The part where the robot sprays molten ceramics onto the saucepan, it's some angry flame I have ever seen. I really wonder how hot it has to be in order to be able to liquefy the three parts ceramic ingredients onto the prepared saucepans.
You could buy one of the bundt cake pans they showed being made and make a bundt cake yourself. Showing folks how your product is made is a great way to advertise said product after all.
"... made of cast aluminum, unbreakable and infinitely lighter" Both of those statements are actually impossible, but it's okay, How It's Made, i love you anyway. Edit: unless bundt pans are massless! This could be the breakthrough we need for faster-than-light travel!
I could grant you 'infinitely lighter' as infinitely is most often hyperbolic, but unbreakable still feels wrong to me lol. I could even go for something that's effectively unbreakable for its purpose like an aluminum toothbrush or carbon fiber coffee mug. But there's plenty of broken aluminum cookware floating around. Definitely nitpicking though. What really grinds my gears is when they call a manual or flywheel press a hydraulic press haha.
@jacobyunderhill3999 Maybe cast iron is actually infinitely dense, and therefore anything with a mass of anything less would be default be infinitely lighter?
Thanks for the video. In fact, if you watch one episode. you have watched all the episodes. Because all other products are also produced like these, machines and robots do everything. I wish we could see these processes in the traditional manual way.
what a fascinating look into the world of kitchen gadgets! i always loved seeing how everyday items come to life. that said, i can't help but think that some of these tools might be a bit overrated. like, do we really need so many different types of cutlery? sometimes simpler is better, right?
Wait those wooden utensils were for dining? I thought they were serving utensils. Imagine putting that fork in your mouth. Or even just trying to stab it through a piece of food. It must be wildly annoying to actually eat with wooden utensils that thick and wide
great video! i love how you break down the process of making these kitchen items. but honestly, isn't it a bit overrated? i mean, who really needs a bundt pan when a simple cake or pie can do the job just as well? just my two cents!
Unless it's a casting you'd have ti either machine it from a solid bar or forge it, both of which are expensive and a casting won't hold an edge at all. So the way they do it is the most efficient way
The original fruit cakes were just regular cakes made with dried fruit and nuts, and sometimes soaked in alcohol, not the candied gross things they use now.
Why does the shot with the slow moving robots grabbing the bundt cake pans with the blinding ominous white background feel so dystopian. Made me kind of uncomfortable. 😂
Give real reason( no tiktok proof) ptfe nonstick is " no thanks". Its not a lifetime non stick and ALL water bottles are made with plastic somewhere in the production line! Including the packaging
@@howlingwolven but aren’t Mircro-waves different from Electromagnetic Waves? @dezmobluefire is saying the waves heat the pan .. don’t the Micro-waves in the Microwave vibrate/heat the water/liquid in your food? 😂 getting to different answers here…
@@douglasmijangos3327 an induction cooktop uses an oscillating magnetic field to jiggle (definitely a technical term) the atoms in the bottom of the pan to heat them up. It only works with cookware that's magnetic. Microwaves jiggle the water molecules, so similar concept but induction doesn't involve any sort of radiation (the energy kind, not the ionizing kind), just magnetic fields.
What bothers me is no one seems to notice that the guy adding raw ingredients to the panettone like butter and such is NOT WEARING GLOVES!!! He touched that butter and the dough with bare hands... How is that passing food and germ safety inspections??? Or whatever it is called... I find it gross that he isnt wearing gloves but manhandling that butter and dough...
"the Mayans started using pots like these 2600 years ago... Probably for hot chocolate" What? What do you mean? Are you saying hot chocolate was invented by the Mayans? This is called "Science Channel" or did I need to go to "History channel" to not hear some nonsense about what kind of heated beverage the Mayans liked. No one could have looked that up before some narrator went off script?
cant wait to fall asleep to this
Glad I'm not the only one. My husband and I go to sleep to this every night lol
I wondered if anyone else did this. Wife and I watch this each night before bed. Very relaxing and interesting to watch as we doze off.
Prime bed time watching for me too
Me too! So soothing ! Lol
Same !!
My childhood was spent learning the manufacturing of everything i used and saw
I love that the person whose job it is to finish the knife handles has bandages all over their fingers lol
My kind of observation, Jeff!
And their glove is missing a finger!!!
I wonder how many HIM episodes revealed OSHA violations at the plants they tour 😂
This show, dirty jobs and Mythbusters are all related in some core memory I have. Unwrapped?! Omg The nostalgia is strong!
my childhood summed up in 4 shows (along with good eats w/ alton brown)! myth busters was my SHOW
who else trying to go to sleep?
Lmao, me.
Right here!🤚
@@liannyshernandez1117lol goodnight 💤 it’s also 2 am here
Exactly what I’m trying to do
Me 😊
The music in these episodes always slapped so hard
I always thought the same thing bro haha! That OG How It's Made soundtracks are the best
I said the same thing to myself while watching this. I wish I could by the soundtrack to How It's Made
I love an elegant Bundt
I like big bundts
The part where the robot sprays molten ceramics onto the saucepan, it's some angry flame I have ever seen. I really wonder how hot it has to be in order to be able to liquefy the three parts ceramic ingredients onto the prepared saucepans.
36:43 it's white, it's plasma, so it's probably near 2000 degrees.
36:40 so great
yep
That color, could be a hydrogen flame
Its compressed air blown through an electrical arc, commonly used to cut metal, so pretty hot.
Yall don’t forget to turn autoplay off so you don’t wake up to 3rd degree burns from your phone still running while you sleep 😂
Or 0% power because you forgot to plug in the charger and then your alarm fails to go off in the morning
@@dshe8637 thx for reminding me to set my alarm 😂
@@devonboes2376 have a good day 😊
Hahaha can tell you are American ‘YALLL’ talk funny 😂
Omg tysm for reminding me tee hee
Robot hand rotating with the knife was the best!! 😂
Those induction cooktops are great! Especially if you live in Texas, it doesn't heat up the kitchen during a hot summer.
i like that he pronounces "pannetone" slightly different every time for some reason
😢now I want a bunt cake 🎂🎂🎂
You could buy one of the bundt cake pans they showed being made and make a bundt cake yourself. Showing folks how your product is made is a great way to advertise said product after all.
"... made of cast aluminum, unbreakable and infinitely lighter"
Both of those statements are actually impossible, but it's okay, How It's Made, i love you anyway.
Edit: unless bundt pans are massless! This could be the breakthrough we need for faster-than-light travel!
Welcome to English. I see that metaphor, hyperbole, and poetic license have not made themselves known to you yet…
I could grant you 'infinitely lighter' as infinitely is most often hyperbolic, but unbreakable still feels wrong to me lol. I could even go for something that's effectively unbreakable for its purpose like an aluminum toothbrush or carbon fiber coffee mug. But there's plenty of broken aluminum cookware floating around. Definitely nitpicking though.
What really grinds my gears is when they call a manual or flywheel press a hydraulic press haha.
@jacobyunderhill3999 Maybe cast iron is actually infinitely dense, and therefore anything with a mass of anything less would be default be infinitely lighter?
@@jacobyunderhill3999yes or when they call a loom or knitting machine "crochet"! i feel like it's fair to be nitpicky about an educational show lol
i hope to grow up and be as beautiful as molten metal someday
Thanks for the video. In fact, if you watch one episode. you have watched all the episodes. Because all other products are also produced like these, machines and robots do everything. I wish we could see these processes in the traditional manual way.
what a fascinating look into the world of kitchen gadgets! i always loved seeing how everyday items come to life. that said, i can't help but think that some of these tools might be a bit overrated. like, do we really need so many different types of cutlery? sometimes simpler is better, right?
I’d forget how much I’d watched this?!
Did you read what you wrote? 😢
I love all the dad joke puns. 😊
“A Bundt pan is a pan for cooking bundts” thanks haha
✍🏻
"High speed ram pushing into the bundt mold" 👀
What brand was the knife making process?
edit: Dexter ok
Stabzilla
Hugbees ruined me.
Very good
I've always wondered about that "non'-stick" stuff. If it's non-stick so what's making the non-stick, stick to the pan🤔🤨
Wait those wooden utensils were for dining? I thought they were serving utensils. Imagine putting that fork in your mouth. Or even just trying to stab it through a piece of food. It must be wildly annoying to actually eat with wooden utensils that thick and wide
had no idea butter knives had cement in them lol
@@brandoncavazos7965 cheap ones
Oh god, that spoon trimmer - I don't trust any press that can be operated one handed!
great video! i love how you break down the process of making these kitchen items. but honestly, isn't it a bit overrated? i mean, who really needs a bundt pan when a simple cake or pie can do the job just as well? just my two cents!
My biggest takeaway from this is that even in early 2000 narration could sound AI generated
You just showed how easily conditioned you are
Seems like it would be a lot easier to make the knives out of pure metal🍴
Metal is probably more expensive, it's lighter, meaning the balance would be off, and it would be easier to crush by gripping it while cutting.
@@canaanval cheaper not to
Unless it's a casting you'd have ti either machine it from a solid bar or forge it, both of which are expensive and a casting won't hold an edge at all. So the way they do it is the most efficient way
Let's get cooking!
No wonder those kinds of butter knives were so heavy
take a shot every time he says the product or workers
"These days they are made from cast aluminum; unbreakable and infinitely lighter"
If you mute the audio, you'll be wiser.
Is this discovery science channel on TH-cam?
Hold god every 2 minutes an ad, can’t even get through 1 item
Good night.
how do they get the none stick coating to stick?
They ask it nicely
Thank you . ( 2024 / Oct / 15 )
Sorry I clicked this thinking it was a new huggbees
"Food-safe silicone polyester material"? Is it PEOPLE safe?
Otherwise, nice job.
Disappointed they didn't show how the serrated knife was made. They showed a completed one but only showed making straight edged knives.
wonder if Panettone was the basis of fruit cake as we know it today?.
The original fruit cakes were just regular cakes made with dried fruit and nuts, and sometimes soaked in alcohol, not the candied gross things they use now.
@@elaexplorer ok Thanks 😀
Why does the shot with the slow moving robots grabbing the bundt cake pans with the blinding ominous white background feel so dystopian. Made me kind of uncomfortable. 😂
It’s official…we are all “robots”…😂
i think rabies is highly survivable if treatment starts before symptoms.
probably a good video to make.
That is one sexy teapot lol, and I'm a coffee drinker.
Second that
Christop Hill
What if you made it thinner they make a dog toy that is thinner and bigger.
Cooking in aluminum later: Doc why i have altzhimer ?
Sorry, but heating the blade doesn't harden it. It softens it. The hardening comes from quenching it in the Liquid Nitrogen.
Oh😂
Forks for $30 each
Why would you use a cut in half pan to cook and crack an egg on it?
It was to demonstrate how the egg would cook on the pan and not the glass
How it's made = sleeping aid
Induction excites molecules? hahahaha induces electric current into the pot/pan that heat it.. come on, try to get things correct.
No thanks to the ptfe.
Give real reason( no tiktok proof) ptfe nonstick is " no thanks". Its not a lifetime non stick and ALL water bottles are made with plastic somewhere in the production line! Including the packaging
Just asking 😂 is that Induction Cooking safe? Feels like “Electromagnetic Fields” to “activate molecules” seems like it’s unsafe 😂
It is 100% safe. It only effects metal, not food or water. What it does is heat up the pan, and the pan heats your food
Ask yourself how your microwave heats your food.
@@howlingwolven but aren’t Mircro-waves different from Electromagnetic Waves? @dezmobluefire is saying the waves heat the pan .. don’t the Micro-waves in the Microwave vibrate/heat the water/liquid in your food? 😂 getting to different answers here…
@@douglasmijangos3327 an induction cooktop uses an oscillating magnetic field to jiggle (definitely a technical term) the atoms in the bottom of the pan to heat them up. It only works with cookware that's magnetic.
Microwaves jiggle the water molecules, so similar concept but induction doesn't involve any sort of radiation (the energy kind, not the ionizing kind), just magnetic fields.
@@douglasmijangos3327 microwaves are a kind of electro magnetic waves.
Lets say this together..
Al- u- min- ium
Both are correct and accepted in academic communities.
What bothers me is no one seems to notice that the guy adding raw ingredients to the panettone like butter and such is NOT WEARING GLOVES!!! He touched that butter and the dough with bare hands... How is that passing food and germ safety inspections??? Or whatever it is called... I find it gross that he isnt wearing gloves but manhandling that butter and dough...
Gloves, I use them for work , not cooking
We all know that knife isn't made for vegetables, I guess they don't want to offend the Vegans.
Ehm yeah, keep believing that XD
It's OK to eat beef because cows are vegan!
"the Mayans started using pots like these 2600 years ago... Probably for hot chocolate" What? What do you mean? Are you saying hot chocolate was invented by the Mayans? This is called "Science Channel" or did I need to go to "History channel" to not hear some nonsense about what kind of heated beverage the Mayans liked. No one could have looked that up before some narrator went off script?
The Mayans did invent hot chocolate though.
The Mayans invented hot chocolate, it's just a fun fact. Go eat crayons.
useless information with mistakes
proof?