Wheat paste
#1
Posted 27 August 2004 - 11:27 AM
as i've never seen anything called wheatpaste no matter what shop i was in, i wondered if thats just a mixture of wheatflour and water?
can i make wheat paste at home by simply stirring wheatflour and water together... maybe heating it? or is it a little more tahn that?
thanks for some infos on that...
Skipjack
#2
Posted 27 August 2004 - 02:06 PM
Wheat paste, etc
Seem to be a few interesting products:
Belgian rice starch (could this be anything like SGRS?)
Zen instant wheat paste.
Not really sure how useful this is
#3
Posted 27 August 2004 - 04:13 PM
AFAIK it is made from modified wheat flour.
Cornstarch whisked in boiling water straight from the kettle works just fine for me when doing small jobs. A blender helps for larger batches, or a saucepan and an electric mixer. Only tried adding waterglass once, didn't seem to help much.
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#4
Posted 15 October 2004 - 02:23 AM
#5
Posted 15 October 2004 - 08:51 AM
Commercial wheat past is sometimes hard to find, but homemade paste is easy to make. Bill Ofca provided a procedure in one of his "Technique of Fire" books, and I modified it to avoid lumps: Bring 9 cups of water to a rolling boil. In a blender, add three cups of cold water followed by 2 cups of all-purpose flour. Quickly put the cover on the blender and start the blender on a medium setting. After about 20-30 seconds, stop the blender. This will release a strange air bubble that seems to form in the flour mixture. Start the blender again, and then mix for another 30 seconds while using a spoon to carefully dislodge any wet flour clinging to the blender's container. Quickly add the flour mixture to the boiling water and immediately start to stir the hot mixture. An electic mixer works very well for this purpose. As the mixture comes to a boil, reduce the heat. Mix/stir for another minute, then turn off the heat and mix/stir for another minute. (This avoids having the bottom burn or cook much more than the rest.) Cover the pot and set it aside to cool for several hours. Paste prepared in this manner will spoil within a couple of days in warm weather, but its pot-life can be extended by adding a small amount of boric acid or salicylic acid.
Hello to ALL,
just wanted to add, that wheat paste is EXTENSIVELY used in Malta, very practical to work with.
best regards
Stanley
#7
Posted 19 February 2007 - 11:18 AM
I brought this mix to a boil in a small pan for a couple of minutes and it seemed to work very well. I used it to make some 1.75 inch round paper shells in a mold I made with plaster of paris and a shell half from a class C shell I disassembled.. They seemed to come out fairly well, though not as perfectly round at the seams as I would have liked. There were slight gaps when attempting to put the two halfs together. They came out very hard at least, once dried.
As an attempt to preserve the paste for later use, I reheated it and disolved in a teaspoon of salt. I have no idea if this will work but I made the assumption that that high amount of salt content would keep any bacteria from forming. This seems to work with beef jerky in terms of keeping it from spoiling.
If anyone has any ideas of how to make the shells come out more perfectly shaped at the seams, I'd love to hear about them. I'm also curious if anyone has had sucess using paper mache products for round shells.
-Strobe
#8
Posted 27 April 2007 - 09:19 PM
It seemed to work, but allowed lots of slip while wet and didn't seem to fill gaps - it's just not very 'sticky'. This is a bit frustrating when trying to tuck in any pointed edges etc. It'll be a few days drying before I can judge the real results... The wallpaper paste was cheap, fungicidal and seems to work - is it weaker than proper pyro wheat paste though?
I tend to mix in some PVA to the same stuff for rolling tubes, but had avoided this for the shell, for fear of the first layers not drying. The PVA might make it more sticky, but would it also make for a stronger shell?
Edited by BrightStar, 28 April 2007 - 09:22 AM.
#9
Posted 27 April 2007 - 09:23 PM
#10
Posted 30 April 2007 - 08:15 AM
I just use kinder eggs, they work a treat and are edable.
LOL madtrick ... The wallpaper paste was just about OK. I got the 70 gsm kraft to conform reasonably well by pre-soaking it, but there are are still evident raised kinks along the edges of the 2cm * 10cm strips.
Out of interest, does anyone know where to source thin kraft paper in the UK? The standard US weights of 60lb and 30lb for shell pasting are roughly 100 gsm and 50 gsm, but I haven't found anything less than 70 gsm...
#11
Posted 01 May 2007 - 11:46 AM
It sounds like you can use Boric acid for the same purpose based on another earlier post.
#12
Posted 01 May 2007 - 01:06 PM
#13
Posted 03 May 2007 - 08:44 PM
Hi Brightstar,LOL madtrick ... The wallpaper paste was just about OK. I got the 70 gsm kraft to conform reasonably well by pre-soaking it, but there are are still evident raised kinks along the edges of the 2cm * 10cm strips.
Out of interest, does anyone know where to source thin kraft paper in the UK? The standard US weights of 60lb and 30lb for shell pasting are roughly 100 gsm and 50 gsm, but I haven't found anything less than 70 gsm...
i use wallpaper lineing paper to past my shells,it is avalable in a few different grades and its cheap,can be found at most diy stores etc.The only thing is the paper is white,which if you are a purist might be a prob,
regards,
Vince.
#14
Posted 03 May 2007 - 09:16 PM
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#15
Posted 03 May 2007 - 10:06 PM
Edited by karlfoxman, 03 May 2007 - 10:07 PM.
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