What could be yummier than pancakes in the exact shape you want? PancakeBot uses a robot arm to squirt pancake batter into any design. The clever bot squirts the outline first, so the batter can cook a bit and hold the rest of the batter when the bot fills in the shape. If you can’t fit PancakeBot in your kitchen, try squirting batter with a bottle — you might be even better than the bot.
Lace up: If you make 3 dinosaur pancakes and then make a horse pancake to mix things up, how many animal pancakes do you have?
Jog: If you make a horse pancake, a chicken pancake and a fish pancake, how many legs do your pancakes have? (Fins don’t count!)
Sprint: If your pancakes have 6 legs and you nibble off 1/2 the legs to start, how many pancake legs are left?
Hurdle: If the machine takes 13 seconds to draw the outline of the pancake and twice as long as that to fill the “wall” with batter, how long does it take to make that cake?
High Jump: If a pancake cooks for a total of 90 seconds, but the 1st side takes 2 seconds longer than the 2nd side, how long does each side take?
Pole Vault: If a cactus cake uses 1/2 cup of batter and a horse uses 5/8 cup, and you want to eat 3 cups of batter’s worth, how many pancakes of each shape can you make IF you want at least 1 of each?
Answers:
Lace up: 4 animal pancakes.
Jog: 6 legs.
Sprint: 3 legs.
Hurdle: 39 seconds.
High Jump: 46 seconds and 44 seconds. If the 1st side gave 1 second back to the 2nd side, they’d be even, so they’d each take 45 seconds.
Pole Vault: 4 horses and a cactus. To use up 3 cups, you’ll need the horses to add up to a round multiple of 1/2, so you can add cacti and reach exactly 3 cups. 4 horses brings you to 20/8 cups, or 2 1/2 cups. That leaves you with room for 1 cactus.