cookie combs
cookie combs
cookie combs
Sing the song!
🎶 Hexagons are the bestagons
ONE. That's how many cookies fit on that tray.
If you're feeling generous you could break off some sections of your one cookie for your friends.
What part would you share? The crispy outer edge, or soft chewy center?
The overcooked back half.
Dude, if you get the nachos stuck together, that's one nacho.
It's so dear of you to assume I have friends. That cookie is all mine, sweetie.
Someone hexed those cookies
The toppings are also cursed.
What have you got against M&M cookies??
Du bist eine hexe
Columnar basalt cookies
This may be my favorite voronoi tesselation.
This only happened because they laid them in rows of 5-4-5-4.
LOL you can see how the back is darker and has this curve. Oven not heating as it should
I don't think I've ever seen any household grade ovens really provide even heat, maybe if you use them with the rotating fan thing, but certainly not in standard mode. You need to spend the big bucks on professional kitchen grade stuff for that.
could also be a shadow?
how do you know that's the back and not the side?
Voronoi cookies!
I wonder what the optimal packing of 17 hexagons looks like
Should the target area be square or should it also be a hexagon?
I've legit been thinking about this since i posted the comment lol. I think the target area should probably be a minimal regular hexagon, but I honestly dont have the mathematical chops to figure it out myself or to know which would be more interesting.
Intuition tells me to either try to reduce the problem to like convex hull or figure out a reasonable way to generate random packings and just monte carlo it a few million times for a close to optimal solution. A reasonable way to generate random packings feels like it would be way harder to implement than it sounds
32
That pan can fit 21 cookies
It can clearly fit 2⁵ hexagonal cookies!
Isn't it 2⁵?
Edit: disregard, I'm clearly blind. Or dumb. Or both.
me after discovering the voronoi node:
Voronoi cookies!
Annnnd now I’m baking cookies
Close hexagonal packing. Rigid cylinders will approximate this as well.
Shame about all the pentagons there.
I suspect having round shape pushing against each other isn't enought to get a hex shape.
In the picture, cookies are tiled such that those in the center are surrounded by 6 other cookies and have a hex shape. Others are surrounded by 2 to 4 cookies and are not hex. So it probably has to do with the tiling.
I love making chocolate chip cookies, and have refined my technique so a batch of dough fills my two baking sheets perfectly without them smooshing together. The two tricks are using a little more flour and baking soda than the recipe says, so they're a little fluffier and don't spread out so much, and consistent ball size.
I just fill the pan and use cookie cutters after they're baked.
I eat the scraps.
btw anyone know what the onset signs of diabetes is?
Cookie Catan!
Off to make some hexacookies. Who wants one?
I wonder if this relates to them having six legs somehow. Like, they're able to measure where the next hex should be based on leg length and direction or something.
The bee doesn't have to know anything about numbers to make the honeycomb. All it needs to know is how big to make the circle (bee-sized) and where the circle should be (touching two other circles). From there, the hexagons form naturally.
Fuck reading instructions. Amirite???
No they don't (necessarily))??
Notice how they didn't spread the cookies evenly on the tray? If they had, it would've resulted in squares - not hexagons. On the left, some cookies look more like squares already.
Hexagons are just one possible way to tile the plane without gaps. The only reason bees use hexagons is because tiling a plane with hexagons results in the lowest possible total perimeter for equally sized shapes. And bees build the edges of their comb shapes using wax, which is expensive.
Bees literally do not use hexagons, they make roughly round shapes and the force of the surrounding cells compresses them into hexagons. This is called self-organization and it's observable in bubbles as well.
It's not a plain tiling problem; it's a circle packing problem. The optimal euclidean circle packing results in each cookie having six cookies around it, and so when they melt, hexagons.
Bestagon cookies!
They're the hexagreatest!
Alright, as long as someone commented it!
https://youtu.be/thOifuHs6eY
Hecks a good cookies.