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George Foreman Grill

November 21, 2016

Are These Crowdfunding Projects the Next George Foreman Grill?

We talk a lot about the high-tech kitchen here at the Spoon, but we’re also fascinated by low-tech kitchen sensations, and no low-tech kitchen gadget has been more successful than the George Foreman Grill.

A few weeks ago we interviewed the inventor of the George Foreman Grill, Michael Boehm, who told us the story behind the infomercial sensation. But that was back in the ’90s. These days blossoming startups don’t take to TV but rather connect on crowdfunding sites to make their fortune.

Here are seven low-tech projects that might just be the next George Foreman Grill:

Empanada Maker

Simplify the process of making empanadas by using this tortillas-press-like device that would make Boehm proud. No muss, no fuss, no electricity. It’s even got a snappy name: the margariteña. The company wants to make the device lighter, which is why they’re raising funds.

Portable Keg

Unless you’re in college, it’s absolutely unacceptable to keep your keg cold by floating it in a trash can full of ice. DraftPak has a cooler solution: Put the DraftPak (which looks suspiciously like a cooler/trash can) on top of the keg and add ice! On the positive side, it uses CO2, so you don’t need to pump the keg.

Hipster Ice Cubes

You know how when you go to a fancy cocktail bar these days, it takes the mixologist about 30 minutes to make your drink? Well, part of that is the bespoke ice cubes. Skip the line and make your own ice and cocktails at home with the Ice Ball Press, which makes a 2.5-inch sphere. (Note: It would also make a killer snow ball to throw at that neighbor you hate.)

Edible Non-Drip Ice Cream Cones

No more melted ice cream dripping down your arm! More importantly, no more melted ice cream dripping down your kids’ arms! Halo Cone stops that in its tracks, with a weird plastic device that catches the liquid. We’re not exactly sure how it’s edible, but we believe in the future.

Water Purifier

This one is essentially a plastic bag that harnesses UV light to kill bacteria in water, making it safe to drink. The company is aiming to help during and after natural disasters like the hurricane in Haiti, and they’re raising funds to scale production of the bags.

Manual Espresso Makers

There are actually two crowdfunding projects right now that do the same thing: help you make espresso the “old-fashioned” way. With both the PREXO and the Flair makers, you tamp the coffee grounds yourself; in the PREXO a piston extracts the espresso, and in the Flair you push down on a lever with your hand. It seems like a fair amount of work, but both are small devices that can easily be stored, not like the massive La Marzocco machine.

So what’s the takeaway here? There’s much innovation in the kitchen that doesn’t necessarily have to do with technology. In particular with the espresso makers, it’s clear that people are interested in returning to making food “by hand.” Does that mean it will taste better? Not necessarily. It’s about both accessibility and the desire to be involved in the food-making process. Even if that means ridiculous sphere-shaped ice for your craft cocktail.

November 5, 2016

The News Show: Smart Cookie Ovens & Malibu Bay Breeze (Podcast)

Mike and Ashley are back talking about the latest in the world of the connected kitchen and foodtech.

To subscribe to the Smart Kitchen Show in iTunes, go here. To download this episode, click here.

Stories discussed on the show include:

Appliance as a service 
Juicero’s new CEO
SideChef’s smart easy bake oven for cooking
Teforia’s $12 million infusion
Ashley’s experience with the Nima gluten sensor
Jenn-Air’s Nest integration
Ashley explains why Rhode Islanders are still drinking the Malibu Bay Breeze
A discussion of whether George Foreman actually invented a grill
Smart Kitchen Summit pictures are out!
SKS17 pre-registration has begun!

Enjoy!

November 4, 2016

How One Savvy Inventor Created the George Foreman Grill and Jump-Started an Industry

George Foreman’s name may grace the label of a certain type of grill we all have in our cabinets, but he didn’t actually invent the machine. No, that honor belongs to a man named Michael Boehm. Back in the early 1990s, Boehm realized that “small kitchen appliances were a sleeping giant,” and decided to capitalize on that slumber. Since then the category has pretty much exploded.

We consider the George Foreman Grill an early precursor to the more electronically advanced products we write about on this site and want to pay homage to where it all started. So we caught up with Boehm to interview him firsthand and hear what he’s up to now. Here’s his story.

The Spark

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Working for a Chinese home electronics manufacturer called Tsann Kuen USA, Boehm created something called the Steam Grill: You poured the water, broth, or wine in a well in the center of the grill, put the meat on, and closed the lid. Voila: tender, succulent meat.

He quickly sold three different versions to three different companies. One of them decided to make an infomercial with a regional chef in California. “The product sold well but only in the West,” Boehm said. “I said they’ve got the wrong idea here.”

The Voice

So when he invented his next product, the Short Order Grill, which used a slanted surface to help fat slide off the grill, he knew he needed a spokesperson to make it sing. His first choice? George Foreman.

“He’s kind of a quirky guy but very charismatic,” Boehm said. He’d heard Foreman had five sons named George and that they loved burgers, as well as that Foreman had burgers before each fight. So in December 1993 he sent a prototype to the Foreman camp and waited. After many months, Foreman’s wife, Mary, started using the grill, and eventually George came calling.

The Money

Since that fateful day more than 100 million grills have been sold and George Foreman has made around $200 million from the deal.

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Of course, Boehm created the grill as part of his job at Tsann Kuen, and the company sold the plans for the product outright to Salton, who worked with Foreman to brand it. So Boehm didn’t make a single penny beyond his salary.

To this day he carries around the patent in his pocket, to prove to people that he did in fact invent the grill.

But despite that habit, he doesn’t seem too concerned about the patent. “I chose to develop another product, and then another, rather than play legal games with people,” he said. Other inventions have included a quesadilla maker and a fusion grill that “looked like a volcano.” And it’s not just kitchenware: He’s also designed everything “from snowmobiles to electronics to toys” for places like JC Penney. Heck, he even designed a coffee maker that’s featured in the Whitney Museum.

A person like that is an inventor for life. “I’m looking for something that I look at it and go wow, it’s going to make my life easier,” he said. “That challenge of finding the elusive secret.”

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