![]() You could use scissors you already own and clean them, but there’s a certain satisfaction in knowing you have a pair of scissors dedicated to cutting pizza, right? Thing is, a pizza wheel accomplishes this task much easier than scissors. ![]() The idea of scissors to cut pizza is only sort of ridiculous. Needless to say, twirl your own frickin’ pasta, bro. Some folks bought it as a novelty, others, I presume, because they want something battery-powered hovering over their dinner. I guess there are some cultural differences globalization can’t crack. I was almost on your side, Roll and Pour, before the sexism.Ī comment in this Amazon item suggests that a non-Italian might not know how to properly twirl spaghetti. You know, because of their undeveloped wrist muscles. But the Roll and Pour’s Amazon description lists young women as beneficiaries of the product. But, of course, children and the elderly can benefit greatly from this tool. And all the able body people using the Roll and Pour in photos make no sense either. The need for a squeezed butter dispenser in one’s life must suggest such a serious carpal tunnel problem that stops you from cutting butter with a knife-that task that takes literal seconds to accomplish.Īs someone whose muscles still work, a plastic gadget that helps me pour liquids from two-liter bottles and gallon jugs into my glass makes little sense. With three butter-related gadgets making this list, as well as the number of banana-slicing related tools, it seems like Americans have built up some serious fears against coming into any contact with anything yellow. There is no reason for these barriers to exist between man and fat. When did we deem butter and skin commingling to be something we should avoid? Maybe it’s time for a dairy civil rights movement. Yet another exoskeleton trying to keep humans from butter. Or if you’re crafty, use the butter wrapper. I understand the desire to not allow churned milk to touch one’s flesh, but is it necessary to buy an exoskeleton for your stick of butter so that you can apply it to, say, toast or corn on the cob without getting greasy? No, it is not. He hasn’t slept in weeks.”įox Run is, like Chef’n, another arbiter of kitchen crap. ![]() As one commenter writer, “My husband likes bananas but hates watching me do this for some reason. The main problem with the Chef’n slicer, other than it’s easy replaceability by a knife, is threat towards the phallus. ![]() We, as a nation, might have to file a class action suit against the Chef’n brand for not only turning out a banana slicer that looks like it could be used in a bris, but many other fruit slicers and well. Here are a few of the funniest, most pointless kitchen gadgets available on the web now. Which means we are now free to openly mock them using all available media. But the whole episode made it obvious that those ridiculous items sold on late night TV and QVC have found a home online. Why does anyone need a piece of yellow plastic to cut up their banana? Does it make it any less funny to know that the safety cutting tool is geared toward Montessori kids? Probable not. While online commenters are the bane of anyone whose business shows up on Yelp, the clever web critics who took to Amazon and turned the silly Hutzler 571 banana slicer into a well-shared social-media meme deserve a round of applause for their hilarious work. ![]()
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