It’s Foodie Friday and on a Friday many weeks ago I wrote about how I generally have a disdain for single purpose kitchen tools, especially those that are solutions in search of a problem. I used an avocado slicer as an example but one could just as easily place things like dehydrators or those margarita machines I see everywhere on the list. The tasks those tools accomplish – the problems they solve – are easily solved just as well by existing tools – an oven or a blender in the two aforementioned cases.
I figured in the interest of fairness to all the really useful singe purpose tools I should be fair and balanced (to coin a phrase) and admit that I do use certain single purpose tools on a regular basis. Melon ballers, for example. Oh, I know I could just chop the fruit into nice little chunks, but melon balls are so elegant. Besides, while I suppose one could tourne melon slices with a paring knife the way one tournes a carrot to make it rounder, the melon baller is a faster, better solution to a real problem (even if it isn’t on the order of most serious problems). The fact that you can core apples with it as well is a bonus! Stick blenders are another one of my favorites. Yes, one could use the stand blender but if you’ve ever scalded yourself transferring hot stuff into a blender you know why a stick blender is a smart solution.
As usual, there’s a business point. I was talking the other day with a potential client about a business he’s in the midst of starting. As he went on about it I asked about the problem he’s solving and why his solution is better than others who are attacking it. That’s a question one can’t ask often enough even about an existing business. It gets the business to the point of differentiation – we’re solving it less expensively, we’re solving it faster, we’re solving it with a more user-friendly environment – that becomes the platform for almost everything else we do in the business.
Great single-use tools found a cooking problem and solved them in a real way. Bad single-use tools just take up a lot of space and are easily replaced, The same can be said about bad businesses. What are consumers saying about yours?

As I’ve mentioned before here on the screed, I’m an old-school newspaper reader. Yep – ink on my hands and everything.
Over the weekend as I was thinking about it some more, I realized why I can’t get it out of my head.
