The reason that the first cherry pitter only worked half the time is because back in the 1900's cherry's were 15%-25% smaller than cherry's today because since then selective breeding has made them bigger and more delicious than cherry's from more than 50+ years ago. Edit: The fry cutter proves my point
the most interesting part of this video is the shift from solid metal products to plastic to metal. and consistently the metal mechanical ones win. (yes the slap chop existed multiple times and got reinnovated)
notice how the older ones are just simple and dont need electricity? They are devices that get straight to the point and do the job without excessive details. Simplicity to its finest.
Well as time goes on, there’s gonna be less and less things to design without electricity. Everything that was a demand and “straight to the point” has pretty much already been done.
I used mine yesterday. I have the huge one and even new it never smelled. I like the flavor off a grill better but this is nice when I'm in a hurry-and works fast on frozen food like chicken breasts or patties.
It was really convenient for a quick meal. I'd just go to Costco and grab a frozen bag each of burger patties, boneless chicken breasts, and salmon fillets. Pair it with rice and / or some steamed veggies. I still have one packed away that had all sorts of removable grill types. Loved that thing and it never smelled of plastic.
My mum used a Sunbeam Vertical Grill, twice every day when I was a kid. For breakfast, she used it instead of a Toaster. For healthy dinners, she'd grill Steak & Fish. It even did a really excellent grilled cheese sandwich. At least 3 gadgets in 1: No need for a Toaster, a Grill or a Sandwich Press!
When there used to be "Dime stores" there was often a man demonstrating these products, who had the voice and cadence of a carnival huckster. They were pretty entertaining, and sold a lot of these items. Later, you'd see them on TV.
The chopper in the jar with the wood was great. We used to use it for nuts. Usually walnuts for dessert toppings. Noone back then would have used that for apples and tomatos
I use the pineapple cutter to make smoothies in my food truck. Don't cut off the bottom, and make the pineapple skin into a cup. Use kitchen sheers to cut the core out without puncturing the cup.
I have a 1930’s flour shifter and you crank it instead of squeezing the handle, white is so much easier. You can also rinse it without the whole thing rusting. My mother and father kept all of their parents kitchen gadgets and now they are passing them on to me and my sisters. We almost resorted to hair pulling over the indestructible vegetable peeler. I love the old stuff. It’s meant to keep and will last longer than we will.
Iterations of many of these are still available. People who live an unplugged lifestyle often use these. The grater is still used at Olive Garden for cheese. The grapefruit corer I have not seen but it looks like a good idea.
some of these things are still made. the apple peeler thing has been around way longer than the 80's. smash burgers used to be called hamburgers. it's how i remember them in the 70's before frozen patties replaced hand made. love your presentation.
The Benriner turns clockwise as shown. They are used to cut firm vegetables like Daikon and carrot into long julienne like strands for sashimi garnish. It won't cut onion, tomato etc.
Awesome video! In the Netherlands we have grilled cheese makers that are basically like that grill they tried. The bread laying flat makes so much more sense than vertical, like in that grilled cheese maker they tried. If the cheese had actually melted, it would be partially on the bottom of that device... how are you going to clean that? We do have toasters looking like that in the Netherlands, but you just put your bread in it and most models have a small detractable tray on the bottom to get out the crumbs that fall in. Also they have multiple settings for how dark you want the toast. My parents had one for 40 years, which was obviously much simpler, but indeed not made out of plastic. They were made to last. Unfortunately their toaster of 40 years gave up last year, so we got them one of those modern ones with the multiple settings and all, but turns out there are still brands that make them out of something sturdier than plastic. They're way more expensive, but hopefully worth it. They look nicer too. And they're more versatile in the sizes of the slices that fit in. On the old one we had to cut it to fit 😅 now they can toast 2 whole slices instead of 2 halves 😂 Some of these gadgets really have potential tho! Like the chocolate grater, that was awesome. Grating chocolate or really fine parmigiano for example is tedious work with a microplane.. I should look into getting a better one for that.
The cool thing about this vid was the history. I loved seeing what they thought was innovative in their decade. I think the egg poacher was supposed to be submerged in the hot water before you put the eggs in. Therefore, not all that mess. My Aunt had that apple peeler, corer and slicer. When it was apple picking time, we made a lot of pies, tarts and cakes. I had a lot of fun using that gadget and it lasted years and years. I actually still use my George Foreman grill. It's the fancy one that has exchangeable plates so it's a waffle maker too. I love it. I think the thing I like best about it is that I don't have to deal w/ meat spatter.
OK, I’ve had two George Foreman grills and they worked perfectly every single time. There are cinch to clean, and if you’re trying to grill food in a kitchen, they work perfectly.
When I was a kid in the 1990's we had a gadget that was like a little box, you put your cheese in and turned a crank and it grated your cheese. It was so easy and worked perfectly. I've never been able to find anything like that again. Miss it so much.
It's funny how cooking has changed over the past 100 years. My dad has some cook books that belonged to my grandmother from the 1930-50s that don't have cooking temperatures since ovens didn't have thermostats or timers back then.
Even as a Chef, I tend to use certain vintage kitchen gadgets, such as pressure cookers, or the Vintage Edlund top off jar opener from the 1940s as they were built to last a lifetime, unlike the 'Disposable' kitchen gadgets of modern day. My Edlund jar opener was given to me by my grandfather when I was in college, and has outlasted several more modern jar openers that all have broken within a few years. Same holds true with eggbeaters, poultry shears, vintage orange juice press, and garlic presses. My KitchenAid blender that I inherited from my late grandfather is on it's last legs, running but noisy, and it is older than I am in my early 50's. 25 + years ago and gadgets even 40 + years ago were built with metal vs all these plastic components of modern-day gadgets and are still working whereas newer tech is breaking apart at the seams.
What alot of these prove, is that we tried to fix stuff that weren't broken. Also the george foreman grill actually is a fantastic little device. Maybe should've ran it a bit to get the chemicals off before you tried it (unless you did prior, cuts hide stuff like that so no clue if you did or not, just guessing as to why it might have smelled so bad).
The rise of plastic was definitely cost and availability thing. Back in the 20's when it took a month for an order to get to you, your tools needed to last with little need for maintenance. Now a manufacturer can spend pennies on plastic and replace the product next day. Why bother with quality?
That's not the case there where plenty of low quality tools back then but they didn't survive till today. The ones that did where the exception not the rule.
somebody doesn't know the history of plastic. because guess what? what you think of plastic? hadn't even been invented yet in the 1920's. 1856 Parkesine 1897-1981 Rayon development and perfection of the cellulose processing techniques 1907 Bakelite (good plastic, but INSANELY brittle. you could drop a Bakelite product on a wood floor from chest height and it would snap and shatter) 1927-38 Nylon by DuPont (first successful crude-oil based thermoplastic polymer) 1930's Polystyrene by BASF 1930 Neoprene by DuPont (synthetic rubber, gloves, SCUBA wet-suits) 1933 Polyethylene by Imperial Chemical Industries 1941 Polyethylene terephthalate by Calico Printers' Association. licensed to ICI and DuPont as the first plastic replacement for glass in bottles and containers. 1954 Polypropylene by Giulio Natta began manufacturing in 1957 (can be spun out as a thread and woven into clothing) 1954 Expanded polystyrene by Dow Chemical (packing peanuts and those white foam cups) so as you can see by my HIGHLY simplified timeline... the plastic 'container' wasn't invented till 1941! 21 YEARS later than you thought.
I like whacking it on the counter to make it pop open. I learned to make sure you peel the outer paper off unless you want to stand there and whack the tube on the counter all day.
@@mieander I've had that one happen as well. Forgot mine on the counter as well and a while after, we heard a loud pop and I ran into the kitchen to find that the can had "exploded" with such force, there were biscuits on the ceiling above the counter. 🤣
I was born in '92 and I remember my grandma going through a microwave gadget phase🤣. If there was a gadget that could go into the microwave, she bought it.
23:28 man. When did Joshua Weissman show up? Out of touch, looking down on us poors. "Just buy a grill, forehead. Apartment? Dorm room? Nah, grill. Do better, poor."
Ah yes, a half-hour infomercial (complete with excited expressions when the thing works as advertised) showing the steady degradation in the quality of kitchen gadgets over the course of a century.
my mom used to have one of those french fry cutters and i still remember how hard it was to cut the potatoes, it made you feel like you deserved the fries 😂
Hate to break it to you but… if you put oil or nonstick spray on the blades and the rods … you can cut through them potatoes like wet toilet paper after the first 6-7 I know from experience
Just don't cut the bottom of the pineapple off and pull up on the handle before you go all the way through the bottom. I use that tool all the time for my tiki drinks!
I saw the donut maker, jumped straight to my shopping app and ordered one. Its gonna deliver tomorrow, my brother's gonna love this, hopefully it works on my end.
some stuffs like the George Foreman Grill and the toaster-like stuffs needs one or two runs with no food first and clean it up.. the runs afterwards should not have the plasticky smell. if I'm going fancy I'd say one or two "seasoning" runs first.
I loved making fries with the metal fry cutter. I used it with both my grandma and mother. Made the best fries. No, potatoes weren’t smaller. We cut them in half. And the chopper we used for nuts all the time. Grandma made lots of cookies.
@awangthier407 I've always done it one handed I think people who don't cook as much use 2 or smaller hands idk maybe they learned it that way as a kid, but not me
The older products didn't have all the warnings on them because people weren't total idiots back then like many people seem to be today. You didn't give the George Foreman Grill a fair shot.
"This grinder is sick! Why don't we have these around anymore?" ...We totally have those around and have for years - in fact, they're super common, you can get even in gas stations all across America. But, uhh...nobody uses them for food prep...
I remember smacking a fry cutter similar to that to get it to cut the potatoes 😂 And I remember my family having an egg beater with the same mechanism 🤓 Later George Foreman models were awesome too!
My mother had one of those rotating choppers and it worked amazingly well! Honestly, I miss it. Whenever I want to mince garlic or nuts I wish I still had it. That one had never been used, which explains its poor performance.
Hi
No reply?Let me fix it.
Uranium is an good Alternative to cereal.
egg🥚🥚
Hi
Hi
The reason that the first cherry pitter only worked half the time is because back in the 1900's cherry's were 15%-25% smaller than cherry's today because since then selective breeding has made them bigger and more delicious than cherry's from more than 50+ years ago.
Edit: The fry cutter proves my point
i'm pretty sure selective breeding has also made the pits smaller
Dog only 38 likes?
thanks for the info
cherries* it's not possessive
I think the device also would have worked better if clamped to the counter like it was supposed to be.
Another banger!🧨
Yoo fr is banger
Thanks Kian!
@@patrickzeinali yoo was up
YOOOOOOO
LETS GO 4TH COMMENT
the most interesting part of this video is the shift from solid metal products to plastic to metal. and consistently the metal mechanical ones win.
(yes the slap chop existed multiple times and got reinnovated)
Interesting, or just predictable?
@@nyanuwu4209 Interesting for the average commenter on social media fighting against his inferiority complex.
@@nettack tf is your problem
Cheaper components mean cheaper build cost. Corporations journey to secure maximum profit regardless of social or environmental impact.
notice how the older ones are just simple and dont need electricity? They are devices that get straight to the point and do the job without excessive details. Simplicity to its finest.
So true
they don't make em like they used to🗣
Well as time goes on, there’s gonna be less and less things to design without electricity. Everything that was a demand and “straight to the point” has pretty much already been done.
And now we don’t need 10 different tools for different food, it may not be as simple but it sure is nice having one machine for multiple purposes.
To be fair, even up into the 50s and 60s, there was a large portion of the population that still didn’t have electricity and indoor plumbing
I had the George Forman grill. You run it awhile without food, and the plastic smell goes away for good. It was very useful.
I used mine yesterday. I have the huge one and even new it never smelled. I like the flavor off a grill better but this is nice when I'm in a hurry-and works fast on frozen food like chicken breasts or patties.
It was really convenient for a quick meal. I'd just go to Costco and grab a frozen bag each of burger patties, boneless chicken breasts, and salmon fillets. Pair it with rice and / or some steamed veggies. I still have one packed away that had all sorts of removable grill types. Loved that thing and it never smelled of plastic.
Never knew they named a grill after one of my favorite boxers
Yes, they reallt failed on that one, just using it righ off without cleaning despite the age?
My mum used a Sunbeam Vertical Grill, twice every day when I was a kid. For breakfast, she used it instead of a Toaster. For healthy dinners, she'd grill Steak & Fish. It even did a really excellent grilled cheese sandwich. At least 3 gadgets in 1: No need for a Toaster, a Grill or a Sandwich Press!
Slice a slice was used during the war when things like bread were precious. It helped extend a loaf. The slices back then were bigger.
Just a thought but I think the slice a slice was for the Great Depression because bread was expensive so they had to eat small amounts of it
Ohh yeahh you're right
Or for a diet🤓
bread was always one of the cheapest products around, no matter when,its great depression or war, what you are talking about?
Still not accessible if u have no money thata why its called great depression @@flyagaric007
@@flyagaric007they said just a thought
This is the cutest, most wholesome couple I have ever seen.
wgat
Idk Nick seems kinda abusive
Man, I was thinking the same thing!
These two have such a bromantic connection that they should pursue; it's adorable.
@@bucktiger33
They have classic jock abusing fat kid dynamic. It's unbearable after first couple of Nick's "jokes"
ikkk its my first time watching them but their chemistry is so cute couple goals
When there used to be "Dime stores" there was often a man demonstrating these products, who had the voice and cadence of a carnival huckster. They were pretty entertaining, and sold a lot of these items. Later, you'd see them on TV.
The chopper in the jar with the wood was great. We used to use it for nuts. Usually walnuts for dessert toppings. Noone back then would have used that for apples and tomatos
I use the pineapple cutter to make smoothies in my food truck. Don't cut off the bottom, and make the pineapple skin into a cup. Use kitchen sheers to cut the core out without puncturing the cup.
I still have that egg beater at my house and my mom uses it. It was used by my grandma but now my mom uses it. That's really really good.
Jj
Patrick's laugh is so funny and awesome and also cute love it!
Patrick has to be the laid back, fun and goofy kid in the group🥹 Patrick my man, you rock!
I have a 1930’s flour shifter and you crank it instead of squeezing the handle, white is so much easier. You can also rinse it without the whole thing rusting. My mother and father kept all of their parents kitchen gadgets and now they are passing them on to me and my sisters. We almost resorted to hair pulling over the indestructible vegetable peeler. I love the old stuff. It’s meant to keep and will last longer than we will.
26:05 Nick's Gordon impression is killer
Thank you.I was looking for ever for someone to comment about it.Cause that stare was down pat😂
Iterations of many of these are still available. People who live an unplugged lifestyle often use these. The grater is still used at Olive Garden for cheese. The grapefruit corer I have not seen but it looks like a good idea.
some of these things are still made. the apple peeler thing has been around way longer than the 80's. smash burgers used to be called hamburgers. it's how i remember them in the 70's before frozen patties replaced hand made. love your presentation.
“They’re even, They’re even!” “Nick you’re showing off” 😭😭😭
I'll bet the Japanese slicer works better when you turn it the other direction.
The Benriner turns clockwise as shown. They are used to cut firm vegetables like Daikon and carrot into long julienne like strands for sashimi garnish. It won't cut onion, tomato etc.
Awesome video! In the Netherlands we have grilled cheese makers that are basically like that grill they tried. The bread laying flat makes so much more sense than vertical, like in that grilled cheese maker they tried. If the cheese had actually melted, it would be partially on the bottom of that device... how are you going to clean that? We do have toasters looking like that in the Netherlands, but you just put your bread in it and most models have a small detractable tray on the bottom to get out the crumbs that fall in. Also they have multiple settings for how dark you want the toast. My parents had one for 40 years, which was obviously much simpler, but indeed not made out of plastic. They were made to last. Unfortunately their toaster of 40 years gave up last year, so we got them one of those modern ones with the multiple settings and all, but turns out there are still brands that make them out of something sturdier than plastic. They're way more expensive, but hopefully worth it. They look nicer too. And they're more versatile in the sizes of the slices that fit in. On the old one we had to cut it to fit 😅 now they can toast 2 whole slices instead of 2 halves 😂
Some of these gadgets really have potential tho! Like the chocolate grater, that was awesome. Grating chocolate or really fine parmigiano for example is tedious work with a microplane.. I should look into getting a better one for that.
my family has the apple corer/slicer/peeler we still use it
it works so well and its just so satisfiying
Love the fact how nick feeds Patrick ❤
As for the George Foreman, you have to wash it first, then run a burger through it first. The plastic smell goes away. They truly do work really well.
IKR! Who just opens a package like that and puts their food on it without washing it first?
The cool thing about this vid was the history. I loved seeing what they thought was innovative in their decade. I think the egg poacher was supposed to be submerged in the hot water before you put the eggs in. Therefore, not all that mess. My Aunt had that apple peeler, corer and slicer. When it was apple picking time, we made a lot of pies, tarts and cakes. I had a lot of fun using that gadget and it lasted years and years. I actually still use my George Foreman grill. It's the fancy one that has exchangeable plates so it's a waffle maker too. I love it. I think the thing I like best about it is that I don't have to deal w/ meat spatter.
OK, I’ve had two George Foreman grills and they worked perfectly every single time. There are cinch to clean, and if you’re trying to grill food in a kitchen, they work perfectly.
A chef would have known. Baby influencers not so much
@@nettack nick was a final 3 contestant on master chef season 10 and a guest judge on season 14 he is literally mentored by Gordon Ramsay
When I was a kid in the 1990's we had a gadget that was like a little box, you put your cheese in and turned a crank and it grated your cheese. It was so easy and worked perfectly. I've never been able to find anything like that again. Miss it so much.
In India, the donut maker is called Vada Maker. People use these daily here :)
It's funny how cooking has changed over the past 100 years. My dad has some cook books that belonged to my grandmother from the 1930-50s that don't have cooking temperatures since ovens didn't have thermostats or timers back then.
00:48 bro really pulled away the cherry like 'nah that's mine'
Even as a Chef, I tend to use certain vintage kitchen gadgets, such as pressure cookers, or the Vintage Edlund top off jar opener from the 1940s as they were built to last a lifetime, unlike the 'Disposable' kitchen gadgets of modern day. My Edlund jar opener was given to me by my grandfather when I was in college, and has outlasted several more modern jar openers that all have broken within a few years. Same holds true with eggbeaters, poultry shears, vintage orange juice press, and garlic presses.
My KitchenAid blender that I inherited from my late grandfather is on it's last legs, running but noisy, and it is older than I am in my early 50's. 25 + years ago and gadgets even 40 + years ago were built with metal vs all these plastic components of modern-day gadgets and are still working whereas newer tech is breaking apart at the seams.
What alot of these prove, is that we tried to fix stuff that weren't broken. Also the george foreman grill actually is a fantastic little device. Maybe should've ran it a bit to get the chemicals off before you tried it (unless you did prior, cuts hide stuff like that so no clue if you did or not, just guessing as to why it might have smelled so bad).
This is a fun and informative video. Thank you guys for sharing.
The rise of plastic was definitely cost and availability thing. Back in the 20's when it took a month for an order to get to you, your tools needed to last with little need for maintenance. Now a manufacturer can spend pennies on plastic and replace the product next day. Why bother with quality?
That's not the case there where plenty of low quality tools back then but they didn't survive till today. The ones that did where the exception not the rule.
somebody doesn't know the history of plastic. because guess what? what you think of plastic? hadn't even been invented yet in the 1920's.
1856 Parkesine
1897-1981 Rayon development and perfection of the cellulose processing techniques
1907 Bakelite (good plastic, but INSANELY brittle. you could drop a Bakelite product on a wood floor from chest height and it would snap and shatter)
1927-38 Nylon by DuPont (first successful crude-oil based thermoplastic polymer)
1930's Polystyrene by BASF
1930 Neoprene by DuPont (synthetic rubber, gloves, SCUBA wet-suits)
1933 Polyethylene by Imperial Chemical Industries
1941 Polyethylene terephthalate by Calico Printers' Association. licensed to ICI and DuPont as the first plastic replacement for glass in bottles and containers.
1954 Polypropylene by Giulio Natta began manufacturing in 1957 (can be spun out as a thread and woven into clothing)
1954 Expanded polystyrene by Dow Chemical (packing peanuts and those white foam cups)
so as you can see by my HIGHLY simplified timeline... the plastic 'container' wasn't invented till 1941! 21 YEARS later than you thought.
The bean slicer is for runner beans - which have strings running along the top and bottom of the pod. I still use mine.
The slice a slice helped with rationing in the 40's (WW II).
Wow I remember Slap Chop. That’s crazy.
Okay, you definitely gained my subscription after this video. 😂Fucking fantastic, lads. Absolutely BRILLIANT. Thanks for all the laughs! 😂
You guys look like you have so much fun! I just want to hang out with you.
I always call those biscuit cans the adult-sized jack-in-the-box. I jump
every time I open a can. 😆😆
i had one in my car on a hot day. scared the heck outta me
my aunt popped one open and the biscuits shot out across the kitchen.
I like whacking it on the counter to make it pop open. I learned to make sure you peel the outer paper off unless you want to stand there and whack the tube on the counter all day.
I had one spontaneously pop open once when it got forgotten on the counter for an hour. Scared the giblets out of me.
@@mieander I've had that one happen as well. Forgot mine on the counter as well and a while after, we heard a loud pop and I ran into the kitchen to find that the can had "exploded" with such force, there were biscuits on the ceiling above the counter. 🤣
Love your videos and shorts You are an amazing chef and UA-camr
These videos are always funny😂
I was born in '92 and I remember my grandma going through a microwave gadget phase🤣. If there was a gadget that could go into the microwave, she bought it.
Woah really? Your grandma is very committed
23:28 man. When did Joshua Weissman show up? Out of touch, looking down on us poors. "Just buy a grill, forehead. Apartment? Dorm room? Nah, grill. Do better, poor."
love this duo 😭🙌🏾
I love that Nick is really silly this vid🤪 ❤
Ah yes, a half-hour infomercial (complete with excited expressions when the thing works as advertised) showing the steady degradation in the quality of kitchen gadgets over the course of a century.
Crazy inventions and the improvements
The older tools were a lot more simple and reliable and nowadays there is things that use plastic andnare unreliable
4:45 i like how nick was using the tool before patrick even read the instructions 😂
You are supposed to clean the George Forman and let it run empty after cleaning.
Yall are so funny together we need more videos with yall together!!! I’ve been laughing so much this video 😅😅
my mom used to have one of those french fry cutters and i still remember how hard it was to cut the potatoes, it made you feel like you deserved the fries 😂
Commercial versions of that fry cutter are massive. Look up video what In & Out uses to cut their potatoes.
Hate to break it to you but… if you put oil or nonstick spray on the blades and the rods … you can cut through them potatoes like wet toilet paper after the first 6-7 I know from experience
Slice a Slice 🔥 🔥
These two have such a potential bromance they should pursue.
Could be more than just a bromance 😏
6:09 I laughed so hard. You nailed the TV sales impression.
there two have the most adorable chemistry
IKR \(//∇//)\!!
Gay
I love the sliced apples but I call them slinkie apples the better way to eat apples
The honeymoon phrase of an adorable brokance; LOVE IT!
14:34 the product exists just maybe not in the cooking world 😂😂
Do not cut the bottom of the pineapple and you have all the juice in the bottom and you can use the husk for drinks.
That biscuit cutter is so cool! I think the chopper is a nut chopper. It's fun seeing these gadgets.
The guy mimicing the pose the infomercial dude had with the Slap Chop killed me. 😂💀
a quick tip, if you don't know the name say "bro" or "bestie" so you won't be in awkward situations. cuz it is the "guy"'s channel you're on
Thanks for the laughs. Great video.
Just don't cut the bottom of the pineapple off and pull up on the handle before you go all the way through the bottom. I use that tool all the time for my tiki drinks!
I really love Nick
1:13 my grandma has on of those
My mum has one of these
My dad gave me one to use in the tub to make bubbles in my bubble bath, it was awesome
We've had multiple of them over the years and I'm only 30 lol.
I had one of the apple cutters, that thing was awesome as a kid. Always made want to eat apples. Its also really good for makimg some potatoes too!
2:43... those poached eggs looked like shit lmao
they look fine
We love you❤😘🤟 keep it up❤❤❤ I learned every thing form you
This was the longest running infomercial best ever. lol 😂
Nicks version of Gordon Ramseys disaproving stare was on point
Missed opportunity not using the slapchop to crush those oreos...
More collab together, the chemistry between you 2 is unreal😂😂😂 love itttt..new subscriber
19:00 we own a version of that can confirm it’s awesome
I know we owned a version of this when I was a kid in the 90s
Me too😄
These guys are hilarious!
That apple peeler/corer/slicer can still be purchased today and i mean that exact design
lots of kindy's have them and call them apple slinky makers.
I saw the donut maker, jumped straight to my shopping app and ordered one.
Its gonna deliver tomorrow, my brother's gonna love this, hopefully it works on my end.
What does a cherry penner supposed to look like a gun?0:18
some stuffs like the George Foreman Grill and the toaster-like stuffs needs one or two runs with no food first and clean it up.. the runs afterwards should not have the plasticky smell. if I'm going fancy I'd say one or two "seasoning" runs first.
11:30 lego sound haha :D
I loved making fries with the metal fry cutter. I used it with both my grandma and mother. Made the best fries. No, potatoes weren’t smaller. We cut them in half. And the chopper we used for nuts all the time. Grandma made lots of cookies.
I honestly had no idea that there were people who can't crack an egg one handed.
😂
Damn, now I feel special.
No one does only those who practise it
@awangthier407 I've always done it one handed I think people who don't cook as much use 2 or smaller hands idk maybe they learned it that way as a kid, but not me
@@awangthier407 Tell me you're not efficient or creative without telling me that you're neither efficient nor creative.
AWESOME VIDEO😊😊 Many unique gadgets!! The Doughnut maker looks incredible 15:45
The French serve cured bacon raw all the time. It is okay to eat.
No, it’s not. French eat many dangerous foods.
It's not raw
@@Jaimelechocolate You are right. They serve it uncooked. Thanks for setting me straight.
Nick is a Pro in everything 😮
why is nick funnier on patricks channel then his own LOL
THE WAY NICK THREW THTA ONE BEAN IN THE 1920 LOL 😂😂😂😂😂😂 4:50
Diddy TOUCHED Nick, 31:27.
nick is amazing at his job
Back then, 1900: This is pretty useful
Now: this is creepy
I had a chill o matic back in the early 90s i loved that thing
The older products didn't have all the warnings on them because people weren't total idiots back then like many people seem to be today. You didn't give the George Foreman Grill a fair shot.
there were idiots, the main difference is that then, only the family and some friends knew that and now, everyone does, because of the internet.
i had one of those apple peeler/corer/slicer growing up, and it worked great
"This grinder is sick! Why don't we have these around anymore?"
...We totally have those around and have for years - in fact, they're super common, you can get even in gas stations all across America. But, uhh...nobody uses them for food prep...
I remember smacking a fry cutter similar to that to get it to cut the potatoes 😂
And I remember my family having an egg beater with the same mechanism 🤓
Later George Foreman models were awesome too!
Even my grandparents weren't born in the 1910s
I just want to see someone using that stirring machine in front of gordon lol
13:54 WHY DID THE JAR HAVE A HOLE
Someone else noticed then
Lmao and the fact that they didn’t even acknowledge it is kinda sussy😊
My mother had one of those rotating choppers and it worked amazingly well! Honestly, I miss it. Whenever I want to mince garlic or nuts I wish I still had it. That one had never been used, which explains its poor performance.