• zod000@lemmy.ml
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    6 hours ago

    Clearly an AI photo, and at first I thought “Well, of course only AI would be dumb enough to do this.”, but then I remembered I grew up in Florida and realized civilization was a mistake.

    • Lumidaub@feddit.org
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      3 hours ago

      Oh gawd I fell for it. It’s the right amount of blurry that was common on the early internet so I didn’t question the hazy details.

  • atempuser23@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    Reading these comments through makes me think that this wasn’t a common thing people did… You can cook food on it as well. It is good for reheating sandwiches so they don’t taste like microwave. Aluminum foil keeps your clothes from getting food stains. You can use plain white paper as well but it’s not as good at grease stopping and is an insulator.

  • kindenough@kbin.earth
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    5 hours ago

    I used to heat pizza slices and make grilled cheese sandwiches with a hot iron when I was mostly homeless or squatting back in the ‘90s. One could get bags full of pizza slices from New York Pizza (in Amsterdam) after closing time out of the waste container.

    • Mouselemming@sh.itjust.works
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      2 hours ago

      You can do ironed cheese sandwiches,* so they get plenty hot, but most modern irons will turn themselves off if they’re not moving for more than a minute.

      *Assemble the sandwich on top of a generous piece of aluminum foil, heavy duty if you have it: butter on the outside, cheese on the inside, sourdough with cheddar is excellent but white bread with American is what the kids expect. (Don’t get too creative with additions until you have a good sense of how long to melt the middle without burning the outside.) Bring up two foil edges and fold that seam at least twice, making it flat as possible against the sandwich and able to channel any escaping butter towards the ends rather than just seeping down onto the ironing board. Then fold the ends as well. Maybe you better put a second piece of foil on your ironing board just in case. Put the iron on top heat but turn off the steam. Iron the sandwich on both sides, starting with the seam side and then doing the bottom, until it smells toasty and delicious. Only move the iron enough to hit all the corners and also keep it from turning off, and don’t press hard.