• On TV.com: THE GIRLS NEXT DOOR photos
November 1, 2007 11:46 AM PDT

In-home doughnut machine

Posted by Tim Moynihan

Eat a bowl of doughnuts for every meal.

(Credit: SkyMall)

In case you were wondering, there is a God.

The Dough-Nu-Matic, available via the SkyMall in-flight catalog, is a miniature version of the Krispy Kreme fryer/conveyor belt that forms and fries savory doughnuts.

For just $130, you can make very small doughnuts at the clip of a dozen every six minutes. That means you can eat 120 miniature doughnuts every hour without leaving your home. You can make doughnuts in your bathroom and eat them in the shower. You can place doughnuts on each of your fingers, then eat them off like the magical Mr. Doughnut Hands. You can buy a kiddie pool, fill it with doughnuts, and swim in it while wearing doughnuts as water wings.

Dials on the side of the machine let you adjust the cooking temperature, but alas, there is no "jelly" setting. You'll need to hollow out the doughnuts and inject jelly into them yourself.

You'll need your own dough, and SkyMall doesn't mention whether oil is included in the package. You may need that, too, but the machine's enclosed, covered oil fryer means you won't get splattered with hot oil while you watch the doughnuts get ready for business....the business of shoving them into your pie-hole.

I repeat: you can now make doughnuts in your home and eat the living hell out of them.

[Via Geekologie.]

Recent posts from Appliances and Kitchen Gadgets
Alphabet Cake Pan spells delicious
Light up your peppercorns
Keep your soda fizzy and upside down
Everyone's happy with the PizzaDome
Zagat on iPhone: 'A disappointment' die-hards will still 'love'
Holiday cookies you can sink your teeth into
A decidedly adult lunch box
Gift alert: Stainless salt & pepper mills, $34.99

About Appliances and Kitchen Gadgets

Having transformed the den and the living room, technology is about to revolutionize the kitchen and even the laundry room. Manufacturers are increasingly cramming silicon into everything from refrigerators to spoons, and you can count on CNET's technology experience to follow and explain these trends. In this blog, you'll find the good, the bad, the priceless, the useless, and everything that fits in between, brought to you by a team of culinary professionals and technology experts from CNET and its network of bloggers.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Appliances and Kitchen Gadgets topics