Get a pie pan and decorate it with numbers put the numbers three six nine and twelve first to create correct spacing and put the rest of the numbers on it and poke a small hole in the middle of the pan and cut out some hands and attach the brad. Or if you want to make the clock work like a real clock you put a battery in get a clock mechanism off the back of anothor clock or get a clock crafts three piece kit. If your taking a clock apart take the hands off and mechanism if the clock your taking apart has no mechanism with no screw get some super glue and glue it on there to hold the back of the clock. And if your using a clock crafts three piece kit step one Place rubber cushion over shaft. Step two Insert shaft through hole in clock surface. Step three Insert shaft through clock face (if appropriate). Step four Place dail plate washer over shaft. Step five Attach dial fixing hex nut. Step six Attach hour hand and press lightly. Step seven Attach minute hand. Step eight Lightly screw minute nut in place. Step nine Press second hand in place. After you done all the steps insert a fresh battery and your clock will begin to keep time. The time can be set by turning the time set knob on the back of the clock movement.
You make an uncooked apple pie from using dough with a pie pan and using a cooking apple with the pan.
Bake a pie in a round pan or you could buy a pan that shape like a moon and bake it in it
A pie pan is a shallow ovenproof dish in which a pie is baked. Pie pans can be made of glass, pottery, or metal, and may be round, square or rectangular
It is a positivly charged pan because the pan is negative in the first place and to negatives are a positive
Norpro makes a non-stick pie pan that should solve your problem.
Yes, there is a "half-pie" pan. I bought several a few years ago at Kitchen Connection and I really use it a lot. I cannot find it on-line now. Perhaps it has been discontinued. Mine is a 10-inch pie pan with an insert that covers "half" the pan. I can make a double crust pie easily, even with a lattice top. I took some photos of my recent "half rhubarb " pie, but I cann see how to attach it to this link. Hope the description helps.
Cake = lie Lie rhymes with pie Therefore, pie = fake
Because in the past it has swallowed an alarm clock.
It depends on the pan you use.
pan?
Pie Tin candy
yes