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Corkscrew Breadsticks & Homemade U-shaped hot dog cradles . This was fun! I'd made some bread dough for burger buns, pita and pizza dough and set some aside to play with. I rolled 1/4 of it out pretty thin into a rectangle, one of the measurements being 6". For the first idea, you need round wooden clothespins (or several chopsticks bundled some way that is oven-safe, I suppose .. someone will probably think of other ways to shape these,too). For the second you need cannoli forms .. or I thought of crumpling aluminum foil into a cylinder the length of and slighly plumper than a hot dog (but I wanted them to be smooth ... picky picky :-/. Please share any other ideas you come up with .. 2 much $ to buy more forms. Can pipe be used in the oven, I wonder??? . With the old-fashioned, round, wooden clothespins (sprayed with non-stick spray and spread to cover with my hand), I cut bread stick-like strips (about 6-7"x1/4-3/8") and, secured one end (pressed it) and wrapped the dough around the pin like a corkscrew, securing the other end by pressing it to the pin. Wrap them loosely (several of mine stuck) and allow them to cool before trying to release, if the stick. I baked them at 350F for about 10 minutes, but watch for them to be golden since I didn't time it exactly. The ones that loosened were SO cute .. like banana curls. They'd be festive on a table and certainly fun for children. I stayed around the oven, btw, in case the sprayed wood and heat were not a good idea. There were NO signs of burning or even darkening of the wood. . The other thing is something I've been after for decades. Doeanyone remember the U-shaped hot dog "buns?" I've seen them around again recently (maybe they never left ..?) and got intrigued by the possibility of making them myself. Finally I spotted cannoli forms (round metal forms like an open-ended hot dot) and got them for this eventual experiment. Yesterday was the day. . With the same rolled out dough, I rolled some of it over the form until it made a U, then cut it away with a pizza slicer. The "buns" were baked draped over the forms. I'd sprayed the forms but not secured the long edges .. the one that inadvertently got secured, however, came out PERFECTLY! This is not only a fun change for hot dogs, but any filling could be piped into the "U" for a weird sandwich .. and they could be cut in smaller lengths for unique appetizers. Oh, for the calorie/fat-counters among us, as a hot dog bun, making the dough without fat (or even just 1 t. oil per 3 cups of flour works) and rolling it thinly like that, gives not only less fat but MUCH less bread .. and still the satisfaction of having some, say with a VLF or vegetarian hot dog. . May not be your thing to play with dough like this, but it if is, this may be fun for you and those you feed, too. :-) . Janet
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