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posted by martyb on Friday December 16 2016, @09:38AM   Printer-friendly
from the no-laughing-matter dept.

Airgas, Inc. has apparently run out of gas -- specifically nitrous oxide. Given that Airgas is the foremost manufacturer of nitrous oxide in the U.S., there is now a nationwide shortage.

Although the problems supposedly date back to an August plant explosion in Florida (which apparently was only reported locally), no one really noticed a problem until coffee shops started running out of whipped cream lately.

Now the news media is being whipped up into a frenzy over the possibility of a holiday desserts without whipped cream.

Time reports on this "dire" issue:

Stock up on canned whipped cream during your next jaunt to the grocery store, because we—as a nation—might be running out soon. That's right: the most important topping (or stand-alone ingredient, for some) in the dessert world is in dire short supply this holiday season. According to the Chicago Tribune, this terrifying fact is all due to a national shortage in nitrous oxide, the gas used to make aerosol cans of whipped cream function the way they're supposed to (among other things).

While this gas shortage reporting about missing coffee toppings may seem silly, it really is no laughing matter. Other Airgas plants beyond Florida are apparently also having problems, so some reports suggest remaining nitrous oxide stocks are now being restricted to medical use until replacement supplies can be imported from Europe. A bulletin sent out to store managers at regional grocery chain Market Basket notes:

Airgas, Inc. had an explosion in their Florida plant and a total loss. Their Maitland, Ontario plant was shut down for safety reasons, and their Yazoo City, Mississippi facility continues to have issues with two lines. Airgas will begin importing nitrous oxide from Europe in December. However, for now, all nitrous oxide available is being used for medical purposes.

More details at the Chicago Tribune .

[Continues...]

What I personally find hilarious about all of this holiday dessert hysteria is that whipped cream is one of the simplest things to make in your kitchen. Do you have any device capable of agitating enough to whip air into a liquid (e.g., hand mixer, stand mixer, immersion blender, food processor, even a bowl and a whisk)? You can make whipped cream in anywhere from a few seconds to a few minutes. (1) Pour some heavy cream (or "whipping cream"). (2) Whip until desired texture is achieved. (3) Toward the end, add any sugar or other flavorings (many people will put at least a tiny bit of vanilla extract). The end. (Minor caution: do pay attention and don't whip beyond where the cream starts to get quite stiff, or you will turn it into homemade butter.)

There's a lot of kitchen lore about having to put bowls and beaters into the freezer, etc., but that's really only necessary if you're whipping by hand with a whisk. And if you've never made homemade whipped cream, be prepared for something significantly better than the can. In addition, you get to choose exactly the texture you like -- do you want it nearly stiff and very light? Or dense, very rich, and a little runny? Feel free to add a little flavor -- a dash of cinnamon, some cocoa powder, a tablespoon or two of your favorite liqueur, a little orange zest, or even something more exotic.

Seriously, I can't even figure out why anyone would buy the canned stuff, nitrous oxide shortage or not. Every time I serve the "real thing" for guests, they act like it's the best thing they've ever eaten. Far from a holiday disaster, maybe we should look at this as an opportunity to make America whip cream again.


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  • (Score: 4, Informative) by pTamok on Friday December 16 2016, @11:48AM

    by pTamok (3042) on Friday December 16 2016, @11:48AM (#442012)

    While not documented in the 'Allowed HTML' subscripts and superscripts work.

    This means we can write the molecular formulas correctly.

    N2O ; O2 ; and N2

    Or N2O → N2 + ½ O2

    Starting Score:    1  point
    Moderation   +3  
       Informative=3, Total=3
    Extra 'Informative' Modifier   0  

    Total Score:   4  
  • (Score: 2) by Immerman on Friday December 16 2016, @11:31PM

    by Immerman (3985) on Friday December 16 2016, @11:31PM (#442274)

    Why would they want to do all that extra typing when it's pretty clear what is meant by context? It would be different if they were typing organic molecule formulas or chemical equations, but neither applies here.

    Wake me up when Slashdot supports unicode so that I can finally type subscripts and exponents using the same simple compose-key combos I use in my text editor and everywhere else (Just to confirm they still haven't: water is H₂O, and the Pythagorean theorem is a² + b² = c²)

    • (Score: 3, Touché) by Immerman on Friday December 16 2016, @11:41PM

      by Immerman (3985) on Friday December 16 2016, @11:41PM (#442277)

      Wow. What do you know. I stand corrected.

      For those interested, a compose key is a *very* old method of entering extended characters without having to memorize arbitrary character codes. For example to type ² you type the sequence [compose] [^] [2], while ₅ = [compose][_][5], and most other common characters you might want to type have similarly logical sequences, e.g. [compose][O][c] = ©

      It's usually easy to turn on a compose key in Linux, if it's not already on by default (It frequently defaults to remapping the rarely used context-menu key to the right of the spacebar, or the capslock key, and can generally be easily remapped to whatever unused key you wish) On Windows you'll need a third-party program such as WinCompose or many others.

      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 17 2016, @03:11AM

        by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 17 2016, @03:11AM (#442341)

        SoylentNews is not Slashdot