If you mean a hot potato, then yes, you can wrap it in paper towels. Why? Because it's small enough. You can wrap anything in paper towels if it's small enough.
First a baby potato likes to keep warm. Wrap him up in something warm and attracts heat, like foil paper, all around his body. Then they like warm places like hot ovens at 180º C. Then keep him for 1 hour then feed him butter and stuff it in your mouth!Answer by: Hisham Bdeir
1960's the Hot Potato?
I loved pin the tail on the donkey. Another good classic is to hit the piata. The kids love the anticipation that they may be the one to break the piata and be the hero for their friends! Another game is similar to the hand played game of hot potato. Wrap a prize many times. Have the children sit in a circle. You can either play music and hit the stop button or sing the song hot potato, pass it around song until it stops. The child that has the gift will then take off a layer of the wrapping paper. This will continue until all of the wrapping paper is off. The child that takes off the last wrap wins the prize.
Hot Potato - film - was created in 1976.
Hot Tot
The duration of Hot Potato - film - is 1.45 hours.
Aluminum foil is the best at keeping things hot because it reflects heat and acts as a barrier to prevent heat loss. Plastic wrap and wax paper are not as effective in retaining heat as aluminum foil.
It would be a hot potato :)
Hot Potato - 1976 is rated/received certificates of: Iceland:12 Singapore:PG USA:PG
Everyone knows that it's called a hot potato.
Energy of flame------->Utensil------->Water-------->Potato
Aluminum foil is a conductor. It really only insulates against radiative heat transfer by reflecting visible light rays or infrared heat rays. When wrapped around an object, pockets of air can act as insulation, but in this case it's the air that's doing the insulating-- not the foil. To answer the question, "it depends." Let's say you have a baked potato that you want to keep warm. First wrap in in foil so that the radiation coming off the potato is reflected back into the potato. Then wrap the potato in bubble wrap with the bubbles facing inward. This will trap any hot air that might surround the potato, preventing conductive and convective heat transfer. On the other hand, if you have a cold can of soda, and it's out in the sunlight, you'll want to first wrap the can in bubblewrap (bubbles facing the can) to trap the cool air and wrap foil around that to reflect any light rays. If the can is in a dark space, such as a lunch box or cooler, the aluminum foil will play a very small role in insulating it. The bubble wrap should go around the can (bubbles facing inward). The aluminum foil won't hurt as long as the foil does not touch the can. If it touches the can, it will conduct heat from the surroundings into the cold can.