Finding out the hard way

Facelikeapotato@lemmy.ml to Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world – 1531 points –
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Also each of them resists different type of foods better. Wax paper will hold up to wet food, and parchment paper holds up better to oily food.

This is not anything I can prove just personal experience so take it with a grain of salt

And let's not forget about butcher's paper. Also totally different application but still no oven.

You can use it for lower temperatures. (< 300°F). You can realistically go up to 400°s but I think it starts to do odd things when above 300°F (it's been awhile since Ive used it so take that with a grain of salt).

It's used in a lot of smoking/roasting applications to keep the moisture in. Just don't let it touch the element and you should be fine.

It's used in a lot of smoking/roasting applications to keep the moisture in. Just don't let it touch the element and you should be fine.

What is this, "el-em-ent?" I don't understand. Are you talking about the hot coals?

(On a related note, Hank Hill was wrong.)

Lol, yeah, essentially coals. An element (or coil) is what's used to heat a standard convection oven or toaster.

Ty! I didn't know it was safe for a smoker.

No problem. Yeah, if your doing something like brisket, you can smoke it for the first half to get a good bark on it. And then wrap it in butcher paper to trap the moisture in for the second half. It's to help prevent stalling.

It's also known as the Texas Crutch.

I recently got "food wrapping paper" for bundling up sandwiches, it is still coated but has just enough stickiness left for tape to hold it shut.

Previously I was using parchment paper and if you wanted to hold it shut you needed to use a rubber band or run the tape all the way around to stick back to itself.