Friday, October 30, 2009

Tasty Meat Hand | Halloween Meat Hand | How to

I made something gruesome and delicious.


No, really, it was good.

This is meatloaf.

Meatloaf with cheese on top.

And some ketchup.

The nails are made of onion.

The wrist bones are onion too.

Where are you going?

This is how I made it:

Since August I've had a post it note over my desk that simply said "meat hand". I mulled over how to make it for a while. I realized that the old formed inside a plastic glove thing wouldn't work since the fingers would cook so much faster than the rest of the hand. It wasn't until I saw this hand gelatin mold that I had my plan:

I shot several angles to show how it has a base built in, meaning I could probably use it to mold meatloaf.

I made the basic meatloaf recipe from How to Cook Everything using a food processor to chop the onions and carrot to a very fine mince so I could fill in the details of the mold without trouble. One meatloaf recipe using 2 pounds of meat will make two hands.

I sprayed the inside of the mold with cooking oil spray and it came out fairly easily. I put it on top of a rack to allow the fat to run off as it cooked.

I did a few versions, learning as I went along.

Version #1

The first one was straight meatloaf. I surrounded it with mashed potatoes and kale (or brain matter and swamp greens if you have kids, or just act like kids). It looked ok, sort of creepy:

Version #2

The next time I tried adding fingernails made of onion, which were just like press on nails:

To make the fingernails I sliced a thin round off of a single layer of an onion, then used kitchen scissors to trim it into a nail shape keeping the lines in the onion running the length of the nail. I kept the thinnest end of the onion slice at the tip of the nail. (Shown here using a red onion as it's easier to see details.)

I also covered it with ketchup before cooking:

It turned out gross:

This time to better define the fingers I piped mashed potatoes around the hand to define the shape. I just used a ziploc bag with a small corner snipped off to do the detail inbetween fingers, then I snipped off a larger corner to pipe around the hand. I smoothed down the mashed potatoes with a silicone spatula. The results where pretty creepy.

Version #3

The ketchup covered hand made me pretty happy but... I had this idea. My mom used to throw a slice of cheese on top of her meatloaf before cooking it and the cheese always turned out browned and crispy. I wondered how that would work with my relatively delicate hand. I also had the idea to use the smaller inner layers of the onion to create a cartoon-y wrist bone sticking out.

I made two versions. The first used white onion and was simply covered in cheese. The second used red onion and was covered with ketchup and then cheese. I used slices of provolone cheese because I knew it wouldn't slide off completely as it melted. (Maggi suggested it, thanks Maggi!) This time I used the version of meatloaf with spinach, again from How to Cook Everything. Here are some pre-cooked pictures:

I peeled an onion until I got to the smaller inner layers and simply pressed it into the wrist:

I trimmed the cheese to fit around the fingernails:

If I were to do it again I would have put less cheese around the fingers, or rather, I would have put narrower pieces. The cheese pooled inbetween the fingers and made it more difficult to diguise later on.

This cheese thing, it worked a bit too well. We couldn't bring ourselves to actually eat either of them (though, we had been eating a lot of meatloaf lately). Here is a picture showing them side by side. They were cooked at the same time and the one with the ketchup beneath the cheese (white fingernails) browned a bit more. You can also see that piping the detail more carefully can make a difference:

The wrist bone of the white onion was pushed out a bit as the meatloaf cooked:

The smaller onion piece of the red onion write bone wasn't as impressive:

The red onion fingernails were creepier, but the white onion fingernails might get the point across more quickly:

Here is a cute pumpkin pancake chaser:

Just in case you need it.

Halloween pancakes



Source Meat hand

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Some Thin Pieces of Art | world's smallest pieces of art

Thin Pieces of Art
world's smallest pieces of art











Beautiful fighting fish pictures | breeding fighting fish

An ideal fish for fish bowls
Betta: an ideal fish for ornamental fish bowls.



Bettas are also known as fighters fish bowl.
Betta is also known as fighter fish


orange betta is an ideal fish for ornamental fish bowl.
An orange betta



Siamese fighter is an ideal fish bowl
Betta is also known as Siamese fighter


Red dragon betta fighter fish
Red dragon betta


Red dragon betta fighter fish

Wildlife pictures Zebra Escaping From A Crocodile



A wildebeest and a zebra escape from a crocodile in the Masai MaraThousands of wildebeest try to cross a swollen river in the Masai Mara Game Reserve

The animals herd together for safety, as massive crocodiles lie in wait to pick off a stray beast

One 20-foot crocodile tries to grab this wildebeest

but the wildebeest kicks out just as the croc is about to strike, and gets away

A herd of zebra enters the water, migrating from the short grass plains of the Serengeti into the Masai Mara Game Reserve

The crocodile makes a desperate lunge for one zebra

but the zebra uses the same trick as the wildebeest, and it too escapes
The reptile goes hungry on this occasion, but lies in wait for the next herd to brave the treacherous river

Drinking Straw Art Works | Cool straws Artwork

Drinking Straw pipes You just drink with these straws n throw them away, but someone can create incredible art pieces from these pieces of Straw

Drinking Straw Art Works

Drinking Straw Art Works

Cool straws Artwork

Cool straws Artwork






drinking straw clip art

drinking straw clip art

Cool straws Artwork