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Waxing a perspective.

Started by Cartierusm, February 20, 2009, 03:13:25 AM

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Cartierusm

So for all of those people out there who think, "Dam Carter has the coolest toys, I wish he would ESAD." This is for you. I might make big, but when I fail, I fail big too. Here's an equation for all you thinkers. What do you get when you take 16 pounds of cheddar, 30 pounds hot wax and a poorly designed waxing cradle? Don't know scroll down.



























homeacremom


Cartierusm

I'm not too fussed it didn't actually get very far. If you notice I have a theme room kitchen it's my own design rain forest meets drug shack in the jungle. I might need a new range though. The cheese didn't get damaged and I was able to peel the ugly wax off and reuse most of the splashed stuff. I seriously have to consider a different technique for waxing these big wheels. Now if it was my new 48" professional range I'm getting then I would be shooting my gun in the air, for examples see Point Break and Hot Fuzz. This is a great lesson, when my new range gets here no way I'm doing this stuff at all on it except for cooking. I'll probably take this old one outside and hook it up and put a rubbermade shed around it just for this sort of stuff.

ATTENTION People no matter how fool proof of a system you have, have a contingency plan. My cheese fell down into the 24" high pot. I was freakin' out. How in the hell do I get my cheese out. The cheese is most important but I didn't want to ruin the cheese, waste $50 worth of wax or destroy another large pot by pouring the wax in. Luckily I had a bussing bucket outside I use for drying the wheels in once waxed. I poured the wax in that dumped the wheel onto a cardboard box outside. Peeled off the wax and put it in the frig until I could figure out to wax it properly. Then I scraped the warm wax off the bucket. Note warm was comes off pretty easy, hot wax not so much.

Cartierusm

I'll be posting pics of the waxed cheese under the farmhouse cheddar #11 thread.

Cheese Head

Wowee thats a mess but like you said could have been worse, hope you didn't get burnt from the wax.

stuartjc


Cartierusm

Thanks for the concern, but no it actually didn't get on me. I'm actully not that fussed, aside from my range, it's not so bad. Could have been worse as my glasses broke today to and my new ones will be ready tomorrow, meaing if my new glasses got splashed I'd be pissed.

Cartierusm

Stuart, I was sure you were going to say Barlye wine makes a wonderful cleaner upper. LOL

stuartjc

nah, Barleywine makes a wonderful sorrow drowner ;)

Cartierusm

I meant you drink a whole bottle and everything miraculously looks clean.

saycheese

Would it work to melt the wax in a large double boiler with boiling water in the bottom half?  Then take the whole mess (water bath and melted wax) away from the stove and dip the cheese in an area that is easier to clean and/or protected with a drop cloth or something?  Just wondering, because I do that with small cheeses and it seems to work pretty well.  Also, I hate having to clean up wax off a stove -- it's a lot easier on a flat countertop.

Cartierusm

Thats a good idea. The wax stays hot so I would just need to heat it up, then take it outside to dip, then return to the stove.

OH JOY I just remembered that I have some Professional Automotive Wax and Grease remover. Works like a charm so everything except the stove top is clean as a whistle. I just realized that the top of the range comes off for cleaning so tomorrow I can take it off and work on it outside. So it's not so bad.

Likesspace

Sheesh Carter, I just saw this.....
That's a pretty major mess.
The next time I string a little wax over my wife's countertop I'll be sure to show her this post. That should get me off the hook.

Dave

DeejayDebi

Oh my! That is a good mess you've got there. Good luck hon!

Worlock

I make homemade candles, and a double boiler for wax is a must....

Shut up I'm a guy.  I can make candles too.  Bite me.