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Record-Breaking Heat Has People Baking Cookies In Their Cars

It might not be 350 degrees in Phoenix, but it's hot enough to bake a good batch of cookies

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Eight underbaked cookies on a tray sitting atop a towel inside a car.
Photo: u/8andahalfby11 / Reddit

The record-high temperatures across the southwestern United States have made it practically impossible to spend long periods of time outdoors. Normally, sitting in a car’s greenhouse on a summer day without air conditioning is dangerous. This month, it’s a death sentence. One Reddit user illustrated the heat’s intensity by baking cookies inside their car.

A red thermometer touching the baking tray reading 163.6 degrees.
Photo: u/8andahalfby11 / Reddit
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The Reddit user u/8andahalfby11 posted a series of photos showing the process and the final results of making chocolate-chip cookies under their rear window. The Phoenix, Arizona resident has weather conditions in their favor as the city has spent nearly a month with the daily high over 110 degrees Fahrenheit. A picture included showed a thermometer touching the baking tray reading 163.6 degrees. The user noted that they put a towel under the tray to prevent scorching the car’s interior during the four-and-a-half-hour bake.

The car was definitely hot, but not truly oven hot. Most traditional cookie recipes have the dough baked at 350 degrees. Many commenters were concerned that the underbaked car cookies were a salmonella risk. The user replied, “For this experiment, I used a premade Pillsbury cookie dough that is designed to be eaten raw. I deliberately did it this way because most scratch-made cookie batters use eggs or untreated flour, which when cooked this slowly presents a salmonella risk.”

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A hand holding a cookie above four other cookie on a baking tray.
Photo: u/8andahalfby11 / Reddit

How did they taste? The user answered, “They tasted like cookies. I’m used to oven-made cookies being a bit softer in the middle, but these had pretty similar consistency throughout.” Personally, I like soft-baked cookies. I would give this baking method a go if I ever move to a city on the bottom rack of an oven.