vr46 9 days ago

I keep them safe from harm in my stomach

  • AnotherGoodName 8 days ago

    They still expand though!

    It depends a bit on the flight altitude and plane type (newer planes have higher pressure and shorter flights are lower altitude) but i’ve learnt not to have carbonated beverages before flying.

    • vr46 8 days ago

      Definitely, and never ever a non-alcoholic beer, yet to find one that isn't 99% gas by volume, you'll explode like Mr Creosote

dboreham 9 days ago

Timely reminder to head to World Market to stock up on pre-tarriff teacakes and caramel wafers..

esperent 9 days ago

Is this viral marketing for Tunnocks?.

  • ljf 9 days ago

    Excellent marketing if so - I already want some.

    I love a Tunnock's teacake - but they are pretty dangerous for me. I work maybe 3 mins walk from a Tesco Express and by the time I've left the shop I've usually eaten one, another on the walk, one in the lift then there are only 3 left - and I can share three with my work mates. So I eat the rest...

    Delicious.

    • stevekemp 9 days ago

      Dangerous indeed. They come in boxes of six, which I always treated as a single-serving.

      I moved to Finland so I can't get them here, but at least I'm consoled by the availability of Irn-Bru!

      • andrewaylett 8 days ago

        They still have Irn Bru in Finland? They stopped making it in Scotland once the sugar tax came into force :(.

        Although if I'm honest, I drank far too much of the stuff so it's probably a good thing I can't buy it any more.

        • dingaling 8 days ago

          It's still Scotland's leading soft drink and you can buy the original high-sugar recipie:

          https://irn-bru.co.uk/products/1901

          • andrewaylett 8 days ago

            That's the original recipe, but not the one that was known as Irn Bru immediately before the sugar tax -- it's got no caffeine in it. I've not tried it.

            Any changes made before I started drinking it are merely historical baggage, but any changes made after I started drinking it have a fundamental effect on whether I consider it the same product. See also: "New Coke".

            (Also, I can taste Aspartame -- so while many people might say that the low sugar variant is sufficiently similar in taste, I really don't enjoy it. Although, as I posted above, this is probably a good thing.)

        • 4ndrewl 8 days ago

          You can definitely still buy it in Scotland.

          • andrewaylett 8 days ago

            You can buy something marketed as Irn Bru, but it's not really Irn Bru. Real Irn Bru does not contain artificial sweeteners.

            • stevekemp 8 days ago

              We're gonna go "No true Scotsman", on irn-bru? That takes some doing!

              I get what you're saying, and I kinda believe the best Irn-Bru was the stuff in a glass bottle, delivered to the door, when I was a kid.

              But the stuff that's out there, to my mind, is still just fine. It cures hangovers. It tastes of sugar and love, whether there's real sugar, real iron, or real love in it is almost immaterial.

              • andrewaylett 4 days ago

                "Made in Scotland, from Girders" :).

                Un(?)fortunately I taste Aspartame as being bitter so it's not as sweet for me as it used to be :(. Which is probably a good thing, given how much I used to drink :P.

      • ljf 8 days ago

        Single serving indeed, they don't really work for sharing. Similar for the 8 Tunnock's caramel bars...

      • unwind 9 days ago

        I haven't tested either, but I would of course give [1] a try for comparison purposes. If you already have, how did they compare?

        [1]: https://brunberg.fi/en/tuoteryhma/chocolate/kisses/

        • stevekemp 9 days ago

          They're very similar to look at, but the chocolate is wrong and the consistency of the "foam" part differs too.

          Close, but sadly not close enough! (I enjoy both, but the Tunnock's teacakes, and their caramel logs too, are a clear winner for me. Probably due to my childhood memories and associations as much as anything else. Bias!)

          • unwind 8 days ago

            Thanks, this kind of information is very hard to find elsewhere and ... I just find snack food interesting. :)

          • ausaus 8 days ago

            Same for me, nothing comes close!

    • LilBytes 9 days ago

      I moved to Australia and forgot they existed until I found them in the "Foriegn Food" aisle and my house has been stocked with them every day since.

      They've been my favourite sweet for as long as I can remember.

  • amiga386 8 days ago

    It's viral marketing for the RAF.

    • esperent 8 days ago

      You're probably right at that.

dsr_ 8 days ago

USA equivalent: think Mallomars or Pinwheels, but with better chocolate.

danparsonson 8 days ago

PSA: I recently carried a box full in my hold luggage and am happy to report that they survived intact (presumably the hold is pressurised), in case anyone was worried about that.

  • aaronmdjones 8 days ago

    The cargo hold of most pressurised aircraft is itself almost always pressurised, yes.

Isamu 9 days ago

Glad that’s sorted now. I wouldn’t want to be lose a limb at altitude to any snack.

Physkal 9 days ago

I wonder how much does it cost to run an experiment like this?

  • bayindirh 9 days ago

    If the facility is being used regularly, practically nothing. Plus, being able to do these kinds of things is a great boost for morale for people who like what they're doing.

heohk 9 days ago

It was a spooky ghost!

zombot 9 days ago

Air-transport pressurized suites at your own peril.