ChatterBank0 min ago
Insulating fabric
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Alfie, we do in fact put the heated plates plus food into an American 'device' - for want of a better word - called a casserole tote. (This is in fact, more or less, a pizza courier-bag.) That is, the food is on one hot plate which is covered by the second, inverted, hot plate and both are put into the tote. However, the food is only pretty warm, I'd say, rather than piping hot when it is taken upstairs.
Andy, as I've said before, you could fill hangars with stuff I don't know!
C, I'm not sure how the paper-plate idea would improve things.
Logman, I'm also unsure how the conventional oven would get the plates any warmer than the micro. I even usually heat a pizza-stone in the conventional oven and put the double-plate + food on top of that. However, the food is still less than piping-hot by the time it gets upstairs!
I just have this notion - however nerdish that may seem! - that there must be an alternative to kitchen foil, such as an all-enveloping wrap-fabric of some kind in which I can swaddle the stone, the plates and the enclosed grub in order to have a stonking-hot, steaming breakfast once it's all delivered to the bedroom!! Maybe I'm just dreaming?
Still, thanks for all the suggestions, folks.
I'm probably not getting the intent of your question, Q, it is, after all, Monday. But this link describes what I had in mind. We even use them to take dishes to carry-in dinners. Sometime regular dinner plates fit inside of them... one on bottom and one on top. They do add quite a lot of insulation. At any rate, best of luck!
http://www.cookingforengineers.com/article.php?id=117
That's an interesting link, C. I'll have a closer look at it later. I didn't mean to sound dismissive in my earlier response, I was just concerned at the possible effect of putting 'paper' plates on top of an extremely hot pizza stone. I know that carrying a flamb� meal into the dining-room can be most impressive, but I had a vision, rather, of a towering inferno!
Just take it from me, Gammaray, the plates need to be heated.
To make the picture totally clear, here is what is layered, one atop the other, on my kitchen work-top just before I head upstairs...
a. Tray
b. Open tote-bag/pizza-courier bag
c. Sheet of foil
d. Hot pizza-stone
e. Heated plate with newly-cooked food
f. Heated plate inverted as lid
g. Sheet of foil
I then fold the two foil-sheets around the contents, close the tote-bag, add coffee, juice etc to the tray and...Off we go!
All I'm looking for now is a sheet - a metre square perhaps - of insulating fabric to replace items 'c' and 'g' above. Does anyone know what that might be called and where I can buy it in Britain? Cheers
I have these plate warmers which are rubbery pads that you interleave with the plates in the microwave. You can also put them under the plates (on an insulated surface) to keep the food hot while you eat
http://www.merevale9.freeserve.co.uk/Page1.htm
Have you also thought about wrapping the plates in "space blanket" theat foily/thin plastic suff that is used to wrap the runners in at the end ofg the london marathon
didn't realise that space blankets were so cheap!
http://www.sportswarehouse.co.uk/acatalog/Silver_Space_Blanket.html
what about using sheet polystyrene instead of foil. That is quite good as a lagging material. Easily and cheaply acquired at B&Qs.
Alternatively, you could make a fabric by layering some wipeable fabric, like plastic table cloth available on a roll at C&H fabrics then foil, or space blanket, then more fabric. This would be wipeable and thus reusuable. Alternatively, C&H fabrics also do like a table cloth fabric which is actually designed to protect a high polished table from the heat of plates. It is thermo-protective and also fairly wipeable. It is normally cream in colour and slightly rubbery to touch and has like an indentation of hexagons all over it. It is available to buy by the meter. It doesn't fray so would be easy to make into some kind of blanket to wrap your breakfast in.
Alternatively what you need to do is invent some kind of electric, battery operated heating device to illiminate the need for the hot pizza stone which must be a) heavy and b)dangerous to carry. That way you could switch on your electric plate heating device, like a fabric hostess trolley and carry just the plates upstairs. Or you could fit a heating element into a large tray, then you would only need to carry two plates and their lids upstairs and they would be kept warm for the duration of your breakfast. patent the idea and sell to lakeland plastic.
Alternativley, install a dumb butler in your house.
Thanks for that, Sense. I'll have a look at that product next time I'm in B & Q...assuming they sell it. I'm a trifle concerned, though, that something designed to be stuck on a wall behind a radiator and never moved thereafter might not be up to being folded and unfolded on a daily basis!
I think the same possibly applies to the 'space-blanket, W. I'm sure that - once the victim is off the mountainside - the thing is thrown away. Nevertheless, that is the first solution I mean to apply.
Love the blow-torch as a concept, Mark! Unfortunately, our bacon etc is as crispy as we like it at the end of the cooking process, so your procedure would render it rather too frangible. In addition, if there's one thing we hate, it's crispy eggs!
Thanks to all of you. I've noted the various points and websites and will be investigating them further. Cheers
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