h a l f b a k e r yWe don't have enough art & classy shit around here.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
You love corn. Corn on the cob, piping hot and slathered in butter. Mmmm. Youre feeling hungry for corn just reading this, arent you? You are. Its a snack fit for a prince, to be sure. But until today, it was a snack your enjoyment of which was limited by mundane practicalities.
The problems
with buttered corn:
1. Its hot to hold, so you have to use an implement.
2. Butter just slides off the corn, resulting in an unsatisfying, haphazard coating of butter.
Aware that the buttered-bread corn technique could cause problems for the wheat intolerants and those with a fear of bread, I present the Corn Buttering Gizmo. The Corn Buttering Gizmo provides a unitary solution to both of these most vexatious problems. Available in premium steel and budget plastic, the corn gizmo consists of two circular ends joined by hinges to a corn-length plastic trough. The inner surface of the plastic ends bear spikes, designed to be driven into the ends of the corn, holding the Epicurean delight firmly in place, without the need for discommodious corn forks.
The trough has a small slit in the base, through which the butter, heated by proximity to the steaming corn slips smoothly through. For those corn-lovers unfortunate enough to live in regions where corn-sizes have yet to be standardised, the Deluxe Corn Buttering Gizmo features a telescopic trough. As the corn is rotated by the eater, the butter drips through to generate a smooth, uniform covering of golden butter.
The image linked below shows a prototype, with the trough positioned on the opposite side of the corn from the mouth of the eater. Another model has the trough on the top of the corn.
Advertising illustration
http://www.clubsbon...halfbakery/corn.htm [my face your, Oct 17 2004]
Corn Butterer
http://www.pampered...l.jsp?productId=233 Simple, yet effective. [half, Oct 17 2004]
Could be used for these, too
http://www.halfbake...as_20on_20the_20Cob From June, 2001, one of my favorite HB ideas. [bristolz, Oct 17 2004]
[link]
|
|
"Please don't throw your corn forks in the commode." |
|
|
I was expecting gizmo back. |
|
|
Mmmm, buttered popcorn. Now I just need a cob to glue them onto. |
|
|
Poor gizmo, does he know he's being used for such a
purpose? |
|
|
(+) Off topic, (and I feel like a dumb ass for asking), but what's btw? |
|
|
//and those with a fear of bread,//
I feared bread for a long time, until I realized that it was just sitting there, loafing around. |
|
|
Since we're being dumb, what's "NB"? |
|
|
Two for the price of one. Thanx bristolz. |
|
|
[Bliss], his mouth is not black, it is merely an illusion caused by the overwhelming whiteness of his toothypegs. |
|
|
[madradish], I have been doing nothing to gizmo. It was the corn wot buttered him. |
|
|
And now I've seen half's link, the Corn Buttering Gizmo now comes with a selection of detachable, ergonomically-designed handles. |
|
|
If you had butter with a higher melting point and viscosity, it wouldn't tend to drip off so much. A product like that would also be good for asparagus. |
|
|
Spray on butter would be useful in this and high volume sandwich making. |
|
|
I love corn (drool). It's very good (drool). Use it to butter a croissant. Corn on the cob (drool). (I love corn). |
|
| |