Pack your bagel in a CD spindle

"Now this is incredibly clever: using an old CD spindle as a bagel-sandwich protector for your packed lunch."

....and simple too.

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Stephen Powell

Or for those of less sophisticated, a donut stacker? Ask Homer...

gonzo

my brother used a 100 cd spindle as a toilet paper despencer. he used a lighter to burn a vertical slot in the clear plastic part so that you can pull the toilet paper through. works like a charm!

matt

How are I do it?

Cpt. Obvious

1. Get empty spindle
2. Make bagel sandwich
3. Press down
4. ????
5. Profit!

the 45 king

not sure, but I know how to eat the bagel

Fraser

Why would you carry the bloody bagel around. Eat the damn thing! they're scrumptious! :P

Anita Hanchaubb

CD holders are made from recycled monkey spunk. Be careful.

Mandi

Nothing angers me more than to make my self a 'scrumptious' bagel sandwich, take it to work and place it in the fridge, only to find at lunch time that some careless, thoughtless ne'er do well has squashed it with their lunch. My poor sandwiches, all smashed and depressing. NEVER AGAIN! Thank you for providing such a great answer to one of life's more challenging questions.

Jenny

Haha that's clever.

Stephanie

This is probably one of the coolest things I've seen EVER.

Stephanie
http://www.makethegreatescape.org

Who Knew

Who knew bagels needed protecting? I didn't realize they were so fragile. The ones I eat are sturdy and taste better because of it.

Go Bagels!

One day I will return to this site to see subsequent comments. Or perhaps I'll forget this page ever existed.

Jonathan

Well, clearly you found this page useful enough to leave a comment.

Thanks.

J

Kimmy

This is awesome

Dan

Yeah that would be cool if only the chemicals that they used to manufacture the case as well as the CD's themselves weren't incredibly toxic.

"At the equivalent of puberty for the pups (50 days old), about 25% of their mammary ducts had precancerous lesions, some three to four times higher than unexposed controls."

"the federal government measured dioxins in blood samples taken from 28 residents who lived near PVC facilities in Louisiana. The testing revealed the average resident has three times more dioxin in his/her blood than the average U.S. citizen."

"The tests found traces of antimony, a chemical used in the making of polyethylene terephthalate...Small doses of antimony can make you feel ill and depressed. Larger quantities can cause violent vomiting and even death."

Andrew

That is genius.

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