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ISS NASA Advertising Space

DoubleTree Hotels Wants The ISS Astronauts To Bake Cookies (theatlantic.com) 88

An anonymous reader quotes the Atlantic: The sight of a cookie had never made me grimace until this one showed up in my email inbox. DoubleTree by Hilton, the hotel chain, was announcing that it would soon send a little oven and a batch of cookie dough to the International Space Station so that astronauts could, for the first time, bake chocolate-chip cookies in space. The cookies, which the hotel gives guests for free when they check in, are "the perfect food to make the cosmos a more welcoming place," DoubleTree said. Call me a grump, but the endeavor felt gimmicky, the latest in a long line of attempts to promote a company's product, from Tang to KFC sandwiches, against the dreamy backdrop of outer space...

Charles Bourland, a retired NASA scientist, says the agency never tried to develop a space-friendly oven, because it was just too risky. Bourland spent 30 years developing food for astronauts, starting with the Apollo program, before retiring in 1999. "If something catches on fire and starts burning, you're going to have to have some way of overcoming that," Bourland says. "You can't just open the window and let the smoke out." But as I spoke with astronauts and others in the space community, my skepticism about the space cookies softened. Bourland says that many astronauts he worked with liked cooking. And that they missed doing it in space...

Those hotel chocolate-chip cookies will be the closest astronauts have come to truly baking something in their high-flying kitchens. NASA says astronauts won't actually eat the cookies, because they are, technically, a science experiment. The treats will be returned home for examination... For the chocolate-chip cookies, astronauts will receive detailed instructions for using the experimental oven, built by NanoRacks, a space company that helps develop experiments for the ISS. They'll also get a heavy-duty oven mitt. "It looks like something you get at a hardware store for welders," says Ian Fichtenbaum, a co-founder of Zero G Kitchen, which paid NanoRacks to develop its oven concept.

A payloads manager at NanoRacks predicts that the cookies will be spherical, reports the Atlantic, which adds "Fingers crossed that they don't shed too many crumbs, which are free-floating nuisances on the space station, liable to get swept into air filters and even the crew's lungs....

"The oven cleared NASA safety reviews in the spring and could hitch a ride to the space station on a resupply mission in October."
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DoubleTree Hotels Wants The ISS Astronauts To Bake Cookies

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Lets get a lot of unwanted cookie crumbs in the space station, what could POSSIBLY go wrong!

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Fuck yeah! Start with the just add water stuff. How long does it take to bake cookies in space? What will we do while they cool down? Or the little tube with the cookies you peel off a stack.

    • Well, to me it seems that sous-vide [wikipedia.org] would be a natural for the space station!

  • Cringe if you must (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Rick Schumann ( 4662797 ) on Saturday August 03, 2019 @08:46PM (#59036384) Journal
    The fact of the matter is, government agencies alone are not going to get people into space as a regular thing, it gets far too politicized for that, and from one Administration to the next funding for space programs waxes and wanes so there's no consistency to anything. If space travel and living in space is ever going to happen, it'll be because corporate interests and corporate money get invested in it, so promoting themselves through advertising and sponsorship is going to happen. You, I, and likely everyone else will cringe at this for a good long while at first but eventually it'll just be part of the way things are.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Space food is not know to be gourmet - I bet astronauts would give up quite a bit for freshly baked chocolate cookies, just like mom's.

  • I imagine space cookies would also be a lot bigger because they don't have gravity keeping them mostly flat and the air pressure being lower than on Earth. I also imagine that you would have a higher danger of the cookies burning on the outside before the center was fully baked.

    • Just use an EZ-Bake oven - there must be a few old ones still floating around somewhere. Proven kid-safe.Just remember that you need to use a real incandescent light bulb - neither CFLs nor LEDs generate enough heat.
    • And you definitely need to follow the high altitude instructions...

  • That would suck to bake delicious-smelling cookies that are a science experiment and then not be able to eat them. That's pure torture right there.

    • I will be offended if they don't include at least a couple extra tubes of dough (I assume?) for "initial calibration purposes"

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Kjella ( 173770 )

      Less than a billiionth (that's 1 in 1000000000) of the human race is in space. Anything and everything they do on the ISS is an experiment. As much as you might think figuring out if baking in space is doable is useless I'm quite sure serving them cookies is even more useless.

    • ... and waste valuable science-doing time baking fucking cookies in orbit...

      Yeah. Baking cookies will cut into that valuable time that otherwise could have been spent doing Bowie covers or playing ping-pong with droplets of water.

    • expend the 10,000 dollars per pound (or whatever it costs... maybe launch cost has dropped faster than the value of the dollar due to inflation since that number was publicized,)

      $1250 per pound on a Falcon 9. Based on the numbers on their website. Note that that's not to ISS, but just to loft a satellite to LEO.

    • If we want to get serious about putting people in space, making food is going to be an important early step - it's one of those things that can be done relatively easily using abundant resources, and dramatically lowers the expensive mass-flow from Earth required just for maintenance. Even if all you're growing is algae in giant plastic bag "fields", that provides a steady supply of oxygen and algae flour as a staple food. Not to mention as a fuel, fertilizer, animal-feed, etc. And quite probably as fe

  • $10,000 cookies. Each. Also, never start a sentence with a number.
    • $10,000 cookies. Each. Also, never start a sentence with a number.

      10,000 Maniacs' publicity manager disagrees.

  • Moderators and editors donâ(TM)t read what they post, or if they do, they don't understand it, case in point:

    NASA says astronauts won't actually eat the cookies, because they are, technically, a science experiment. The treats will be returned home for examination...

    And later, in same paragraph:

    A payloads manager at NanoRacks predicts that the cookies will be spherical, reports the Atlantic, which adds "Fingers crossed that they don't shed too many crumbs, which are free-floating nuisances on the space station, liable to get swept into air filters and even the crew's lungs...."

    Got that? Astronauts can't eat them, but guy worred about crumbs.

  • by kenh ( 9056 )

    Call me a grump, but the endeavor felt gimmicky, the latest in a long line of attempts to promote a company's product, from Tang to KFC sandwiches, against the dreamy backdrop of outer space...

    Prety sure Tang was developed for space, THEN turned into a consumer poduct.

  • Even if the cooking experiment fails, at least the astronauts will get to eat raw dough in space.

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