The world's thinnest spaghetti, about 200 times thinner than a human hair, has been created by a UCL-led research team. The spaghetti is not intended to be a new food but was created because of the wide-ranging uses that extremely thin strands of material, called nanofibers, have in medicine and industry.
In a new paper in Nanoscale Advances, the team describe making spaghetti just 372 nanometers (billionths of a meter) across using a technique called electrospinning, in which threads of flour and liquid are pulled through the tip of a needle by an electric charge.
"I don't think it's useful as pasta, sadly, as it would overcook in less than a second, before you could take it out of the pan."
But only for a fraction of a second
All other science in the world is going to have to take a pause until we figure this shit out. I want to try the asbestosghetti.
well these chemists should come up with a way to cook'a da pasta
spray some water on it and microwave for 1 second, there you go mama mia