Which automobile would bake the best cookies?
Which automobile would bake the best cookies?
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Anyone?
Toyota Sera.
All that domed class.
>Which automobile would bake the best cookies?
Hot air rises to the top, so the tray should be higher as there are too many cookies on the tray. Reduce the number of cookies so more of the black tray is exposed to be heated by the sunlight. There should be a minimum of 2 inches between each cookie.
Also put an insulator beneath the cookie tray not just to protect the dash, but to reduce the amount of heat lost. See picture for the proper way to bake cookies in the car. OP's picture was created by a newbie.
Cookie Recipe Matters. Your cookie recipe should be adjusted for low temperature baking which means just the right amount of bicarbonate. That means very plain non oily cookies such as the vanilla wafer type. And they will be blah if you don't have arizona august heat.
It's too cool now. You also need a dry environment such as in aridzona. The same heat in humid california would probably fail. In general, baking in the car fails except for acid bicarbonate cookies that only need to be dried out to be finished. Cookies that need a toasting action such as oily (fatty) cookies will be yuck.
>Veeky Forums here
Anything blacked out and pointed towards the sun.
>Tfw i can bake my cookies in hellizona
Feels good
First thing first a car with big window
c7 z06
...
...
Uh oh, it's mad!
Viper. Just put them on the hood and let it idle for five minutes.
>Just put them on the hood and let it idle for five minutes.
Hoods are insulated so the heat is less.
But Mythbusters did have a car cooking episode as in can you cook or bake with your car? So, they packed a thanksgiving meal into the engine compartment and after they arrived at the destination, they would check out the food to see if they could give thanks (that it was edible) or not.
Lol. A couple weeks ago my brother brought us an engine baked pizza from Wally World.
>Sitting at friends house enjoying a buzz
>Brother calls and says he'll be on his way
>Told him to stop and buy a cheap wally world pizza
>Friend says make sure it's baked when it gets here
>Tell brother to take the pizza and place it under the hood on his 3.1
>Brother shows up hour and a half later
>Walks in bringing us a pizza
>Immediately cut into it and start spreading slices
>Toppings are all melted, the crust looks done on the one side
>disgunbegood.jpg
>Proceeded to eat a half cooked pizza
Wouldn't say it was a success but I wouldn't say it was a failure.
>Hoods are insulated so the heat is less.
doesn't matter
>Hot air rises to the top
only when there is cold air to displace it at the bottom retard
>my car is completely air tight
It pushes away the air from the top and leaves the cool air at the bottom.
The hottest air will be at the top of the cabin. There's no real air circulation since the windows are closed, so there's no wind to cause air of different temperatures to be continually mixed inside the cabin.
Ding! Cookies ready!