@@AtomicShrimp oh I get ya there, same thing happens with me sometimes when opening some mackerel fillets. I just wiggle back and forth a few times with those tins until the metal bends off smoothly as it's a bit tricky to open a square can with a can opener. 😋
@@tumainitiger4655 As owner of a home made can opener, I have no problem with tight corners. But both, pull tabs and can opener opened cans, leave a catch, that keeps some of the food back. I like the cans, that come with a opening key and open sideways around.
Hehehe I've asked this before. I still don't remove the lid, just open it far enough to get the stuff out. I feel like they're designed so you aren't meant to remove the lid entirely.
I started to laugh uncontrollably, it’s 3AM and I can’t sleep and I’ve stumbled across a video of a middle aged man using an invention designed solely to test the wobliness of sausages😂😂
500 years from now in history class: Greatest inventions of all time: 5. Harnessing Electricity - 1879 4. Printing Press - 1439 3. Wheel - 3200 bc 2. Fire - 125,000 bc 1. Wobble Dog 9003i - 2019
I literally just exited out of the video and started reading this in my head, and apparently it synced perfectly to him saying it and I burst out laughing.
At one point I was wondering why I was bothering watching this. Then the wobble dog happened and I was crying with laughter! Bravo for the deadpan delivery on that one.
Halfway through the wobble test I just started giggling uncontrollably and could no longer understand if I was personally having a breakdown, or merely watching someone else have one. =>.
I thought it said 90031, which is a zip code for a part of LA which is northeast of downtown. I'm sure lots of porn was filmed in that zip code. Now, I'm a sad.
I love how serious he sounds while testing the wobbliness of hotdogs on a machine literally called the wobble dog 90031! I now know what I'll be doing after retirement.
Honestly, if someone on the internet told me not to grab sausages straight out the jar... I would make an entire video dedicated to grabbing sausages out of jars.
I’m American and hot dogs in a jar just makes sense! At first I thought it was really odd. Then it occurred to me that the vacuum packs are awkward, leak, and aren’t resealable. I always have to put the opened pack in a ziploc bag then worry about them going bad.
The Jars are also re-useable for pantry storage and possibly even re -water bathing, or maybe even pressure canning but I have not tested the latter yet. Cans are just destined for landfill, as are the vacuum packs.
Sometimes when I'm having a particularly rough or sad day, I'll come back to watch this video. Specifically the wobbly test section. It always manages to bring a giggly smile to my face. Reminds me that if there's a guy out there who measured the wobbliness of canned hot dogs, then it's okay for me to be a little silly sometimes too.
16:12. I was crying laughing. The dedication to tweak the speed to get the perfect wobble. 😂😂. “I mean, look at the swing on that. You’ve just got to admire that.”😂😂 Imagine just sitting there playing with this machine and your wife walks in like: “What on God’s green earth is going on.....?” You: “It’s for science.”
I subbed for the scam videos, but I found your other content really enjoyable, too. This is, honestly, one of the funniest things I've ever seen. Your deadpan delivery and genuine sounding interest got to me in a way that most other content just can't. I've been too depressed to brush my hair or eat, and you made me actually smile for the first time in weeks. Thank you.
Damn, that got dark. You got anyone looking out for you? I don't brush my hair either but it's because I'm too busy not because I'm depressed... maybe try being too busy to be depressed?
@@BRUtahn that's exactly what I did, my husband lost his job a couple of months before I started college, so back in February I started working full time, I'm in college full time and we have a 3 year old. He got a job offer, so I put in my two weeks, but I feel so much better. And I shaved my head so I don't have to worry about brushing my hair lol
@@IDKwhatimdoingyet hey, I'm glad you're still around and feeling better. Enjoy the special moments with your little one. I have a 5 and a 1 yr old, they grow up too fast. I wish you and yours good health.
@@albapantheratigris6071 Yes, real scientific stuff going on here, next week checking out websites which use the number 30 in Roman numeral a lot?, and the Question of why? Roman numeral
This was just another food vlog until you introduced the Wobble Dog 9000. Suddenly, this is a science documentary. *Someone call Curiosity Stream* quickly.
This is genuinely, honestly, maybe one of the most absurd and frankly dumb things I've ever seen in my entire life. And I absolutely love it and wouldn't have it any other way. Fantastic video.
Do the vacuumed packed ones come with some sort of oil (or whatever it is) in it? Or are they mostly dry? I guess you yanks usually use them for barbecue? It's not quite as much of a cultural thing in the Netherlands, we mostly stick them in a pot to cook in whatever juices they come packed in.
@@omikronweapon They typically come in a small amount of brine. As far as serving them, they usually grilled, boiled, or baked. In the Northeastern U.S. there are an insane amount of varieties, just none that are jarred or canned.
I find this so funny. You have such a good skill for presentation and you're talking about wobbly sausages 😂 I bet you were the best at presentations in school.
Thanks - actually, this is something I only really learned later in life. I was a bit of a clown at school, and that hasn't gone away, I've just got it under control a bit more now
@@AtomicShrimp Oh man I'm so happy for you that you didn't end up having to suppress that part of you! Otherwise we wouldn't have great content like this. Thanks for being yourself.
That WobbleDog sets up some interesting harmonics on the firmer one - at lower revs you get a sway but at higher revs you get tighter oscillations but in each you set up standing/stationary waves. This would have been great for a physics A-Level practical :D
I tend to go for local sauasages (butcher or branded(usually deny’s) in a hot dog bap, baguette or ciabatta with blue dragon sweet chilli sauce Absolutely gorgeous
☺ Canada is a BIG country. the small pull top cans of mini hot dogs called "vienna sausage" by grace, is very common in Toronto. ❤ atomic shrimp, you have a keen mind 💡💪👍🔑
@@annjones5201 - the can be found on nearly every US market, as well. They are strange and mealy, imo. But they definitely qualify as strange food in a can 🥫
I went in expecting a typical hot dog wieners review. Instead, I get to witness the grandeur of the Wobble Dog 90031. 10/10. Also, how the heck can you keep a straight face?! I was busting out laughing all the way through.
I'm crying. My husband walked into the room, glanced at my screen, stopped and looked again, blinked, looked at me, looked back at the screen and walked back out of the room with a great big sigh. I'm not going to bring it up, just look at him levelly and see if he mentions it. 🤣🤣🤣
There's someone at Google trying to get this demonetized, but they can't find a reason that wouldn't reflect badly on them. Well played sir! They can't stop the Wobble Dog! xD
It does in fact bug me as an American that the “American” section of your grocery store has jarred hot dogs lol. I’ve genuinely never seen them like that here haha
I'm in Southern Ohio, and while I have seen them (pickled hot dogs in the pinkish brine, and stuff like the tinier ones that I think are actually labeled as sausages, but pretty much hot dogs nonetheless) they are EXTREMELY rare here at least. Canned hot dogs are also arguably a thing? Those, in my opinion, pretty gross vienna sausages you find at dollar stores you'd only eat if you were camping or had nothing else to eat. I don't know the exact definition of hot dogs and sausages and all the other things you'd call it, but if the canned vienna sausages aren't actually hot dogs, I'd say they're pretty close.
@@Clairness I would say that those 'Canned Vienna sausages' are Hotdogs. For the life of me, I couldn't tell you why. Only that all hotdogs are sausages, but not all sausages are hotdogs. Maybe, anyway. I suppose that it differs from place to place. Much like Cookies & Biscuits, Scones and ehh, Biscuits?, Jam and Jelly, Jelly and Jello. Language is an odd thing. Actually, Everything can be quite odd. ... (") (") So, Yeah.
Being British growing up, I’ve always thought I was getting conned with American style hotdogs. And I’ve always suspected your hotdogs didn’t come in cans either. British love bullshi++ing each other.
I hope after this you just invited all the neighbors over, fired up the grill and had a hot dog cookout XD i cant even imagine what i'd do with that many opened containers of hot dogs. I like a hot dog now and again, but having like, 100 of them to eat through before they went bad, i dont think i could do it.
As an American, I can confirm what @Trodoss said. I have never even seen those type of hot dogs in jars or cans. I have seen the mini hotdogs in cans, but not regular hotdogs.
Hot diggity dog! As a Yank, I appreciated this exercise. I did note how often your watchers are compelled to be offended by what you do. Fingers touching, can opener aggravation, worry worry. Personally, keep doing what you do and thank you. And the Wobble Dog 5000 was brilliant... "I mean just look at the swing on that...." I nearly died laughing! Thanks again, David
Oi, this comment section. But to put it to rest, canned vs vacu-packed, zero functional difference. All hotdogs are packed in brine and pasteurized. Plastic is a permeable membrane, so plastic packed dogs spoil faster than canning in a jar or metal can. You also cannot heat plastic packed dogs as much, so they are pasteurized at a lower temp. Hot dogs are also typically cured before the pasteurization process as well, so they're more or less triple cooked including people who cook them again before eating them. Canning is more expensive than plastic, and hot dogs are consumed faster in NA, so the plastic with lower shelf life makes sense, heras they are less common, and more of a novelty in the UK, hence more shelf stable packaging. Chicken based hot dogs are typically sold as an alternative to beef and pork, with premium hot dogs being all beef, while chicken is considered a low-fat alternative. Turkey is also seen as a meat for hot dogs, though a bit less than chicken. There are a few brands of commercially available venison and bison dogs too, but those are the rarest of the bunch, and typically are only regional. I personally buy my hot dogs in frozen bulk packaging, frozen in brine in a big brick inside a vac sealed plastic pack, which is probably something consumers almost never see. I've also seen refrigerated brined hot dogs in an un-canned tub that's only got an airtight seal, again, not typically sold to end-consumers, but common enough for food service in NA.