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06-16-2016 02:22 PM
Noel7 wrote:
It sounds as if it was easier just to smack it on the sink.
I must say, I've seen a lot of interesting ideas on things you can do with crescent rolls, though. One is just as simple as putting sugar and cinnamon on them before you roll them up, others use chocolate chips and mini marshmallows.
That's the thing! Nothing was wrong, to my knowledge, with the way it was all those years. Pull off the strip, one hit on the corner of the counter/sink, and VOILA! It's popped open.
It was kind of a (frustrating) comedy of errors when I hadn't realized it changed and kept banging the darn thing on the corner of my counter. Laughing now, thinking about it.
But, IMO, this is one of those things that was not broken, so no need to 'fix' it!
06-16-2016 02:26 PM
@chickenbutt wrote:Hey Noel! Unfortunately, they don't open like that anymore.
Also, I might add, they are much more difficult.
You DO pull off that strip, as best you can, anyway, so that you can expose the seam. Then you need to take a spoon and try to push it over one side of the seam to make it 'pop' open.
I learned that no amount of banging it on the corner of the counter would work anymore and one day I finally read the label and it explained this.
I learned this after several WT_ attempts on a couple of packages. When you used to be able to bang them on the counter they were easy to open. Now with the spoon it's the devil to get them to open. I usually give up and take a sharp object to the cardboard - way sharper than a spoon 😏
06-16-2016 02:27 PM
As to what you can do with crescent rolls - (sorry, I got interrupted a few minutes ago) - The thing when I was young was to take hot dogs (they gross me out now, but this was decades ago!) and put a slice down them but not totally in half. Then take some pieces of cheese and slide into the slit.
Then you open up the crescent rolls and break them apart and roll each one out just a little bit, wrap the hot dog into the crescent roll and put them on a baking pan. Then bake them for however long it took and you'd have a - oh, I forgot what they call that sort of thing. D'oh!
Anyway, for the time it was good. ![]()
Oh! pig in a blanket
06-16-2016 02:28 PM
Inch by inch, life's a cinch;
yard by yard, life is hard.
Everytime I try to open one of those tubes I have a mess.
06-16-2016 02:34 PM
Ok, get this - I have a can of Pillsbury (some kind of large, buttery or something) biscuits in my refrigerator I purchased this week because biscuits and sausage sounded good.
Anyway, I pulled that out to read the directions and see if it was described any better and I'll be darned if there are NOT directions as to how to open it.
I know they had changed the directions at some point, or I would not have known that. But now, nothing - just how to cook them and how to make them taller or something (? by crowding them I guess - I didn't read it).
If somebody had never purchased that type of product before, I wonder how they would figure out how to open it.
06-16-2016 02:36 PM
Oh, never mind. It's in very small writing on that corner of the paper you need to tear off to expose the seam. D'oh!
06-16-2016 04:00 PM
....Or add about 2/3 cup of Bisquick to your egg/milk mixture and it'll form its own crust.
06-16-2016 04:12 PM
Thank you all for your kind replies glad I am not alone with this how to open item.
DH returned with new tube - proceeded to get his small saw drilled the top off then unrolled the new "blob"
I think it is easier to use pastry case or make my own.
thank you all.
06-16-2016 07:02 PM
@dulwich wrote:In the high 90's here up early and decided to make a zucchini quiche to eat later either salad. Never made one before but neighbor gave me recipe whic uses Pillsbury crescent rolls - evidently 8 to a tube- which is the base for the quiche.
Ha Ha how the heck do you open these tubes? Used magnifying glass to read instructions - then called DH who followed directions and ended up with gooey mess all up his arm. Me laughing he looked like an experiment from space.
DH now en route to Safeways for another tube!
Any advice as I could not even pick out shape of one crescent roll just a long blob on DH arm.
I understand how he feels, @dulwich! ![]()
I think that these tubes are difficult to open now, especially if you have any problems with your hands, like arthritis or any other type of health problems with them.
I often have difficulty trying to open the tubes, and I often have to call my DH to come over and help me open the tubes, sometimes. It is so frustrating.
Sometimes by the time that you do finally get the tube open, the dough is in one large, gooey mess, as you have found out, and then you find yourself trying to separate it out into its recommended pieces. ![]()
I have done as chickenbutt has recommended, and that is to take a piece of cutlery and then just push it into the seam to pop it open, if I am able to do it myself.
Banging the tube on the edge of a counter doesn't work for me anymore, like it used to do.
06-16-2016 07:10 PM
@Noel7 wrote:
It sounds as if it was easier just to smack it on the sink.
I must say, I've seen a lot of interesting ideas on things you can do with crescent rolls, though. One is just as simple as putting sugar and cinnamon on them before you roll them up, others use chocolate chips and mini marshmallows.
Hi @Noel7!
![]()
There are some really yummy recipes out there-I think-for things that you can make with either cresent rolls or biscuits that come in a can, too.
I have made taco-type casseroles, and a struedel-type meat recipe with them. Pocket-type sandwiches, too. ![]()
Years ago, I used to like using those Pillsbury recipe booklets that you could buy at the check-out line in the supermarket. They had some good recipes in them for using the pre-made doughs.
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