Have you been using baking paper wrong your whole life? Mum shares the 'right' way to use it so it fits perfectly in a pan EVERY time
- An Australian mum-of-four has revealed the 'correct way' to use baking paper
- Sascha posted a video showing how to stop the paper from lifting upwards
- She scrunched the paper into a ball to ensure it lays flat in an oven tray
- Parents online dubbed the hack as 'mind blowing' and a 'game changer'
A video demonstrating the 'correct way' to use baking paper has been hailed as the 'best kitchen hack ever' by some viewers.
Mum-of-four Sascha, who runs the Facebook page 'The Healthy Mummy Health Private Support Group', shared her clever tactic with the 230,000 women part of the online community.
Since baking paper often springs upwards in an oven tray, Sascha opted to scrunch the paper into a ball before smoothing it out to line the tray.
The resultant folds in the paper prevented it slipping aorund the tray while cooking.
'For 30 years I have been using baking paper wrong,' she captioned the post.
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Mum Sascha has revealed a clever hack to stop baking paper from springing upwards when placed in an oven tray
In a video Sascha scrunched the paper in a ball to ensure it laid flat and worked exceptionally well
The post quickly caught the attention of mums around the country, with many labelling the trick as a 'game changer'.
'Mind blown! Totally doing this from now on,' one woman wrote.
While the hack was news to many, some said they've been doing this 'for years'.
'My mum showed me this trick when I was 10, so good to know,' one woman said.
Another also recommended spraying the pan first with baking oil, then layering the baking paper.
In a TikTok video shared earlier this year Leah Itsines, the younger sister of fitness queen Kayla Itsines, revealed a unique way to cut capsicums
In a TikTok video shared earlier this year Leah Itsines, the younger sister of fitness queen Kayla Itsines, revealed a unique way to cut capsicums.
Instead of cutting off the top of the stem, the cookbook author, from Adelaide, used a knife to slice along the natural grooves to separate into wedges.
Using her hands, she peeled the slices, almost like a flower, then cut each one away from the stalk with all of the seeds attached.
'I bloody love TikTok hacks and this one I will absolutely do all the time. I laughed so much after this because I thought, why wasn't this obvious from the start?' she said in her now-viral Instagram video.
