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Earth Idle

It's So Hot in Nebraska, You Can Bake Biscuits in Your Car (nypost.com) 189

An anonymous reader quotes the New York Post: The National Weather Service in Omaha, Nebraska, baked biscuits in a car Friday amid a major heat wave in the Northeast and Midwest... Within 45 minutes, the dough had begun to rise, the NWS said. After an hour, the pan had reached 175 degrees, and the tops of the biscuits were at 153 degrees.

"This is a good time to remind everyone that your car does in fact get deadly hot. Look before you lock!," the NWS said... After baking in the sun for nearly eight hours, the biscuits were edible, but the middle remained "pretty doughy." The pan maxed out at a blazing 185 degrees.

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It's So Hot in Nebraska, You Can Bake Biscuits in Your Car

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  • by Viol8 ( 599362 ) on Monday July 22, 2019 @05:37AM (#58964226) Homepage

    ... no, nevermind.

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by Joce640k ( 829181 )

      My neighbor also had a dog called biscuit. It died of old age though, unlike the dog in this story.

  • by Chrisq ( 894406 ) on Monday July 22, 2019 @05:45AM (#58964262)
    A lot of AV systems, etc. say maximum temperature 50 C. Do you get a lot of electronics failures in US States which reach this sort of high temperature?
    • I used to have a van in California that would sit in the sun all afternoon in 42C temperatures. Inside the van it got hotter (I don't think it ever reached 175F, more in the 130sF). I never had a problem with electronics failing. YMMV.
    • by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Monday July 22, 2019 @06:58AM (#58964478)

      A lot of AV systems, etc. say maximum temperature 50 C. Do you get a lot of electronics failures in US States which reach this sort of high temperature?

      Most stuff in a car can handle temperatures of at least 80C and typically much higher. Stuff like components in the engine compartment are typically rated for 110-125C or more. My day job is making automotive wire harnesses so I've had to do testing for this sort of thing. We've had to bake circuit boards to the point they fail. Most wire insulation actually used in cars such as TXL [awcwire.com] is rated for up to 125C. This is not unique to the US - all car companies globally use similar specs. If a bit of electronics can't handle those sorts of temperatures they would fail rather quickly. Electronics operating in an enclosed metal box (like an engine compartment) in desert heat can easily go well north of 100C.

      And yes high temperatures are a thing in large parts of the US. Ambient temperatures in places like Arizona routinely get above 40C and that means electronics will get a fair bit hotter than that.

      • by e3m4n ( 947977 )

        The engine itself gets pretty close to 400F. Thats why the need for high temp engine paint sold in automotive sections.

        • The engine itself gets pretty close to 400F. Thats why the need for high temp engine paint sold in automotive sections.

          Some parts of the engine never get much above the boiling point of water, while the face of the piston and the exhaust valves can each easily get up over a thousand degrees. Aluminum melts around 1250 F, so you should never run sustained exhaust gas temperatures over about 1100 (as measured by thermocouple in the exhaust manifold, preferably next to whichever valves have the poorest cooling.) Pretty much everything these days has an aluminum head, pistons, or both, and most high-output engines have either s

    • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

      Nope. Most vehicle electronic packages are in the engine compartment, and when they aren't they're inside the ducting for the AC system itself. The article itself is clickbait, you'll see a run of similar stories every time that there's a heatwave going on. In the colder parts of the US and Canada we see more failures from the cold. Simply because when it gets cold(-20 to -40C in the winter) everything goes brittle.

      It's similar to the 'frying an egg on a sidewalk' or 'road melting' because of high tempe

    • by lordlod ( 458156 )

      Commercial electronic components are generally rated for 70 degrees. Then you take into account the localised heating in the chassis by the components and the fact that you need a temperature differential to dispose of heat and appliances are often rated (read that as tested) for 50 degrees, which is hotter than the room you want standing in. The localised heating impact can be huge but doesn't occur if the device isn't powered.

      In practice 70 degrees isn't going to cause a failure. Virtually all components

    • A lot of AV systems, etc. say maximum temperature 50 C. Do you get a lot of electronics failures in US States which reach this sort of high temperature?

      Standard consumer grade stuff is typically rated at 0-70C. The next grade up is -20C to +85C, which is perhaps the most common for electronics. Automotive electronics are usually rated at +105C though anything near an engine is going to be +125C, sometimes greater.

    • Electronics actually can deal with heat better then we think. The specs for heat tolerance is set rather low, figuring a good safety margin. Normally if there is warping where casings are broken or connections are snapped or shorted. However I have seen server rooms run in 90+F rooms for days (while the AC is being repaired) with no problems. Modern CPU may cycle down in hot conditions as a safety measure but it rarely is a major problem. That said, it isn't a good idea to go out and test thousands of d

  • Any biscuits I've made say to cook them at 350F. If there's raw egg in the biscuits, I wouldn't recommend eating them if only cooked to 185F.

    • 185F is more than enough to kill harmful bacteria, especially considering they left them in there for hours.

      • 185F is more than enough to kill harmful bacteria, especially considering they left them in there for hours.

        For biscuits, I don't think the food safety angle is really an issue. It's going to take hours and hours before a mixture of water, flour, baking powder and salt is going to become unsafe to consume.

        What "cooked" means in the case of quick breads (actually bread in general) that don't contain eggs is more about being "set" than being safe to eat. I.E. where the gluten and water mixture has solidified hard enough to hold the shape. It just so happens that where this temperature will likely kill anything n

    • Any biscuits I've made say to cook them at 350F. If there's raw egg in the biscuits, I wouldn't recommend eating them if only cooked to 185F.

      Don't confuse the oven temperature with the temperature the food actually gets to. If you actually cooked a biscuit to 350F it would become basically charcoal. If it is actually cooked to an internal temperature of 185F you will be quite safe and a finished bread usually has a temperature of 190-205 or so. 165F is high enough to kill pretty much any pathogens that should worry you. And you can cook at lower temperatures safely if you do it for long enough. For example , at 155F it takes 5 seconds, at 1 [polyscienceculinary.com]

    • No egg needed in biscuits. Flour, fat, milk, salt, baking powder. You cook to 350 not to get the biscuits that hot (as sibling comment says), but because you want the maillard reaction to make the outside toasty and delicious. That's why so many things are cooked at that temp.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • I'm from the USA and I have a biscuit recipe (not the cookie kind, the savory kind) that includes eggs. This violates the general rule of thumb, but they are pretty tasty and very forgiving should you mishandle them or over work the dough.. However, my absolute favorite recipe for these kinds of biscuit includes little more than, flour, backing powder, salt and fresh heavy cream to cover both the liquid and fat components. Properly handled, the sweet cream biscuits will more than double in height, don't n

    • 350deg for food safety?? Uh, no; half that (on the inside) for pork... and eggs are served partially raw millions of times a day in the U.S. alone... though it helps if your immune system isn't a fucking joke and the eggs are real and not factory-farmed, diseased sludge from Big Ag.
    • Oven temperature just dictates how long it takes to bring the internal temperature up to the cooking temperature needed to kill off harmful bacteria.

      Chicken requires an internal temperature of 165F. It takes roughly 25-30 minutes for the chicken to reach that temperature at 350F but only 15-20 minutes at 450F.

      At 175-185F for the pan in the car, this car could have potentially cooked safe chicken although it would have taken a number of hours for it to reach the correct temperature. I'm not sure I would want

  • by bobstreo ( 1320787 ) on Monday July 22, 2019 @06:04AM (#58964328)

    was that maybe biscuits was the name of the family dog, or a nickname for a kid.

    Please remember to check the back seat before leaving the car.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      If you can't remember you have kids, maybe you shouldn't have kids.

      • If you can't remember you have kids,

        I keep trying to forget but they keep reminding me they exist.

    • by e3m4n ( 947977 )

      My wife always put her purse behind the driver seat in the floorboard so she would be forced to open up the back door, thus ensuring she would avoid such a crisis.

      • I've heard a recommendation to put your cellphone in the back, so you'll remember your kids when you get your phone.

        Interesting priorities.

        • I've heard a recommendation to put your cellphone in the back, so you'll remember your kids when you get your phone. Interesting priorities.

          Parents who have left kids in hot cars would have sworn at the time that they were dropped off at the babysitters. It's not about "priorities", it's about how the human brain works under stress and when routines are interrupted. It's not saying your cell phone is more important than your kids, it's about ensuring you don't misplace them while thinking about the other

  • Nebraskan here... (Score:1, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward

    High in Omaha on friday was only 97, which isn't even remotely exceptional by July standards. Meanwhile highs for sunday through thursday were/are forecast to be in the mid 70's to low 80's.

    Among a flood of retarded global warming hysteria on this site, this one is even more retarded than usual.

    • I'm a few hours south in Kansas your not kidding when you say they are hyping a small temperature spike in an otherwise mild summer. It's usually in the high 90s this time of year and we are getting a few days as expected and the rest has been 70s and 80s. I'm not saying I want a hot summer, I'm very much enjoying the lower cooling cost.

      • Missourian here. We got some hot days last week, but as a whole this hasn't been a bad summer, and isn't even close to what we got last year.

    • I've always thought of Nebraska as a cooler than average State... and today I am discovering my middle-america ignorance.

      It reached a feels-like temperature above 110F here in New England the other day and people were going nuts. Honestly the temperature wasnt so bad but the humidity was oppressive as fuck.

      I've always thought the mid-west to be dryer than average... low humidity because of rockies drain the air... am I wrong on that too?
  • by Tomahawk ( 1343 ) on Monday July 22, 2019 @06:31AM (#58964390) Homepage

    This sounds extremely impressive until I realised it was ÂF, not ÂC.
    185 F = 85 C

    Certain hot enough to cook steak. Beef is considered cooked once it hits 58C (~136F). So leaving a person in a car that hot would cause them to start cooking.

    • Beef is considered cooked once it hits 58C

      You monster. That poor beef died only to be cooked medium! Do you not value its life or your tastebuds at all?

      • by skovnymfe ( 1671822 ) on Monday July 22, 2019 @09:26AM (#58965168)
        Getting the cow inside the car in the first place was hard enough. Just eat your damn steak, ungrateful bastard.
      • You monster. That poor beef died only to be cooked medium! Do you not value its life or your tastebuds at all?

        Cute, but 58 C is just about the middle of the range for medium rare [wikipedia.org]. I wouldn't take a filet quite that high, but certainly less tender and/or more marbled cuts like a ribeye, flank, or strip benefit from a few extra degrees.

        You may be confusing the final temperature of the finished steak with its temperature when you take it off the grill -- keeping it on the heat until you measure 58 C likely would cause it to overshoot into the medium range during resting.

    • So leaving a person in a car that hot would cause them to start cooking.

      Only well after it's dry and it can't sweat anymore. In the excellent "Experiments and Observations in an Heated Room" by Charles Blagden from the 1700s (well into public domain) the author experimented with two people and one dog (and a steak and some more things I believe) sitting for something like 45 minutes in an oven at 112C. Everybody (who wasn't dead already like the stake) survived relatively well.

      • by PPH ( 736903 )

        I imagine that the steak didn't survive for very long with a dog in there.

        • I imagine that the steak didn't survive for very long with a dog in there.

          The experiment was repeated in China in the 1800s and the dog didn't survive either.

    • > Beef is considered cooked once it hits 58C (~136F). So leaving a person in a car that hot would cause them to start cooking.

      Hence, person == beef ???

      God, maybe vegans were right all along ! Beef is not food, it's our friends !
    • by RedK ( 112790 )

      So leaving a person in a car that hot would cause them to start cooking.

      You've never set foot in a sauna I take it.

      85 C is nothing.

    • by pruss ( 246395 )

      The FDA says that the safe minimum internal temperature for beef is 145F (~63C). So not only can you cook it, you can cook it safely (as long as you leave it long enough so the internal temperature equalizes with the outside layer).

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Enjoy your sustained 90+ degrees, you fucking idiots.

  • Misleading Headline (Score:5, Informative)

    by Bender0x7D1 ( 536254 ) on Monday July 22, 2019 @07:55AM (#58964706)

    The headline says, "It's So Hot in Nebraska, You Can Bake Biscuits in Your Car" but you that isn't quite what happened.

    From the article: After baking in the sun for nearly eight hours, the biscuits were edible, but the middle remained "pretty doughy."

    So, while they may have been made "edible" after 8 hours in the sun, they were not, actually, "baked". Plus, I would definitely want to check the internal temperature of the biscuits to make sure the middle got hot enough to kill all of the bacteria.

    • Plus - no pictures.
    • You don't need to worry about bacteria in raw dough in normal situations. You do need to worry about parasites though... last I heard if you froze (put in your freezer) your flour for a week or two it would kill the parasite eggs, which allows you to eat raw dough made from that flour all you want. Raw cookie dough anybody?

    • > So, while they may have been made "edible" after 8 hours in the sun, they were not, actually, "baked". Plus, I would definitely want to check the internal temperature of the biscuits to make sure the middle got hot enough to kill all of the bacteria.

      1. Bacteria ain't a worry when baking bread.
      2. Not all bacteria should be killed just because it's bacteria, unless you're a soap manufacturer / advertiser.
  • Well, not really (Score:2, Insightful)

    by argStyopa ( 232550 )

    ...I read that account when they originally posted it, and they admitted that only the outside was "baked" - in effect, that bit had just dried enough to be crusty and faux-baked*. The inside was still entirely unbaked dough. They advised the hottest the pan got was 185 which is still pretty hot, but I'm relatively sure you could park a car in many southern cities in high summer and see those sorts of temps on a dark dashboard facing the sun.

    *and while I love them, tbh for American-style baking powder bis

  • ...A friend of mine fried eggs on a sidewalk summer before last. Gets that hot every year in my neck of the woods.

  • Wasn't around during the 1800's...they never would have made it west of the mississippi river! It's been warmer, it's been colder, but MAN doesn't play a role in the weather, no matter how many misguided researcher say it does with their flawed studies!

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