deptfordmarmoset
Full time tea drinker
- Location
- Armonmy Way
The only ones I can think of would be energy gels.I can't think of a squirty product I would have once chewed.
The only ones I can think of would be energy gels.I can't think of a squirty product I would have once chewed.
1. thump the side a few times in between thumping the bottom, or if it's close, hold the bottom and swing it side-to-side neck-down (edit: with the lid on!)But if the bottle is half empty it is almost impossible to put a dollop on your chips and you will be sitting thumping the bottom of the bottle and wishing you had bought something in a squeezy bottle!
Maybe @Fnaar can help with that mental image? I think Miss Goodbody might be a bit tied up right now.For some reason I keep thinking of Miss Goodbody whenever someone mentions squirty golden syrup. Help me!![]()
Same with golden syrup unless you use it quicker than I do. Nasty stuff anyway. Most other syrups taste better and don't crystallise so easily.Never buy honey in a squirty container; it's ok when it's runny, but it inevitably goes hard once you start to use it.
1. thump the side a few times in between thumping the bottom, or if it's close, hold the bottom and swing it side-to-side neck-down (edit: with the lid on!)
At least, that's what you told the other people in the house the white stuff was...Mrs C got covered in Mary Berry Salad Dressing once when I took it out of the fridge and shook it without checking whether the last user had put the top on properly.
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Brown sauce of the Gods.
But if the bottle is half empty it is almost impossible to put a dollop on your chips and you will be sitting thumping the bottom of the bottle and wishing you had bought something in a squeezy bottle!
I'm not convinced they do.Yebbut, if they have to alter the sauce to make it more runny so it can squeeze out of a miserably small hole, surely that's a step too far?
We need @Fab Foodie!I'm not convinced they do.
I've just spooned some syrup from a tin, into an empty ketchup bottle...amd it squirted just fine.
(this might be a lie but you fell for it right)
Id assume the same for marmite, ketchup, mayo or even something as vulgar as brown sauce.
Not convinced the product is any different, can you imagine the production costs of making a new batch or even adding another agent.
J
Yebbut, if they have to alter the sauce to make it more runny so it can squeeze out of a miserably small hole, surely that's a step too far?
I don't have a beef with ketchup, but mustard, mint sauce and Marmite are a bit different, surely? They work perfectly well in wide-mouthed containers.Sauces like ketchup are thixotropic - they become less viscous and will flow better when subjected to stress (e.g. you shake the bottle), returning to their more viscous state once the stress is removed. They also display a minimum yield stress below which they will not flow.
Mint sauce obliterates the flavour of whatever it is applied to, and Marmite is re-packaged fish food. I struggle to contain my indifference on the subject of how they are contained.I don't have a beef with ketchup, but mustard, mint sauce and Marmite are a bit different, surely? They work perfectly well in wide-mouthed containers.
It's a marketing. We just provide the technology where needed ;-) It's a rheology thing.We need @Fab Foodie!