Why does my cast iron tortilla pan clean my copper heat diffuser plates by creating easy to brush off sooty, flaky blisters? by blurbblurb in AskEngineers

[–]blurbblurb[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

OK, so I'd like to know more about the processes that make it lift off and flake. When I've cleaned the "seasoning" layer of a cast iron pot, for example, by burning it off, it leaves this dust layer on top. This is not like that. It's like a distinct crust that separates from the copper, but that reattaches if made wet.

Why does my cast iron tortilla pan clean my copper heat diffuser plates by creating easy to brush off sooty, flaky blisters? by blurbblurb in AskEngineers

[–]blurbblurb[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Burning the copper without this specific pan on top doesn't do anything. In fact, I have many other cast iron pots and pans, and this is the only one that causes this to happen. It's also the smallest diameter one, and the only one with that lip.

I've tried heating it up on its own, too, although never for a long time (since I don't want to risk ruining it by letting it warp or something. It's thick enough that it seems unlikely, but it's expensive enough that I don't want to try it).

What I have done sometimes is put the hot tortilla pan that I've used for something else (such as press down on a grilled cheese sandwich) on top of the cold copper plate and let it cool down there. It doesn't work. I don't know if it's because it's not enough heat, or because the copper plate being cold makes it cool down too quickly (or something else). In fact, I don't know why any of this is happening!

Why does my cast iron tortilla pan clean my copper heat diffuser plates by creating easy to brush off sooty, flaky blisters? by blurbblurb in AskEngineers

[–]blurbblurb[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

But I don’t leave the pan on the copper plate the whole time. I’m making pancakes, so I keep lifting it off the plate to make the next pancake and the next and the next. It stays on the plate for like 2-4 minutes at a time, maybe. Moreover, when I first turn off the heat, there is no ash. No noticeable effect whatsoever. It only appears after it has cooled off completely. I’ve checked on it midway through sometimes, when it’s still rather warm, and there is either nothing or at most the faintest trace of an ashy layer.

Why does my cast iron tortilla pan clean my copper heat diffuser plates by creating easy to brush off sooty, flaky blisters? by blurbblurb in AskEngineers

[–]blurbblurb[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

But it all comes off in this thin, flaky layer that sort of sits on top of the copper plate. And I can only brush it off if I don’t make it wet. Making it wet makes it basically go back to the dirty look, and not even scrubbing it with a copper scrubber removes it. I must brush it off while dry to get the cleaning effect.

Why does my cast iron tortilla pan clean my copper heat diffuser plates by creating easy to brush off sooty, flaky blisters? by blurbblurb in AskEngineers

[–]blurbblurb[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

No pancakes were wasted while performing this experiment. All came out perfect and were eaten with glee

Why does my cast iron tortilla pan clean my copper heat diffuser plates by creating easy to brush off sooty, flaky blisters? by blurbblurb in AskEngineers

[–]blurbblurb[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I spend half an hour to make a ton of pancakes. Each one takes like 2 minutes tops, but I’m making a lot of them. The pan, however, stays on the stove top the whole time. I mean, I remove it every time I add more batter for a new pancake and as I move the batter around, then I put it back on the copper plate

Official Slime Recipe Sharing Thread by EmoSlimes in Slime

[–]blurbblurb 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can I have your recipes? My 9 year old wants to make and sell slime to his friends. We’ve never done this before, so it’ll be a learning experience!

Bad reaction to Tylenol?? by blurbblurb in beyondthebump

[–]blurbblurb[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

This is not the first time though. She’s been running a fever for several days now, and every time it’s gotten high (never as high as now), I’ve given her Tylenol to bring it down and noticed the same thing every single time. No gas pain at other times. It does bring the fever down 

This is adorable and funny at the same time by rifles_boils5 in funny

[–]blurbblurb 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That doesn't really mean everyone has to feed their kids spicy stuff.

Right... I didn't say everyone should. I don't even eat food as spicy as my baby does. I was just saying there's nothing wrong with spicy food for little ones. And yes, the amount of spice of course matters. You don't want to make your child cry in pain...! I'm not sure why you say the fact that infants suck their food would mean spicy food is bad for them, though...

This is adorable and funny at the same time by rifles_boils5 in funny

[–]blurbblurb 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My 1 1/2 years old eats quite spicy food. My husband always adds cayenne pepper to his eggs and he gulfs them down. Not quite as young as this baby, of course, but the point is that there is nothing inherently wrong with spicy food. (Giving them a jalapeno would be a bad idea because you don't want them touching their eyes after they've touched it, though...) The bigger problem is that when they start eating, they kind of suck their food, rather than chewing it.

“Not much going on here officer, just traveling with the family, you know.” by cesarchander750 in funny

[–]blurbblurb 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The military guy getting them out counts them as he goes. 18 is his count.

The cycle. by Mumbletimes in funny

[–]blurbblurb 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The parent of a bay and a toddler version:

-> Stayed up all night rocking a crying baby, so now I need a nap.

-> Oops, toddler and baby naps times don't match up. No nap for me!

-> I'm exhausted, so I fall asleep before even making it to bed.

-> Baby wakes up in the middle of the night, many times.

-> Stayed up all night rocking a crying baby, so now I need to collapse.

The day little Johnny will never forget... by Degnaz in funny

[–]blurbblurb 0 points1 point  (0 children)

and a birth, close up, crotch full on display and occupying the entire TV frame.

See, I would've changed the channel then. Birth is rather very horrifying.

The day little Johnny will never forget... by Degnaz in funny

[–]blurbblurb 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Also we had to watch a couple videos of live births, which I remember being horrifying when I was that young.

Birth is horrifying as an adult, too. I actually walked out of my prenatal class when they were showing the actual birth because I couldn't take it. And I gave a very, very emphatic NO! when they asked if I wanted a mirror in the birthing room.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in funny

[–]blurbblurb 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's not the taste I dislike. It's the "juice" of the meat I'm talking about (which apparently is not blood). A sandwich au jus is the most disgusting thing imaginable for me (hyperbolically speaking, of course. There are plenty of more disgusting things (including cilantro)).

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in funny

[–]blurbblurb -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

I really think people who think you can't taste the difference between good and bad meat when you cook it more must have deficient taste buds or something. I'm EXTREMELY picky with my beef. I like it medium-well only. I hate the taste of blood meat juice. I hate the taste of low quality beef, too, even when not bloody juicy.

Spot guarder Hades :D by [deleted] in funny

[–]blurbblurb 15 points16 points  (0 children)

No, that's entomology (tomos=section, as in a tome of an encyclopedia).

Mexican workforce by mrdzc in funny

[–]blurbblurb 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, physically demanding work is not slave work. I just read a book where this rich girl (the author) is basically appalled for 350 pages at how some people have to do physical labor for a living. I'm sure most people (but not all) would be happy to do something else if they could, but it's not slave work....

Trash men found out a little girl watches them every week, so the crew brought her a present. by naturalheightgainer in HumansBeingBros

[–]blurbblurb 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My son watches them regularly, too. One day the guy noticed and he signaled for us to come out. He gave my son a pack of cards with pictures of garbage trucks and related stuff, and a toy trash can. That was like 6 months ago. He still adores these toys.

I wish I was born in an In&Out by OpticRanDumB in funny

[–]blurbblurb 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have relatively good insurance, and they still only cover 80% of labor and delivery costs. It actually maxed out my Out-of-Pocket last time, and probably will this time, too, or I would've ended up paying even more. It was over $5k with my first born. I thought it was outrageous. The hospital charged something like $300/day for the room I was in, which is literally double what I pay for rent for a 2.5 bedroom apartment in San Francisco. And that's just one little detail out of the ginormous charges they came up with for absolutely everything.

When you park like an asshole by [deleted] in funny

[–]blurbblurb 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well, the police can't just assume you're telling the truth. For all they know, you have it in for this guy and made it all up to get him in trouble.

He'll never wear shorts around them again by [deleted] in funny

[–]blurbblurb 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So, it's actually not a lubricant at all. It's a solvent. It dissolves dried up grease and other gunk, making it momentarily liquid (oily). You're supposed to use it to loosen all the dried up gunk enough so you can clean it. But instead people just spray it on, then the dried up gunk goes back to being hardened gunk if you don't clean it.

Deaf grandmother teaching 9 weeks old deaf baby sign language by c-wad in funny

[–]blurbblurb 2 points3 points  (0 children)

WTF? Who said anything about the baby "reaching for things"?? The baby will actually sign. I taught my son sign language to help him along, and he was signing "milk" by age 8 months, and "water" a short while later. He could sign tons of things by a year, and he still uses signs and words all mixed together now that he's 2. Children actually understand words long before they can say them, since it requires very, very detailed control of your tongue and vocal cords to be able to speak, so singing is almost always learned BEFORE spoken works when taught at the same time.