I wonder if the configuration space of all genomes contains a version of rice that is popcorn.
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@operand @mcc doesn't "The Detonator" sound like something you want to use in your kitchen https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Detonator_Popcorn_Popper.jpg
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I looked on wikipedia and they said Rice Krispies are "crisped rice". Great. Thanks. Thank you
@mcc "You're in a balloon."
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"Puffed Rice" as a keyword is finding some pretty compelling looking results. The first one is supposed to be masala flavor
@mcc I dont think you can (easily anyway) puff rice at home. On the other hand, bags of unflavoured puffed rice should be readily available at Indian stores (and maybe other Asian stores) near you.
We use it as in ingredient in a bunch of snacks.
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I wonder if the configuration space of all genomes contains a version of rice that is popcorn.
How do you make Rice Krispies. What exactly are they. Are they something you can make at home
@mcc as a kid i always imagined they dehydrated the rice for that, so I'm surprised to see other people here agreeing that it's probably puffed rice... interesting
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I wonder if the configuration space of all genomes contains a version of rice that is popcorn.
How do you make Rice Krispies. What exactly are they. Are they something you can make at home
@mcc In Korean TV shows, they use some sort of canon. It makes a big BOOM and instantly puffs a big portion of rice that they catch in a net. Doesn’t seem like something you’d do at home.
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@elomatreb @operand @mcc #TIL that popcorn cannons exist AND that they're how puffed rice is made, and now my life is just a smidge better!
"[T]he earliest form of popcorn cannon was invented by American botanist Alexander P. Anderson. Anderson experimented with heating corn starch using glass in 1901 and subsequently developed a device capable of puffing grain, which was then revealed by Anderson at the St. Louis World's Fair in 1904. Anderson used the invention to puff rice, which the Quaker Oats Company eventually bought to make puffed rice as breakfast cereal."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Popcorn_maker -
"Puffed Rice" as a keyword is finding some pretty compelling looking results. The first one is supposed to be masala flavor
@mcc in 🇦🇷 puffed rice is pretty common as a sweet, along with tutuca (another puffed corn)
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@mcc in 🇦🇷 puffed rice is pretty common as a sweet, along with tutuca (another puffed corn)
@mcc it may be useful to search for it in other languages. It looks like it is not as common in english-speaking countries
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@elomatreb @operand @mcc #TIL that popcorn cannons exist AND that they're how puffed rice is made, and now my life is just a smidge better!
"[T]he earliest form of popcorn cannon was invented by American botanist Alexander P. Anderson. Anderson experimented with heating corn starch using glass in 1901 and subsequently developed a device capable of puffing grain, which was then revealed by Anderson at the St. Louis World's Fair in 1904. Anderson used the invention to puff rice, which the Quaker Oats Company eventually bought to make puffed rice as breakfast cereal."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Popcorn_maker@elomatreb @operand @mcc Looks perfectly safe* to me!!!!
*dangerous a.f.
https://youtu.be/Pe8-zWZXPVE?si=MyYVfvjl8-9ApMD7 -
I wonder if the configuration space of all genomes contains a version of rice that is popcorn.
How do you make Rice Krispies. What exactly are they. Are they something you can make at home
@mcc I went on a wikipedia journey and it seems like they jam some moisture into the kernals with steam treatment and then give it the popcorn treatment. Interesting.
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I looked on wikipedia and they said Rice Krispies are "crisped rice". Great. Thanks. Thank you
@mcc Now they wouldn't want everyone to know the process, otherwise they have no product to sell. lol Given your level of intelligence, I wouldn't at all bet against you finding out.
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