If you’re concerned about the potential environmental impact of your music collection, but don’t want to adopt this whole streaming thing that all the kids have been talking about, perhaps you should consider having your records converted into tortillas?

The music industry has been making great strides in innovating playable tortilla technology and the video embedded below just goes to show we’re closer than ever to seeing them hit the consumer market. As FACT notes, tortilla records are more sustainable and far more delicious than vinyl.

Okay, you probably don’t want to convert your record collection into a tasty Spanish flatbread and sadly, you couldn’t even if you did. But one clever cookie with their own laser-etching machine has decided to see what happens when you try.

Apparently inspired by the fake viral video that made the rounds earlier this year, YouTube user Rapture Records decided to take a store-bought flour tortilla and use a laser to cut grooves into the tortilla surface well enough to make it playable.

You can check out the results of the process below. While it sounds pretty muddy for a vinyl, you’ve gotta admit it’s surprisingly clear for some flour. How does it compare to the 3D printed records we wrote about back in November?

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