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After letting the battered water ball spend a few minutes in 375-degree peanut oil, he cracked open the crispy shell to find the successfully deep-fried water inside.
A Massachusetts man revealed the method he used to create "deep fried water" for a "terrible ideas" hackathon event in San Francisco.
Not to mention, who on Earth would want to deep-fry water all for the sake of "eating" fried water? Nothing makes sense anymore.
The Roadkill Cook-Off put the town of Marlinton, W. Va., on the map, in a state that’s a hearty stew of homey mountain towns.
Snake Catcher Dan shared on Facebook that it took "nearly an hour of searching" before the snake catcher located the venomous reptile inside the couch, in a spot where he could reach the animal.
The first question one must ask when contemplating deep-fried water is, “Why?” Best case, it works and you’ve got a ball of breading around a flavorless liquid. Worst case, you lose both ...
Fried water is the latest and perhaps one of the weirdest food trends to take over the internet recently. And if you think deep-fried water is just a fancy name for boiled water, you are mistaken ...
Deep-fried water No, we didn’t accidentally drop the “melon,” someone actually deep fried water.
Portland What not to do on Thanksgiving: Greatest deep-fried turkey disasters caught on video Published: Nov. 25, 2021, 1:27 p.m.
One can make a case for deep-frying just about anything, from Oreos, to ice cream and even avocados. But at the Stupid Shit No One Needs and Terrible Ideas Hackathon, which, yes, is an actual ...
Snake Catcher Finds 'Highly Venomous' Snake Hiding So Deep in a Couch It 'Takes Nearly an Hour' to Remove the Reptile Snake Catcher Dan had to use patience, a flashlight, and a hook to relocate ...