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Shamus is right. There was an enterprising young chemist in Chicago named Clark W. Griswold who developed a non-osmotic, non-nutritive crunch enhancer. I don't believe he patented the idea because he spent too much time on vacation.
shamus said:I know of a guy working on that same problem. I think he came up with a solution...
His name is Clark Griswold. Hails from Chicago. You might be able to look him up.
Hey, it's a free country. You're welcome to avoid any section you want. :cheers1:fedoralover said:It's threads like this that remind me to stay in the Hats section.
geo said:After some research, it turns out there are Czech cornflakes, and they're called "Emco", not "Kubflacz", as previously thought.
Marc Chevalier said:If we can put a man on the Moon, then ...
Marc Chevalier said:Muesli is my happy compromise between cornflakes and Grateguts.
So do I. I thought cornflakes were meant to be soggy.20thCenturyTim said:I actually like 'em soggy. :essen: I know, I'm weird.
CWetherby said:I'm surprised at you fellas! Doesn't everyone know you're supposed to eat oatmeal for breakfast???
Of course, then, that begs the question, what to do about lumpy oatmeal.....
matei said:It is simple. You need to eat vintage flakes!
Vintage is the way to go. Back in the day, they were made with a now forgotton step process of flaking, called "pre-flaking". Of course the big manufacturers no longer employ this step, as it is time consuming and labour intensive.
A vintage flake, when exposed to moisture such as milk, will not get soggy. A modern flake, will taper... emmm... get soggy.
There might be some independent flake-makers here and there who specialise in custom flakes...