The bread dress, created by Ted Sebarese, is part of his Hunger Pains photo series. The models wore clothes made entirely of real food that depicts a meal that each person was craving.
Archives for November 2010
Personal Pie Maker
Considered by this site to be the greatest thing ever, the Breville Pie Maker creates up to four individual pies, filled to your liking. Whether you take your pies berry-filled, meaty, or you’re one of those quiche types — the desktop pie machine is here to help.
The kit includes a pastry cutter to ensure a perfect fit, and claims that 8 minutes is all that stands between you and glorious pie.
[available at Williams-Sonoma for $75, via The Consumerist]
Picture Cook: Using Illustrations as Recipes
For those who enjoy cooking more than reading, Picture Cook by Katie Shelly is another collection of recipes that uses illustrations in lieu of words, or boring instruction.
According to Shelly, “The following recipes are not intended as precise culinary blueprints. Instead they are meant to inspire experimentation, improvisation, and play in the kitchen.”
Something Foodiggity is totally on board with… Down with words!
[Picture Cook, via Laughing Squid]
Protect Your Banana with Fruity Faces
Help your kids get their daily potassium to school unbruised, with Fruity Faces‘ Banana Protector.
And, for your less phallic fruits, the inflatable fruit protectors are also available in the form of footballs, monsters, and animal heads, to protect your spherical snacks.
[product page, via GeekDad]
Drinking Glasses
Not content with the simple spiral or loop de loop of a Silly Straw — Drinking Glasses will have kids watching their HFCS-laden juices swirl right before their eyes.
For the experimental adult, stick one end into your Bud Light, and make a real set of beer goggles.
[product page, via Presurfer]
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