I like the idea of a bunch of scientists diligently taking notes for their "eating liquid nitrogen submerged cereal" classes, specifically on how to eat cereal submerged in liquid nitrogen. Like that's a specific thing that scientists need to take lessons for.
College chemistry class and they asked for volunteers but didn't say for what- so I did. I followed the instructions then they lit my hands on fire. No pain, no burns
My 7th grade science teacher did this for many years but kids weren't paying attention to the instructions and kept burning their hair/eyebrows and at one point the fire chief had to come in and he had to stop
They'll do that in some hs chem classes too. My chem 1 teacher let us do that sophomore year. Grantdd this was the same school where the ap chem teacher got to tell juniors and seniors that if they wanted to, they could stick their hands in a dry oven at 100C/212 F without getting burned(which is true, just don't touch anything other than the literal air in there) and to "try it at home if you want".
I saw a demonstrator do this with mini marshmallows and hand them out to the audience. Since they’re a little less porous, they were notably safer and still gave the “dragon breath” effect, as they called it.
Once I was eating it in my moms car, and I felt a burning on my thigh. I looked down and realized there was a hole in the bottom of the cup, and there was leftover liquid nitrogen dripping out. That place is closed now
Once in the car my moms coffe dripped on me and I got scared I thought a snake bite me lol it was just her coffe in my pants Gladly it didn't burn me but scared the hell out of me
@@slycethur teeth are hard enamel, they wouldn't get burned as bad as more temperature sensitive parts like your tongue, plus that's why you keep moving it, so it doesn't stay in one spot long enough to hurt you. Think of it like hot potato but in your mouth.
@@Fen_Foxproblem is, little kids don't know that. There's probably a sad number of adults that don't know that either, thinking that it won't hurt because it's cold or not thinking it's cold enough to worry about. Society is used to hot foods and dealing with them, but we aren't as used to cold foods.
And sell it for 5 to 10 bucks in a cup. This had to have happened more than 10 years ago. Heck, could've happened back in the day when you could buy a hotdog and a coke for a nickle. These frozen cereals could've been eaten by the upper echelons of society.
@@dillonhambymaybe cause no one ever said a word on how to eat them and the price of em 😂 I remember a cup was decently sized but they were just meh and a little too much for what it was
@@Steve.._. yeah it was expensive af for some junk just thrown into nitrogen. Maybe the nitrogen itself is expensive not worth the money tho. Probably why a lot of ‘em didn’t last
In a local mall of mine there was an ice cream shop called Sub-Zero and in that shop they had a treat called Dragons Breath, they took enlarged Trix cereal and added Liquid Nitrogen. Best. Candy. Ever. Unfortunately they did close the shop but man that candy was so good.
@@MikeVVaryou know how with ice cream you kinda roll it around with your tongue and move it around cuz it’s cold? Same principle. As long as it’s constantly moving you’re fine. The issue would be if kids or whomever just kept it in one place on their tongue or some where lodged between their gums. When it sits in one place long enough it starts to get frost bite. I remember when we used to make dry ice explode as a kid by putting it in water bottles and having it expand. Same thing you could hold dry ice but only constantly moving it on your hand
Plus it encourages children to violate lab safety rules typically you're never supposed to eat touch taste or smell anything involved with chemicals/chemistry
Yeah I’ve seen em at quite a few malls. They were trending for a while. I guess they closed because since it tastes like nothing and are kind of expensive for what it was, once you try it you don’t really have much reason to try it again. It’s literally just to look cool for like, 10 minutes at most, and so most people probably just didn’t think it was worth it. Therefore it probably wasn’t very profitable after a while therefore they closed them.
these things existed for the longest i remember. last time i had em is 20+ years ago. slurpee tasting drinks with liquid nitrogen in a funny looking tall plastic glass.
The most I ever saw as a kid years and years ago was in elementary school. A demonstration of liquid nitrogen. A man took the top off this big metal canister probably twice the size of a big Oxygen tank that we have today. We all got a chance to go up and look inside and we could see inside at it and the guy took a banana and dipped it in the nitrogen and then he ate it and said it was frozen and then he dropped a piece of the banana on the ground and it shattered. Pretty cool
I remember when they added this to the mall 😂😂, literally people came there when it opened but a week later no one ever went back 😂. Once we all realized it was just cereal for $6/7. They never got business and shut down 😂
It was $5 for 6 pieces of "Dragon's Breath Cereal Puffs" in the mall by my house. They were 1 in corn puff cereal pieces, they were dyed different colors it didn't taste like anything. You had to sign a waiver saying you knew you were buying something potentially that could hurt you if you don't follow the instructions listed below. 1. Keep the puff moving in your mouth. 2. Chew with your mouth open. 3. Only eat ONE puff at a time. The part that I found funny though was they had gluten-free written all over the booth. Now that booth has been replaced by the seasonal roasted corn kiosk, where the guy goes over to the grocery store next to the shopping mall and buys two banana boxes full of corn every couple of days. Then grill's it on a grill plate, and sells it for $10 a ear. But he's got competition now because one of the Chinese food restaurants in the food court has caught on and upped it because they have grill so they make elote corn and only charge $5 a ear. And they're a little take corn is a thousand times better than the other guys corn because they actually have a gas grill in the back of their kitchen... Plus elote spices and cheese. Ummm. 🤤
I absolutely love how you went off on a random tangent about food. I worked as a chef for a few years, and I enjoy seeing people enjoying food. But $10/ear seems high af.
Oh I'm at uni, we were doing this with lollies in the physics labs the other day just for fun. Turned them rock hard and it was so cool. The head lab tech also made everyone ice cream using liquid nitrogen which is one inefficient but very cool way of doing it. It makes really smooth ice cream btw cos of the way it freezes so much faster you get smaller smoother crystals.
So awesome to rediscover Steve Spangler Science, grew up watching your vids and they heavily influenced my love for science. Love to see you still inspiring the masses!
One of my chem profs actually gargled liquid nitrogen one day for us. Basically the liquid is rapidly converting to gas as it reacts to bodily warmth near the skin and mucosa and if kept in constant motion and agitation it never really gets a chance to make contact and start doing damage. Different story if you just hold it in your mouth and sit there.
I remember a classmate of mine had a scientist for a father and he actually brought this in our 1st grade year. He was freezing mini marshmallows and i think he even froze a balloon. Classic!
I’ve had this before in a mall in LA, and I didn’t have to sign a waiver, and it was cool, and tasted like Cheetos without the cheese and cold, it was called Dragon Breath, and it was amazing, I did not get burned at all.
I went to a fancy restaurant and they offered deserts cooled by liquid nitrogen, my wife just ate it being blissfully unaware of the risk and enjoyed it. I put it in my mouth, felt how cold it was, spat it out over the chef but it exploded into light sprinkles and it was a desert confetti salvia shower for him. He was not impressed. Sometimes ignorance is bliss.
@@RustyRick that I misspelt saliva as salvia (sage) and it is actually a food, so they are gently ribbing me about it. No, I got it, I just wanted to clarify.
Lol what? My chemistry teacher in highschool gave the whole class liquid nitrogen-dipped crackers and marshmallows. None of us got burned, but I think we all knew better than to keep it still in one place for too long 😂
Even out in the streets, they only use liquid nitrogen spray over it, not as much such that it actually looked like liquid but just pouring the cold gas over it, kept in in one place but nvr got burned
@@deathdealer6347they definitely didnt pour the gas over it, it needs a significant amount of liquid nitrogen to produce this effect. The "gas" you see is just water vapor.
@@nonullpointers that's funny I was 8 at that time at another country, they just had this like water dispenser thing but I only saw the gas coming out of the nozzle, but the bowl of cereal were not filled with the actual liquid nitrogen
If you're 8 you have no real reason to know that. By that point you have no reason to believe that something can still burn you while being cold, and it's not your fault your parents didn't think of that
Kind of scary how public safety gets ignored so easily. And not everyone may have access to it, but they do have access to frozen co2 and that can do similar things and cause similar damage. When they make these type of foods, it’s allowed to sit a set amount of time and stirred a few times to ensure all the liquid nitrogen is out of the food. You can see with how much “fog” he blows out that piece of cereal was full of it and that is very dangerous
I remember they sold "dragons breath" at a concert I went to years ago and being introduced to that liquid nitrogen cereal. Don't remember if I actually got the chance to try it, but I have remained interested in liquid nitrogen since.
I did this a lot at my old job. It was super fun. A Walmart mini apple pie is pretty fun, but you gotta keep it moving or it will rip you up good. Any chocolate with a wafer and caramel layer was good too.
I had a patient that ate a nitrogen ice cream cup very fast that still had an amount of liquid nitrogen inside. Liquid nitrogen got to her stomach and expanded into gas which ruptured that organ and she had to have emergency surgery.
@chuharry5360 no it seems like exactly what would happen; liquid nitrogen is about -196 °C (77.15 °K) which is not that far off from “absolute zero,” the proposed lowest temperature possible. your stomach is around 37.6 °C (310.75 °K), so swallowing liquid nitrogen causes it to boil on contact with your stomach acid, meaning it quickly expands and your stomach can basically just explode (and that’s not even mentioning all the freezing damage it can do to your mouth and esophagus when swallowing it, you thought a brain freeze was bad? let me tell you about internal frostbite)
@@KaraTheGirlie Waivers are usually put out to try and prevent parents from making a mountain out of a molehill by filing a lawsuit from their kids being stupid enough to get mouth burns from improperly eating this.
@@KaraTheGirlie Waivers are usually put out to try and prevent parents from making a mountain out of a molehill by filing a lawsuit from their kids being stupid enough to get mouth burns from improperly eating this.
I remember doing this when I was looking for a high school, in the science class we got to dip a green grape in there, then whipped cream, back in there and then chocolate, and then back in there. Wait a bit, and then eat it.
I went with my mom to her MIT reunion a few times, and the most recent time they had Rice Krispie treats that were frozen with liquid nitrogen, they were sooo good
@@420planttechguySaskatchewan has the worst Mexican/Tex Mex/San Diego style Mexican food I've ever had so maybe Taco Bell would be an improvement. I will say Regina has the best Indian (Caraway) I've ever eaten and some of the best Thai food (Nit's) is in Moose Jaw. I'm fascinated with the no alcohol strip club concept. Saw a burlesque show in Regina that could have used some alcohol to tolerate better. It's not like the strip club with alcohol ban
I think the kids who got burned probably hated it more than the teacher who watched and allowed the kid to get burned tbh. And if the teacher wasnt around when it happened they arent even part of the story so there would be no point in bringing them into it.
So there was a kiosk at our mall that still does this. But the employees always say "keep it moving, keep chewing until its all gone" That's the right way to do it.
I KNOW MY man did not just put the liquid nitrogen before the cereal
That's how you keep it crunchy....don't you know?
Good one
Bro why isn't this comment at the top
mans committing war crimes...
@@turntsnaco824But it's less cereal
Craig: “But we ain’t got no milk”
Pops: “Better put some LN2 on that sh!t”
Underrated comment 😂😂😂😂😂😂
😂😂😂 you win the internet for the day
😂
Didn't think I'd see that scene get referenced this way.
Rip pops
Ohhhh that’s why my mouth burned eating the puffed up “dragon cereal” as a kid. 😅
for me it was called dragons breath cereal
They literally tell you to chew it quickly and keep it moving
Were you a slow kid, they tell you to keep moving it in ur mouth
@@Somedudeonaiphonechilling8971you dont know how hard it is for some people
"as a kid" honey that stuff was invented last year your still a kid
I like the idea of a bunch of scientists diligently taking notes for their "eating liquid nitrogen submerged cereal" classes, specifically on how to eat cereal submerged in liquid nitrogen. Like that's a specific thing that scientists need to take lessons for.
College chemistry class and they asked for volunteers but didn't say for what- so I did. I followed the instructions then they lit my hands on fire. No pain, no burns
Yea cause that butane or hand sanitizer obviously it's not gonna burn u
My 7th grade science teacher did this for many years but kids weren't paying attention to the instructions and kept burning their hair/eyebrows and at one point the fire chief had to come in and he had to stop
Haha, I love doing this to kids. They always freak out, even if you warn them
@@mr.poopoofart6182cool story, just like how i was the 4th usa president of united states and time travled to 2023
They'll do that in some hs chem classes too. My chem 1 teacher let us do that sophomore year. Grantdd this was the same school where the ap chem teacher got to tell juniors and seniors that if they wanted to, they could stick their hands in a dry oven at 100C/212 F without getting burned(which is true, just don't touch anything other than the literal air in there) and to "try it at home if you want".
I saw a demonstrator do this with mini marshmallows and hand them out to the audience. Since they’re a little less porous, they were notably safer and still gave the “dragon breath” effect, as they called it.
Yup 😅 selling years ago as "dragons breath" in Myrtle Beach !
@Dont_click_this_profileeok
Same thing I did
@Dont_click_this_profileebot activity detected
👇if i was correct
@Dont_click_this_profileebooooo
Anyone that's ever had a fresh slice of pizza knows to keep it moving.
Or a hot pocket
@@skittlesbro1378or pizza rolls
Ya know, after looking at the replies to your comment, it’s just really anything with molten cheese
Fax
you are in my head!😂
"Why? Because it was fun."
Yes, thank you for reminding me that i have ears
There are subtitles in the short already.
@@yayakame the world needs necesarry evil for it to be properly balanced.
im the 1000th like🎉
@@_setbes that's the gayest thing ive ever heard
@@_setbesYeah, but that wasn’t necessary
“Putting it in liquid nitrogen like this... then eat it like this.” Is something I never expected to hear in the same sentence.
Yep
U never had dragon breath ice cream?
Why? Cause it was fun!
You didn't hear it in the same sentence
Real 😂
Once I was eating it in my moms car, and I felt a burning on my thigh. I looked down and realized there was a hole in the bottom of the cup, and there was leftover liquid nitrogen dripping out. That place is closed now
Did it put a hole through the car?
You're lucky it fell on your thigh. Could've been worse.
@@suryatejas3013rip
Once in the car my moms coffe dripped on me and I got scared I thought a snake bite me lol it was just her coffe in my pants
Gladly it didn't burn me but scared the hell out of me
@@skydivenext you gotta be no older than 11
I was expecting a refreshing beverage, got ice cold burned tongue instead
You gotta chew it fast or it'll freeze a hole in your mouth
@@OversizedSausage and burn my tooth gums?
@@slyceth how else will you dissipate the cold
@@slycethur teeth are hard enamel, they wouldn't get burned as bad as more temperature sensitive parts like your tongue, plus that's why you keep moving it, so it doesn't stay in one spot long enough to hurt you. Think of it like hot potato but in your mouth.
Well ,
Should’ve rethought your expectations then shouldn’t you
Vape?
"Nah, Cereal"
"We've been taught how to do this correctly" bro acts like I've never eaten a molten hot pocket.
Gold 😂
@@collindavis7765 🤣
It’s cold tho
@@pancake234 cold, hot, same concept, move it around to distribute so it never touches any particular part of your mouth for too long
@@Fen_Foxproblem is, little kids don't know that. There's probably a sad number of adults that don't know that either, thinking that it won't hurt because it's cold or not thinking it's cold enough to worry about.
Society is used to hot foods and dealing with them, but we aren't as used to cold foods.
That cereal already cuts the living hell out of your mouth... "let's freeze it"
Nawww for real man
fr
And sell it for 5 to 10 bucks in a cup. This had to have happened more than 10 years ago. Heck, could've happened back in the day when you could buy a hotdog and a coke for a nickle. These frozen cereals could've been eaten by the upper echelons of society.
@@nickv1212nah those sound like right after covid prices
Dippin' dots still costs about that much without the need to buy nitrogen or lawyers
I also have an allergy, so cereal DESTROYS my mouth.. but i still eat it. 🙄🙈
My favorite part of this is when you eat all the cereal, you’re left with delicious cereal milk to drink
So refreshing, thanks!
Liquid nitrogen is my favorite drink!
My favorite part of this is when I eat all the cereal, I’m left with delicious liquid nitrogen to drink
I like my liquid nitrogen under -100 fahreneit
This is why I pour milk first
I was like "now eat it" and *he did*
My arse was happy af
HAHAHA
They called ‘em dragon puffs in my mall back when they were being sold
where i got them they were dragon breath
Yup dragon puffs they used to sell them at carshows growing up
Yep same here. Didn’t last long at all
@@dillonhambymaybe cause no one ever said a word on how to eat them and the price of em 😂 I remember a cup was decently sized but they were just meh and a little too much for what it was
@@Steve.._. yeah it was expensive af for some junk just thrown into nitrogen. Maybe the nitrogen itself is expensive not worth the money tho. Probably why a lot of ‘em didn’t last
" Did you enjoy the cereal kids, well I have a suprise.....Asbestos Cotton Candy....Yaaaayyyyy "
HAHAHAHAHA
well it’s just nitrogen man
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
brother, the majority of the air you breathe is nitrogen
@axod1916 yes I'm aware....thanks
In a local mall of mine there was an ice cream shop called Sub-Zero and in that shop they had a treat called Dragons Breath, they took enlarged Trix cereal and added Liquid Nitrogen. Best. Candy. Ever. Unfortunately they did close the shop but man that candy was so good.
I went there bro and they are still open lol I also got the dragons breath
How exactly do you eat it though
I went there with my dad and football coach, always wanted to go again
@@MikeVVari think you had open and close your mouth a certain way
@@MikeVVaryou know how with ice cream you kinda roll it around with your tongue and move it around cuz it’s cold? Same principle. As long as it’s constantly moving you’re fine. The issue would be if kids or whomever just kept it in one place on their tongue or some where lodged between their gums. When it sits in one place long enough it starts to get frost bite. I remember when we used to make dry ice explode as a kid by putting it in water bottles and having it expand. Same thing you could hold dry ice but only constantly moving it on your hand
"...it was a disast-" perfect cut off point 😅😂😂
Shoot, with Captain Crunch you don’t need liquid nitrogen. After two bowls the roof of your mouth is riddled with sores. 😂
i never had captain crunch but bro i don’t think u should be getting SORES from it 😭
@@asterramirez5996 I can confirm that the roof of your mouth does in fact get shredded after 2-3 bowls
🤣🤣 it’s true!
Hahah yeah that stuff is sharp
Accurate 😿
When I tried it it felt natural to keep it moving since keeping it still would slowly make it colder and colder wherever it was left
but if you were from florida you would be that dumb
i did too some ppl are just a little slower ig 💀
Natural? That’s common sense lol
It's the same as eating really hot food
right, and that's what children are not necessarily good at
Never has my brain been more sure of something, imma Ned you to stand next to law by mike cause y’all got super similar chemistry
This could be a good topic
I would never watch this guy again if I saw those two collab. Mike is a goof.
i thought it was law by mike until i saw his face 😂
@@FurBabyWhisperers exactly
@@Ooga.booga.unga.bunga1because he acts like some big Hollywood movie with his cuts and edits. Makes things way too cheesy and just full of cringe
Plus it encourages children to violate lab safety rules typically you're never supposed to eat touch taste or smell anything involved with chemicals/chemistry
Instructions unclear now I have something called an esco bar
Can one of you 58 up voters explain the joke to the dummy that is me?
Underrated comment
@@mondovision4460definitely underrated
Here before this blows up
Fuckin esco bar 💀
The mall near where I live sold "nitrogen puffs" for awhile, they were fun to eat, didn't taste like much and wasn't sold there for long....😂❤
Yeah I’ve seen em at quite a few malls. They were trending for a while. I guess they closed because since it tastes like nothing and are kind of expensive for what it was, once you try it you don’t really have much reason to try it again. It’s literally just to look cool for like, 10 minutes at most, and so most people probably just didn’t think it was worth it. Therefore it probably wasn’t very profitable after a while therefore they closed them.
these things existed for the longest i remember. last time i had em is 20+ years ago. slurpee tasting drinks with liquid nitrogen in a funny looking tall plastic glass.
as did the malls
I've bought them before when I was a kid when I was in Middle School I had some they were really cool but kind of burning sometimes
@@poorlenoreYeah they definitely burned & didn’t taste like anything😂 Waste of money honestly
The most I ever saw as a kid years and years ago was in elementary school. A demonstration of liquid nitrogen. A man took the top off this big metal canister probably twice the size of a big Oxygen tank that we have today. We all got a chance to go up and look inside and we could see inside at it and the guy took a banana and dipped it in the nitrogen and then he ate it and said it was frozen and then he dropped a piece of the banana on the ground and it shattered. Pretty cool
I remember coming across this channel when you had 10000 subs, and now I come back and see you are over a million. Happy for you.
I remember when they added this to the mall 😂😂, literally people came there when it opened but a week later no one ever went back 😂. Once we all realized it was just cereal for $6/7. They never got business and shut down 😂
Can’t see this being a profitable business, it’s more suitable for like stalls or Easter show parades and stuff I would assume
That or the lawsuits started rolling in
It was $5 for 6 pieces of "Dragon's Breath Cereal Puffs" in the mall by my house. They were 1 in corn puff cereal pieces, they were dyed different colors it didn't taste like anything. You had to sign a waiver saying you knew you were buying something potentially that could hurt you if you don't follow the instructions listed below.
1. Keep the puff moving in your mouth.
2. Chew with your mouth open.
3. Only eat ONE puff at a time.
The part that I found funny though was they had gluten-free written all over the booth.
Now that booth has been replaced by the seasonal roasted corn kiosk, where the guy goes over to the grocery store next to the shopping mall and buys two banana boxes full of corn every couple of days. Then grill's it on a grill plate, and sells it for $10 a ear.
But he's got competition now because one of the Chinese food restaurants in the food court has caught on and upped it because they have grill so they make elote corn and only charge $5 a ear. And they're a little take corn is a thousand times better than the other guys corn because they actually have a gas grill in the back of their kitchen... Plus elote spices and cheese. Ummm. 🤤
I absolutely love how you went off on a random tangent about food. I worked as a chef for a few years, and I enjoy seeing people enjoying food. But $10/ear seems high af.
I read this and enjoyed it ngl, very interesting thanks.
Now I want street corn
I missed this Steve Spangler!!! You made science fun during my childhood
Along with the burns it was also giving kids with asthma fatal asthma attacks. My mom never let me get any because of that.
Remember to drink the milk when the cereal is done 😂
Ex plain
Oh I'm at uni, we were doing this with lollies in the physics labs the other day just for fun. Turned them rock hard and it was so cool. The head lab tech also made everyone ice cream using liquid nitrogen which is one inefficient but very cool way of doing it. It makes really smooth ice cream btw cos of the way it freezes so much faster you get smaller smoother crystals.
ur talking about dippin dots bozo
@@devcs9474fr
By lollies please be lollipops and not the other ones.
@@69hunter55i was about to comment this, thanks for doing it for me
@@devcs9474dippin dots are specifically flash frozen in that shape. They're not the same thing bozo
You can actually combine that with the candy cigarettes and it would look like a real cigarette
why do I hate this
This was in fact, *NEVER* a disaster. 🗿
So awesome to rediscover Steve Spangler Science, grew up watching your vids and they heavily influenced my love for science. Love to see you still inspiring the masses!
Fr bro is a g. I've seen his videos in like 2012 before
I remember trying them years ago and wondered why the shops disappeared
How do you know your a psychopath without knowing your a psychopath
Liquid nitrogen catalyzed my tonsil stones causing caustic gas to form eddy patterns on the floor of the lab
That brainfreeze gonna go crazy lmaooo
That’s literally not how that works, like you totally missed the joke Lmfaoo clown it’s not ice that’s why people were being burned
One of my chem profs actually gargled liquid nitrogen one day for us. Basically the liquid is rapidly converting to gas as it reacts to bodily warmth near the skin and mucosa and if kept in constant motion and agitation it never really gets a chance to make contact and start doing damage. Different story if you just hold it in your mouth and sit there.
The best application I've seen was a drink with a dry ice ball in a plastic cage
It would carbonate the drink too, dope
I brought one of these with some ice cream at my country for like 2.50 bucks and my mouth didn't burnt
Omg I've always wondered why these disappeared
Dude somehow just made cap'n crunch more dangerous.
Not really they sell these at the mall where I live
Had some of these a few years ago but they made the cereal a lot larger. Tasted good plus a fun time with no burns.
I loved these growing up. You either had a good treat or burned cheeks
Had "Dragons Breath" puffs or whatever in Myrtle Beach around 2018 was pretty cool
I went there too I commented that 1 month before you lol
On the strip? I did too
@@revolxtion8229 YES
@@Eliyahu_777ok???
I lived in Myrtle beach until 2021, they were still selling it in the mall 😂
Science teachers are taught specifically how to eat liquid nitrogen... what a great college program.
I remember a classmate of mine had a scientist for a father and he actually brought this in our 1st grade year. He was freezing mini marshmallows and i think he even froze a balloon. Classic!
In Siberian winters no need for liquid nitrogen in your mouth to see your own “dragon breath” when breathing outdoors.
As a science professor I can confirm:
*Yes, I did have to pass the nitrogen cereal eating elective before earning my degree.*
In which case, it wasn't an elective. I
think you're lying.......
@@TheEudaemonicPlagueit was a joke lil bro “i think ur lying 🤓☝️”
@@TheEudaemonicPlague🫤
I’ve had this before in a mall in LA, and I didn’t have to sign a waiver, and it was cool, and tasted like Cheetos without the cheese and cold, it was called Dragon Breath, and it was amazing, I did not get burned at all.
I went to a fancy restaurant and they offered deserts cooled by liquid nitrogen, my wife just ate it being blissfully unaware of the risk and enjoyed it. I put it in my mouth, felt how cold it was, spat it out over the chef but it exploded into light sprinkles and it was a desert confetti salvia shower for him. He was not impressed. Sometimes ignorance is bliss.
Salvia is fun fs not sure what it has to do with liquid nitrogen
@@lukeboyer4071i think he meant saliva haha
@@lukeboyer4071 because I ate food cooled by liquid nitrogen, I spat it out so the food had my saliva on it.
@@AFourEyedGeekthat went over your head lol
@@RustyRick that I misspelt saliva as salvia (sage) and it is actually a food, so they are gently ribbing me about it. No, I got it, I just wanted to clarify.
How many times did you watch this?
Me:yes
Hope everyone is ok!!! Wishing much love and peace!!!
Lol what? My chemistry teacher in highschool gave the whole class liquid nitrogen-dipped crackers and marshmallows. None of us got burned, but I think we all knew better than to keep it still in one place for too long 😂
Even out in the streets, they only use liquid nitrogen spray over it, not as much such that it actually looked like liquid but just pouring the cold gas over it, kept in in one place but nvr got burned
@@deathdealer6347they definitely didnt pour the gas over it, it needs a significant amount of liquid nitrogen to produce this effect. The "gas" you see is just water vapor.
Probably because you were teenagers not children. He’s mostly talking about children getting burned
@@nonullpointers that's funny I was 8 at that time at another country, they just had this like water dispenser thing but I only saw the gas coming out of the nozzle, but the bowl of cereal were not filled with the actual liquid nitrogen
If you're 8 you have no real reason to know that. By that point you have no reason to believe that something can still burn you while being cold, and it's not your fault your parents didn't think of that
They have these at Pigeon Forge on big sticks like lollipops, they were pretty good.
dragons breath candy right?
@@sexygirlmax2019 Yeah, I think you had to stab them with a stick. I don't remember them burning or anything though.
no wonder these stores would pop up in my local mall for like a month and then magically disappear
Seriously dangerous and negligent way to handle liquid nitrogen.
Kind of scary how public safety gets ignored so easily. And not everyone may have access to it, but they do have access to frozen co2 and that can do similar things and cause similar damage. When they make these type of foods, it’s allowed to sit a set amount of time and stirred a few times to ensure all the liquid nitrogen is out of the food. You can see with how much “fog” he blows out that piece of cereal was full of it and that is very dangerous
I remember that this was a big fad when I was younger! Me and my cousins always getting burned over them 😂
Six or ten bucks just for that is crazy tho... Maybe two or three.
Now kids just vape instead.
💀
Yea, definitely the same thing
@@iwatchtoomuchyt9281totally not a even dangerous alternative to smoking (real)
Thats a terrible comparison.
Unironically safer than this
Ngl, as a kid, this would probably be irresistible. “One burned mouth please. No bag thank you!”
This made me think of something Fry from Futurama would say 🤣
I remember they sold "dragons breath" at a concert I went to years ago and being introduced to that liquid nitrogen cereal.
Don't remember if I actually got the chance to try it, but I have remained interested in liquid nitrogen since.
Is that Steve Spangler!? Dude this was my childhood!😮😮
I never ate this, but I sure did pretend to smoke in the winter 😂
😂😂 I always thought someone was gonna search me at school because it looked like I was smoking when it was cold 😂
dawg they sell this at a place near me no waiver needed😂
I remember these at the mall a few years ago
I got some of this in the mall, but it didn’t seem to be sold there very long 😂 wonder why
This guy sounds like Steve-O if he never got hurt
steve-o without the cocaine benders
I did this a lot at my old job. It was super fun. A Walmart mini apple pie is pretty fun, but you gotta keep it moving or it will rip you up good. Any chocolate with a wafer and caramel layer was good too.
I had a patient that ate a nitrogen ice cream cup very fast that still had an amount of liquid nitrogen inside.
Liquid nitrogen got to her stomach and expanded into gas which ruptured that organ and she had to have emergency surgery.
Arghhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
😥Oh man!
she could’ve just burped, skill issue
@chuharry5360 no it seems like exactly what would happen; liquid nitrogen is about -196 °C (77.15 °K) which is not that far off from “absolute zero,” the proposed lowest temperature possible. your stomach is around 37.6 °C (310.75 °K), so swallowing liquid nitrogen causes it to boil on contact with your stomach acid, meaning it quickly expands and your stomach can basically just explode (and that’s not even mentioning all the freezing damage it can do to your mouth and esophagus when swallowing it, you thought a brain freeze was bad? let me tell you about internal frostbite)
Oh my god
Tried one of these as a kid, it was so cool, somehow I never felt a burn
I sold this. We did an instruction session and they signed a waiver. The kids loved it.
If the kids signed a waiver ur lucky nobody got hurt. Contracts signed by a minor are not legally binding.
@@KaraTheGirlie Waivers are usually put out to try and prevent parents from making a mountain out of a molehill by filing a lawsuit from their kids being stupid enough to get mouth burns from improperly eating this.
@@KaraTheGirlie Waivers are usually put out to try and prevent parents from making a mountain out of a molehill by filing a lawsuit from their kids being stupid enough to get mouth burns from improperly eating this.
bro invented the vaporator😭
"kids were getting burned, it was a disaster" 😂
I remember doing this when I was looking for a high school, in the science class we got to dip a green grape in there, then whipped cream, back in there and then chocolate, and then back in there. Wait a bit, and then eat it.
Captain crunch, no matter how you present it is always, mouth shrapnel!!
I once got a dragons breath enema. With liquid nitrogen instead of cold brew coffee. I still fart little puffs of smoke to this day!
I wish I couldn’t read
Thankyou for sharing your experience bud
Hahaha, made my night. Thanks bud
i miss 10 seconds ago, when i had not seen this comment.
The reason he’s using liquid hydrogen is because his father left and has no more milk
“Liquid hydrogen”
@user-4253Except the Subtitles were accurate..
He’s not black tho
Liquid hydrogen would kill you if you put it anywhere inside your body because of how cold it is
@@fronk794being a racist is not cute.
I went with my mom to her MIT reunion a few times, and the most recent time they had Rice Krispie treats that were frozen with liquid nitrogen, they were sooo good
Everyone in my class was getting burnt but i they they was tripping 😂😂
They are eating that in Japan. I think they call it dragon breath.
Completely different thing entirely.
@@R0FLC4T5 no it’s not 😂 maybe they don’t use cereal but you get the exact same result.
Who else puts it in liquid nitrogen?
My mom
-muscleman
The Saskatchewan Science Center in Regina, Canada has an adult night and they make treats for the adults with dry ice.
How tf does Regina have a science center but no Taco Bell
@@420planttechguySaskatchewan has the worst Mexican/Tex Mex/San Diego style Mexican food I've ever had so maybe Taco Bell would be an improvement. I will say Regina has the best Indian (Caraway) I've ever eaten and some of the best Thai food (Nit's) is in Moose Jaw.
I'm fascinated with the no alcohol strip club concept. Saw a burlesque show in Regina that could have used some alcohol to tolerate better.
It's not like the strip club with alcohol ban
I think the kids who got burned probably hated it more than the teacher who watched and allowed the kid to get burned tbh. And if the teacher wasnt around when it happened they arent even part of the story so there would be no point in bringing them into it.
So there was a kiosk at our mall that still does this. But the employees always say "keep it moving, keep chewing until its all gone"
That's the right way to do it.
Could you get nitrogen narcosis from doing this too much?
"It was a disaster" for some reason bought tears to my eyes laughing, I’m guessing because I was expecting a pleasant ending result 😂😂😂
I'm glad I got a chance to do it. They had a little sign telling you to keep it moving and not to hold it against your cheeks or upper palette.
Why, WHY COULDN’T I HAVE HAD A SCIENCE TEACHER LIKE THIS GUY!!!!
First time I had liquid nitrogen cereal at my mall when me and my brother were eating it we both got bloody noses
I loved Dragon's Breath, use to get it in a mall
Next other liquid stuffs other than commonly used stuffs
This video is oddly satisfying for some reason.
This is not liquid nitrogen this is liquid ammonia ❤❤❤❤
I believe you will need food grade liquid nitrogen
Yes it does exist
I think
It's all food grade it's frozen gas
Do you put your liquid nitrogen before or after the cereal?