well known that people can go for weeks without food, but only a short time without waterI've solved this problem - introducing (drum roll, please): DEHYDRATED WATERThese are small, aluminum foil packages that easily fit inside a backpack, and contain delicious dehydrated spring waterWhen needed, reconstitute by adding water and instantly you've got a source of hydrationObviously, this is going to be a big hit with hikers and campers, and I'm expecting large orders from the US militaryAnd I wouldn't be surprised if a Nobel Prize for Inventing Stuff is coming my way! If anyone would like to invest in my fledgling company, please let me know AS SOON AS POSSIBLEDon't let this once in a lifetime opportunity pass you by!!
waxed paper cant be used cause it burns, plastic wrap will meltyou can use aluminum foil and spritz with a tiny bit of pani usually do that and it works out fine.
Using parchment paper is so nice for NO MESS baking but not at all necessary! We have been baking cookies and other stuff without it much longer than it has been available in our kitchens I just ignore that and mist the cookie sheet with oil or rub it with butter if it is to be put on greased surface to bakeFor the meringue cookies that don't get near any oil or grease, they come off the cookie sheets fairly well without messing with the paperThe food gurus and sheffs on this site diss me but I use copy paper on baking sheets also(how many little boys die from eating paper in school so they can shoot spit balls at the picture of George Washington over the teachers head?) this is supposedly not food grade and is flamable! Fahrenheit 451 is a dystopian novel by Ray Bradbury which was first published in a shorter form as The Fireman (Galaxy Science Fiction, Vol1 No5, February 1951)The short novel presents a future American society in which the masses are hedonistic and critical thought through reading is outlawedThe central character, Guy Montag, is employed as a fireman (which, in this future, means bookburner)The number 451 refers to the temperature at which book paper combustsAlthough sources contemporary with the novel's writing gave the temperature as 450 °C (842 °F),[1] Bradbury is believed to have thought Fahrenheit made for a better title[2][page needed]; however, in an introduction to the 40th anniversary edition of the novel, Bradbury states that a person he spoke with at the local fire department said Book-paper catches fire at 451 degrees FahrenheitThe firemen burn them for the good of humanityWritten in the early years of the Cold War, the novel is a critique of what Bradbury saw as issues in American society of the era.[3]
Sorry, but dehydrated water already existsNo one has figured out why, since it's a total scamBut amazon allows it to be sold, so what the heck.