Metal content. Sort of. My best friend's wife saw this in an antique store. Thought I'd might know. I do not. That drives me nuts!
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Metal content. Sort of. My best friend's wife saw this in an antique store. Thought I'd might know. I do not. That drives me nuts!
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Last edited by TheAndroid; 07-05-2012 at 10:17 PM.
I'll venture a guess...
In the good old days if the bacon wasn't greasy enough you could take that pan, fill with oil, and run the bacon across the roller - of course the "excess" would drain back to the reservoir so it wasn't too bad!
I don't know for sure but it's amazing -- it's worth more than 15 bucks...
the float is possibly a "tell at a glance and distance" gauge - so u don't run low on water...
the unit may have been anything from an old potpourri vessel to an apparatus for thawing out meats and such?![]()
whatever it is it's cool
edit; may have been a first attempt at a vaporizer --- throw a little eucalyptus in there and "shazamm"
Last edited by A.K. Boomer; 07-05-2012 at 08:53 PM.
Very interesting, never seen such a thing.
Wonder if it is kitchen related or for another purpose.?
Both myself and her have a similar pair without the loose piece. Hers is for kitchen use while mine is for camping. Think of it as a collander combined with a pot.
"I am, and ever will be, a white-socks, pocket-protector, nerdy engineer -- born under the second law of thermodynamics, steeped in the steam tables, in love with free-body diagrams, transformed by Laplace, and propelled by compressible flow."
it appears to be made to apply some "cooking compound" or "substance" to something..... perhaps not to bacon, as Mike B said, but some other item. the roller appears to me to have an axle on bent-down tabs.
Could apply melted shortening, melted frosting of some sort, etc.
Perhaps it is a baker's or confectioner's pan.
Good eye JT - there is something going on there - also could just be a vert slot to keep it from wondering off...
what a unique little cookermajigger
We thought it might be some kind of candy pan also. My wife vaguely remembers her grandfather having a pot like this to do something with molasses.
To heighten the mystery, my friend's wife says the lid does NOT come off. For awhile, I thought it might be some sort of hard candy spreader (note the wear on the top rim). Turn it upside down, and the roller would spread out the candy.
However, without being able to remove the lid, how would you clean it?
Next I thought "Powdered sugar spreader?" But why the hollow handle? That's usually reserved for very hot things.
so is that roller thing solidly anchored? or does it have travel?
I'm thinking some sort of steamer????????????
_____________________________________________
Mel Larsen
Remember when your cup holder sat next to you and wore a poodle skirt?