A few of these still have a place in the kitchen, and the electric can opener is one of them. Now that chicken rotisserie monstrosity was HUGE and not practical for most kitchens.
I recently purchased a manual can opener with a hand crank, makes opening cans much easier, I also have a tool that gives me more leverage when opening cans with pull tabs.
And popcorn poppers were around before the 70s. They were metal pots with an electric heating element under the bottom. Some people also used them to heat soup in dorms and even took them on vacations and snuck them into motel rooms to be able to warm up a can of something to eat.😂
And we did not get our first microwave until 1984. Saved for a year. Big purchase for us. But did not have a popcorn maker either. Did it in a regular pot on the stove.
my mom won a microwave from a drawing at a store. I'd say it was around 1981 or so , they were starting to become more common at the time. You ad to take TV dinners out of the tray to cool them in the microwave back then , they still had the tin trays
3:03 I bought this popcorn popper in the late-70s or early-80s and still use it. It even has a metal tray at the top to melt butter. While microwave or stovetop popcorn is handy, it's also loaded with all sorts of additives. Mine makes a large bowlful of just air heated popcorn that can be salted and buttered to taste.
I worked in hardware stores in Canada for 38 years, and I can tell you, we sold a lot of popcorn machines. A LOT. The beauty of the air popper was that you can make a bowl without the added fat of the oil, and as long as you didn't put butter on it, it wouldn't go stale or rancid if you couldn't finish it immediately. There are also devices which allow you to pop the popcorn in the microwave without using a bag.
I have a fig tree. The fruit ripens in a New York second and spoils just as fast. I put it in the dehydrator and eat figs that I've grown well into winter. I also use it for chili peppers. Ghost peppers, habenero, Thai dragons are all thin walled and great for the dehydrator. I have two and use them. Also they don't "suck" moisture out of the food, they work by blowing a stream of warm air up through the appliance, drying the food that way. Who writes this s**t?
I'm 59 years old now i was a kid in the 1970's and I remember all of these appliances as my parents and kinfolk had them some of them i wished we had back today but I really enjoy watching these blasts from the past and as Bob Hope always said Thanks for the memories.🇺🇲📺📻📺📻🇺🇲
Did the meat slicer ever take off in USA. ? While working in Poland I noticed every family had one - motorized with a circular blade like butchers have for slicing ham etc. They're not big in UK but I'm surprised they're not.
And they were expensive back then. At least mine was. I never had the Amanda Radar Range but i think that was one of the first ones. Mine was MGA or something like that
I brought lunch to high school a time or two and walked to a home ed classroom to use their microwave ( I’m class of 2004 ) and forgot how HUGE microwaves used to be when I was a kid !
The popcorn machine is readily available in Australian discount stores, as is the food dehydrator. In fact, high-end dehydrators are available to dehydrate fruits, veges, meat, and homemade dog treats. Salad shredders are still available, as are soda streams, with supplies available at supermarkets and electric ice-crushers are a feature of most high-end refrigerators. How soon before coffee-pod machines fall out of favour as a too-expensive way to have a cup of Joe?
Well Keurig-Style machines are less popular in people's homes lately. At least I've seen them less frequently than I used to. They're mainly popular now in places like churches, offices, and auto repair shops as it allows people to make a flavor of coffee they want to brew at will and instead of requiring someone to continuously freshen up a pot of joe. The only real maintenance it needs is someone to clean it out occasionally and to refill the reservoir when it gets empty.
They are readily available in the USA too! Most of these appliances are still available. Most people I know have electric can openers. I hate manual ones.
Don't hate me for this comment. Looking at the salad shooter, I think about the Snoopy Snow Cone Maker. It is pretty much the same design. If you have one and you like it, that it wonderful. If everyone liked the same thing, the world would be pretty boring.
electric slicer and shredder is still pretty popular in korea and other asian countries. It never stopped being popular specially in korea coz they have dishes like bibimbap and many other meals that require a lot of slicing and shredding. They use it on the daily. I think one of the reasons why a lot of these kitchen processors fell out of popularity in America is primarily because a lot of people stopped cooking, and the popularity of fastfood chains in america skyrocketed. America popularized cheaper fastfood chains and many popular restaurants resulting into its people having less need to cook at home with their busy working lives.
Bagged microwave popcorn was not available until the 1980s, but the flavor was far inferior to the Stir Crazy popcorn appliance my mom made popcorn in all the time. She used a Stir Crazy until well into the 2010s.
Maybe nostalgia is clouding my memory, but neither air poppers nor microwave popcorn ever tasted as good as when my mom used to make TV Time popcorn on the stove in the early seventies. I can still hear the sound of her shaking that big heavy Cory stainless steel pan on the burner as the kernels popped and rang the lid like a bell.
@@lisapop5219 I was recalling my parents having to blanch fresh vegetables before they could freeze them. I think that fresh veggies still have to be blanched prior to freezing. Of course, frozen veggies purchased in a store have already gone through the necessary processes and can be put directly into the home freezer.
“Super fluis?” And many of these products are modern with a filter applied. I promise you there was no hot dog toaster commercial in the 70s featuring an actor with a tattoo, let alone modern three prong outlets.
But they worked so good in the infomercials. Ron Popeil was a master salesman. Give it up for the dude. Hey, he sold spray paint as a cure for baldness!
I have no recollection of the hot dog toaster from the 70s. What I do remember was the Presto Hot Dogger, which didn't work like a toaster, you know, with heating elements and all that; nor did it warm buns. What it did do was literally plug your hot dogs into MAINS VOLTAGE and electrocute them. They tasted weird, and it was fire hazard since there was no timer or safety cut-out device of any kind. THAT deserves to be swept into the dustbin of history. The hot dog toaster seems like a work of genius by comparison.
The biggest failing of the hot dog toaster is that it doesn't actually work. It incinerates the bun while barely warming the sausage. Which really should be pretty obvious if you think about it. You'd almost need to dump mains current through the wiener to cook it quickly enough to be ready when the bun was nice and toasted (although you'd still burn the edges of the bun, as shown in the video).
Although the person that narrated this video said most of these items were "weird", they were a daily part of peoples lifestyle as we grew up in those times, I recognize most of those items and we as a family used almost every one, except for the electric wok and the ice shredder, I think this person called these things weird because he did not see how useful they were to use.
Besides, the commentator acts as if no kitchen had a pantry, cupboards, or cabinets to store the appliances when not in use. It is as if once the appliance was in the kitchen it had to sit on the counter, forever. I mother had most of these appliances, used them for decades, and they NEVER sat on a counter unless they were being used. The commentator's use of hyperbole is lazy and careless journalism, at best.
Ronco came out with the "Veg-o-Matic," in 1963. However, it was not a salad "shooter," but more of a rudimentary food processor. The "Salad Shooter," was released in 1988, not in the 70's. I took me literally 2 minutes of internet searching to gather these facts. As a child of the 70s, I can tell you it was the era of the fondue pot, the Presto Hot Dogger and hot air pop corn poppers. The real break-out star of the show was the Crock Pot though. The crock pot was a game changer and I remember my mom and the next door neighbor lady losing their minds, excited about dinner being ready when they got home from work thanks to the crock pot.
Food dehydraters still exist and people, especially who hike/camp a lot, use them all the time. Good video though, that rotisserie oven was massive. Lol
I still use most of these things.🤣 I LOVE my hotdog toaster, my wide slice toaster doesn't properly toast the buns, and I'm not willing to stick hotdogs into it to even try. 🤣 We fondu annually during the holidays. I love my classic popcorn cart popper, and my air popper. I don't have the patience to pop it on the stove. I do love microwave popcorn too, but classic popped is better. My brother used his dehydrator so much that he went through at least a dozen of them. He was a big camper drying his own jerky and fruits saved him a fortune. I love my pasta makers. My brother lived alone, and used his Showtime Rotissary oven more than his real one. He could make a juicy chicken, ribs, or roast then eat on it for a week, changing it up as leftovers. Sandwhes, salads, hotdishes, whatever he felt like making. He was also a big salad sh**ter. He didn't like slicing manually. We're not a fan of Soda Streams then or now. We had the electric can opener with knife sharpener growing up. It worked AMAZINGLY for 20 years. When it needed replacing, we've never found one that could do the same. My parents developed renal failure. Our ice crusher became a life saver. They were limited in their allowed fluid intake. Sucking on crushed ice made it easier to hold to their restrictions, and soothed mouth sores that are a common side effect of renal failure. Again, Fondu is a family holiday tradition. We have a wonderful battery operated sharpener that we use on certain knives, and stones we use on others. We used to use our electric wok when our kids were young. We just use our regular wok now that we're empty nesters. 🤣 We aren't big fans of the slicer/shredder. The Salad Sh**ter is the only one that stuck for us.
I'm with you here ! I'm still using the electric can opener, the fondue kit is always a big success with guests because it's fun to use, and my sister -in-law has a big electric wok that she regularly uses. I had a manual soda stream for a while , now I have a more sophisticated version. But those appliances are must-haves if you cook regularly.
The hot air popcorn Maker was practical. Even in the late 70s, microwaves. Were like buying a Rolls Royce and putting one in your kitchen. Plus, microwave bags of popcorn weren't common until the 80s.
Kitchens are generally bigger, today, and can accommodate larger appliances better. In addition to the traditional L-shaped countertops, many kitchens also have a center island that provides a lot more space and work surface, and also extra cabinet space beneath them.
@@jrnfw4060 Hi ,ironically we are living in a 22ft rv on land we got last year. Sadly it will be 2 or so years before we see that. One step at a time and one day at a time. But before GOD SENT US HERE, IN GA . WE wore out two showtime. The first month here I found our biggest one, and then the little one. Love them. Can't wait for a real kitchen again. GOD BLESS YA'LL
I remember those popcorn popper that had the rod in bottom that spins the corn. and the top used as a bowl. These poppers did a good job at popping corn. We used our almost every night. Thanks for doing this, it brought back memories of the simplicity of the 70s.
I own a dehydrator now. Two actually. They works great. You just rotate the shelves. We have 5 apple trees and it gets used every fall. Also used for anything else I have extra of. With food cost being high and freezer space needed for meat, dehydration for future use is ver practical.
the OG salad shooter is the bomb! it slices or shreds and cleans up easily--plus i don't worry about hacking a finger off! And my H went out and scored a retro hot air popcorn popper--the slim one that doesn't use oil..best purchase ever! use your organic non-gmo popcorn, no oil, little sea salt if you want--and you have a healthy treat. Just bc something is old doesn't mean you throw it away✌️
I had an air popper. It worked pretty well, I just didn't use it all that much. One thing that I liked about it was that it would melt your butter for you while popping.
Do not ever throw away anything just because it is old. Some of the older designs are far better than anything done today. Some of the designs of today are just taking old designs and adding window dressing.
The utility value of just about any kitchen appliance is inversely proportional to how specialized and fancy it is. Microwaves, refrigerators, toasters and drip coffee makers have withstood the test of time for a reason and the less gadgety and more straightforward they are, the better.
A simple mandolin is all you need for slicing. Unless making a ton of food, I don't even bother with my food processor. It is also just fun practicing my knife skills. I feel more involved that way, instead of letting the machine do it.
I've had popcorn poppers over the years, and hubby and I still have one, today. I still use it. Much better than Jiffy-Pop used on the stove top, and microwave popcorn always left kernels either unpopped or burnt. Popcorn poppers are easy to use. Once the kernels are popped, just pour them out into a large bowl and add melted butter or coconut oil, and salt, if desired. These appliances are still popular.
I’ve had my salad shooter since the late 70’s & I still use it. It works perfectly. I use a lot of cheese so I use it mainly for that. It saves me time & these day..aches from my hands. 👍😁
I love my salad shooter and was so pleased to inherit my Mom's. She actually was on her second. Easier to slice larger amounts of veggies and grate carrots & cheese. Not weird at all..
Big Lots actually still sells the hotdog toaster. A friend of mine actually bought one last October and it works great, but it's very difficult to clean.
We absolutely want the popcorn popper back!! My Mom had one and we used it well into the early 2000's till it broke. The popcorn tastes so much better than microwave popcorn.
If you still make jerky, dry your own fresh fruits and vegetables, etc., then nothing can replace a powered multi-tray food dehydrator. Those old weak ones from Ronson were no good, but the modern ones are amazing. Eat organic with no preservatives? There's only the food dehydrator.
I used to have one that electrocuted the hotdog. The hotdog was impaled on two spikes and house current was sent through the meat. Kinda gruesome and a little dangerous but it did work.
I love fondue but don't need a dedicated fondue pot. Any double boiler will work. The key is not in the pot, it is in using the right ingredients in making the sauce.
Hubby and I had two electric can openers during our marriage. Our first was avocado green, our second harvest gold.They didn't always work well. We never had the ones that were also knife sharpeners. When our last one died, we got rid of it and now we use manual can openers. They don't always work well, either, but they're smaller and easier to store.
The popcorn maker was good, for those of us who did not own microwaves. My husband used the popcorn maker, I bought him in 1974, for his 24th, or 25th birthday, when he was my boyfriend, and a law student, until I replaced it with the hot air kind, after we were married. I didn't want a microwave, until my husband gave me one for Christmas, around 1990. I had stove, and an oven. I only used it to defrost meats. The icer crusher was more of a danger, than anything, because of the little fingers, (and sometimes drunk ones!) that would get hurt, when a cube got stuck. It was just easier, to grab a flor sack cloth, put ice in the middle, gather up the sides and whack it, on the sides of a counter a few times.
Literally every one of these items is still available today. I have the same popcorn make eith the center spin bar and the upside down bowl for a lid, and I like it.
I own two. I can use all 10 shelves on one, or split them up and use both when dehydrating different things that take different temperature or just can not be done at the same time.
The 70s soda stream maker may not have had the flavours we have today but it did have the flavours that were available from the shops at the time. Soda was more basic back then.
One of my college friends had a popcorn popper in her dorm room. Back then (early 80's), hotplates and microwaves weren't allowed in dorm rooms. I guess she was allowed to have the popcorn popper, but of course I never asked 😉😊
I love my Showtime Rotisserie Oven. The meats turn out juicy, succulent, and browned on the outside. Yes, it has to be cleaned after use but it is well worth it.
Walmart still sells a hotdog toaster today, I have two salad shooters, the problem with hot air poppers it the popcorn shriveled when buttered, the only problem I ever had with my dehydrators was the plastic trays cracked from the heat, the only thing the electric knife sharpener was good for was turning your knives into paring knives. All they did was grind the blades down to nothing, I still have and use my fondue pot for shrimp fondue all the time.
We had the yellow top popcorn maker and the one that spouted into the bowl in the 70's.We also had a "Dynamite 8" 8 track player. Ronco came up woth so many junk appliances,especially when Chrostmas came arpund.
Glad I didn't have all of the items though I do admit to having more than half of the list and still using my dehydrator, rotisserie, popcorn popper, and a few others. I kinda wish we could get a new Electric Wok the later designs with the temp controller were not as bad as the original ones. Some kitchens still don't have the best stove position in layout for traditional wok on the burner. and its not practical to redesign the layout just to get the elbow room needed. Hope there weren't too many people who pointed out two of your items on the list were effective repeats.
Today's soda streamers are no better or worse than they were 50 years ago.Frankly, I would rather just go ahead and buy one from the store.Considering how expensive it is to buy the ingredients to get one
The hotdog toaster and popcorn popper seems like they would be popular with college students back them. I had one of those food dehydrators that I never used…… My husband got many years out of the salad shooter
A common theme in all of these appliances, and why some have not survived is that they are not used regularly. Either because they are for special occasions or because there are other simpler alternatives. A lot of these could be replaced simply by learning some knife skills. In the case of the crushed ice maker, I make crushed ice for cocktails just by tapping the cube with the back of a spoon. If I am mixing drinks, there is the added bonus of showing off my bartender skills.
20:36 Electric Woks You opened this part of your clickbait listicle, with the Breville US market Gourmet Wok EW30XL, a late 1990s product. So much for this listicle for being about 1970s appliances.
Most of these appliances were either from the 1980s and beyond or some were from decades long before the 1970s Very few were popular or even available in the 1970s As an example, the video compares popcorn makers being an unnecessary item because microwave popcorn was so easy and convenient. Microwave popcorn wasn’t even on the market in the ‘70s and most people didn’t own or even know what a microwave oven was. They didn’t become popular until the ‘80s. Other appliances like the rotisserie oven. These were around back in the 1950s and yes they were big bulky things, that took up a lot of space. You would very often find them at the local thrift store in the 1960s As usual for this Channel, much misinformation and lack of knowledge
Duuuuuuuuude. I still have--and LOVE--my oil popcorn maker. Nothing tastes nearly as good. And, okay, it's a one-use appliance. But popcorn out of this bad boy tastes AMAZING, while, when my coworkers make microwave popcorn, it either smells like cat pee or burnt leaves. I'll keep my bulky, weird oil popper. And my kid has already claimed dibs on it when my popping days are over.
I miss the original Hot Air Popcorn Pumper. While there are still hit air popcorn poppers being made, they quality just seems to get worse.
Cheap ones are pretty bad
Plus cheaper than microwave popcorn bags and more environmentally better.
I still have my mom's original one.❤
I love mine
The hot air popcorn maker was awesome. I'd buy one again.
My 97-year-old grandfather uses an electric can opener. I will say they are really great for elderly people and people with arthritis.
A few of these still have a place in the kitchen, and the electric can opener is one of them. Now that chicken rotisserie monstrosity was HUGE and not practical for most kitchens.
Yes!!!! A lot of infomercial stuff look silly until you realize there's a non healthy problem it's for.
I recently purchased a manual can opener with a hand crank, makes opening cans much easier, I also have a tool that gives me more leverage when opening cans with pull tabs.
I don't open very many cans, but when I do I use the electric can opener mounted under one of my cabinets.
Good greif🤦♂️ The fact that every product that you highlighted in this video is still available in one form or another, makes your title ridiculous.
Microwave popcorn wasn't commercially available to consumers until 1981. A simple Google search revealed this.
And popcorn poppers were around before the 70s. They were metal pots with an electric heating element under the bottom. Some people also used them to heat soup in dorms and even took them on vacations and snuck them into motel rooms to be able to warm up a can of something to eat.😂
And we did not get our first microwave until 1984. Saved for a year. Big purchase for us.
But did not have a popcorn maker either. Did it in a regular pot on the stove.
I preferred using Jiffy Pop until microwave popcorn caught on!
my mom won a microwave from a drawing at a store. I'd say it was around 1981 or so , they were starting to become more common at the time. You ad to take TV dinners out of the tray to cool them in the microwave back then , they still had the tin trays
3:03 I bought this popcorn popper in the late-70s or early-80s and still use it. It even has a metal tray at the top to melt butter. While microwave or stovetop popcorn is handy, it's also loaded with all sorts of additives. Mine makes a large bowlful of just air heated popcorn that can be salted and buttered to taste.
I agree. I still have an air popper and use it because the microwave bags always leave so many unpopped, greasy kernels.
Same here. Young TH-camts be like 👆
Stovetop is just kernels u put in a bit of oil to pop with a lid!! Actually, thats the tastiest, cheapest way to have popcorn 🍿!!
@@johnmacdonald3070 With hot air poppers, no messy oil is needed. Plus, it takes more time to heat up a stove than a hot air popper.
Yep! Shake- shake- shake, Rest on the heat, Shake-shake-shake, Rest on the heat. That's how ya' do it on the stove top
I still use a Salad Shooter to grate cheese. Easiest thing ever.
Me too!!
I worked in hardware stores in Canada for 38 years, and I can tell you, we sold a lot of popcorn machines. A LOT. The beauty of the air popper was that you can make a bowl without the added fat of the oil, and as long as you didn't put butter on it, it wouldn't go stale or rancid if you couldn't finish it immediately. There are also devices which allow you to pop the popcorn in the microwave without using a bag.
I had one after I got my first microwave. It worked great, but after a few decades the one foot broke off.
I love my dehydrator and air popper. I still use both regularly
Before the microwave - Jiffy pop on the stove was easy, delicious & no clean up required
The magic treat
I know a lot of people that use dehydrators.
Especially for chili peppers in a humid area.
I have a fig tree. The fruit ripens in a New York second and spoils just as fast. I put it in the dehydrator and eat figs that I've grown well into winter. I also use it for chili peppers. Ghost peppers, habenero, Thai dragons are all thin walled and great for the dehydrator. I have two and use them. Also they don't "suck" moisture out of the food, they work by blowing a stream of warm air up through the appliance, drying the food that way. Who writes this s**t?
I find it weird too - people with gardens absolutely use food dehydrators.. they're not weird, this show is weird
I'm 59 years old now i was a kid in the 1970's and I remember
all of these appliances as my parents and kinfolk had them
some of them i wished we had back today but I really enjoy
watching these blasts from the past and as Bob Hope always
said Thanks for the memories.🇺🇲📺📻📺📻🇺🇲
Did the meat slicer ever take off in USA. ? While working in Poland I noticed every family had one - motorized with a circular blade like butchers have for slicing ham etc. They're not big in UK but I'm surprised they're not.
Normal people didn't have microwaves until '82 or later. We couldn't use a microwave to make popcorn in the '70s
Microwaves were available in 1946, and a lot of people probably didn't have one, but yes, they were available.
And they were expensive back then. At least mine was. I never had the Amanda Radar Range but i think that was one of the first ones. Mine was MGA or something like that
My one uncle had one it the 70s. It was massive with dials. First one I ever saw. He still has it at his cabin.
I brought lunch to high school a time or two and walked to a home ed classroom to use their microwave ( I’m class of 2004 ) and forgot how HUGE microwaves used to be when I was a kid !
My wife’s parents had one in the ‘70s.
The popcorn machine is readily available in Australian discount stores, as is the food dehydrator. In fact, high-end dehydrators are available to dehydrate fruits, veges, meat, and homemade dog treats. Salad shredders are still available, as are soda streams, with supplies available at supermarkets and electric ice-crushers are a feature of most high-end refrigerators.
How soon before coffee-pod machines fall out of favour as a too-expensive way to have a cup of Joe?
Well Keurig-Style machines are less popular in people's homes lately. At least I've seen them less frequently than I used to. They're mainly popular now in places like churches, offices, and auto repair shops as it allows people to make a flavor of coffee they want to brew at will and instead of requiring someone to continuously freshen up a pot of joe. The only real maintenance it needs is someone to clean it out occasionally and to refill the reservoir when it gets empty.
Plus fill the garbage dumps w little plastic cups?
They are readily available in the USA too! Most of these appliances are still available. Most people I know have electric can openers. I hate manual ones.
Don't hate me for this comment. Looking at the salad shooter, I think about the Snoopy Snow Cone Maker. It is pretty much the same design. If you have one and you like it, that it wonderful. If everyone liked the same thing, the world would be pretty boring.
Me, too! I love my "🎵Snoopy Snowcone Machine 🎶" of 40 years and use it w my "Littles".
Makes a great cocktail!
My brother had a snoopy snow machine!!! Was great!!!
Nothing wrong with your comment. We've just learned something, those of us who are unfamiliar with that device. Thanks for the info.
The one that you hand cranked?
electric slicer and shredder is still pretty popular in korea and other asian countries. It never stopped being popular specially in korea coz they have dishes like bibimbap and many other meals that require a lot of slicing and shredding. They use it on the daily. I think one of the reasons why a lot of these kitchen processors fell out of popularity in America is primarily because a lot of people stopped cooking, and the popularity of fastfood chains in america skyrocketed. America popularized cheaper fastfood chains and many popular restaurants resulting into its people having less need to cook at home with their busy working lives.
Bagged microwave popcorn was not available until the 1980s, but the flavor was far inferior to the Stir Crazy popcorn appliance my mom made popcorn in all the time. She used a Stir Crazy until well into the 2010s.
Maybe nostalgia is clouding my memory, but neither air poppers nor microwave popcorn ever tasted as good as when my mom used to make TV Time popcorn on the stove in the early seventies. I can still hear the sound of her shaking that big heavy Cory stainless steel pan on the burner as the kernels popped and rang the lid like a bell.
Pop corn in a heavy pot on the stove. Use corn oil. Cover with a splatter screen to allow steam to escape.
The Stir Crazy is still available for sale, and is still quite popular.
Nothing brought your cat or dog running to the kitchen faster than the sound of an electric can opener.
Food dehydrators still exist today for the usage of making beef jerky.
A similar device; vacuum sealer, exists to seal up special packages for meats.
I can't imagine going back before the vacuum sealer. It's saved thousands of dollars on meats for the freezer. Same with vegetables.
@@lisapop5219 Vegetables required blanching before freezing.
@jrnfw4060 are you saying currently or previously?
@@lisapop5219 I was recalling my parents having to blanch fresh vegetables before they could freeze them. I think that fresh veggies still have to be blanched prior to freezing. Of course, frozen veggies purchased in a store have already gone through the necessary processes and can be put directly into the home freezer.
I'll bet 50 years from now, people will wax nostalgic over air fryers. 🍖
We probably all be extinct by then!!
“Super fluis?” And many of these products are modern with a filter applied. I promise you there was no hot dog toaster commercial in the 70s featuring an actor with a tattoo, let alone modern three prong outlets.
Agreed. Most of these things are late 80s, early 90s at the earliest.
Super flewis, or super flouis
Three prong outlets were mandated in homes about 1960.
But they worked so good in the infomercials. Ron Popeil was a master salesman. Give it up for the dude. Hey, he sold spray paint as a cure for baldness!
My favorite was Ron Popiels pocket fisherman. But there were so many things to choose from. I wonder if he invented Mr Microphone 🎤 😊
But wait, there's more...
I have no recollection of the hot dog toaster from the 70s. What I do remember was the Presto Hot Dogger, which didn't work like a toaster, you know, with heating elements and all that; nor did it warm buns. What it did do was literally plug your hot dogs into MAINS VOLTAGE and electrocute them. They tasted weird, and it was fire hazard since there was no timer or safety cut-out device of any kind. THAT deserves to be swept into the dustbin of history. The hot dog toaster seems like a work of genius by comparison.
The biggest failing of the hot dog toaster is that it doesn't actually work. It incinerates the bun while barely warming the sausage. Which really should be pretty obvious if you think about it. You'd almost need to dump mains current through the wiener to cook it quickly enough to be ready when the bun was nice and toasted (although you'd still burn the edges of the bun, as shown in the video).
We had a hot dogger . it used to electrocute the hot dogs within one minute. I agree, they tasted funny.
Although the person that narrated this video said most of these items were "weird", they were a daily part of peoples lifestyle as we grew up in those times, I recognize most of those items and we as a family used almost every one, except for the electric wok and the ice shredder, I think this person called these things weird because he did not see how useful they were to use.
Besides, the commentator acts as if no kitchen had a pantry, cupboards, or cabinets to store the appliances when not in use. It is as if once the appliance was in the kitchen it had to sit on the counter, forever. I mother had most of these appliances, used them for decades, and they NEVER sat on a counter unless they were being used. The commentator's use of hyperbole is lazy and careless journalism, at best.
Ronco came out with the "Veg-o-Matic," in 1963. However, it was not a salad "shooter," but more of a rudimentary food processor. The "Salad Shooter," was released in 1988, not in the 70's. I took me literally 2 minutes of internet searching to gather these facts. As a child of the 70s, I can tell you it was the era of the fondue pot, the Presto Hot Dogger and hot air pop corn poppers. The real break-out star of the show was the Crock Pot though. The crock pot was a game changer and I remember my mom and the next door neighbor lady losing their minds, excited about dinner being ready when they got home from work thanks to the crock pot.
Oh, and the crock pot came out in 1971, just like me! ;)
We have a crock pot, and use it often.
Those popcorn makers with bowl are fantastic. Still around. Used them.
Lots of people still dehydrate. But now we have better dehydrators to do it. I love my Excalibur dehydrator.
Food dehydraters still exist and people, especially who hike/camp a lot, use them all the time. Good video though, that rotisserie oven was massive. Lol
Yep. As a gardener, I grow several things that I dry with my old dehydrator, like herbs for kitchen use and for teas. I use this every year.
Haha. I just put a batch of strawberries in my dehydrator. I love mine.
I still use most of these things.🤣 I LOVE my hotdog toaster, my wide slice toaster doesn't properly toast the buns, and I'm not willing to stick hotdogs into it to even try. 🤣
We fondu annually during the holidays.
I love my classic popcorn cart popper, and my air popper. I don't have the patience to pop it on the stove. I do love microwave popcorn too, but classic popped is better.
My brother used his dehydrator so much that he went through at least a dozen of them. He was a big camper drying his own jerky and fruits saved him a fortune.
I love my pasta makers.
My brother lived alone, and used his Showtime Rotissary oven more than his real one. He could make a juicy chicken, ribs, or roast then eat on it for a week, changing it up as leftovers. Sandwhes, salads, hotdishes, whatever he felt like making.
He was also a big salad sh**ter. He didn't like slicing manually.
We're not a fan of Soda Streams then or now.
We had the electric can opener with knife sharpener growing up. It worked AMAZINGLY for 20 years. When it needed replacing, we've never found one that could do the same.
My parents developed renal failure. Our ice crusher became a life saver. They were limited in their allowed fluid intake. Sucking on crushed ice made it easier to hold to their restrictions, and soothed mouth sores that are a common side effect of renal failure.
Again, Fondu is a family holiday tradition.
We have a wonderful battery operated sharpener that we use on certain knives, and stones we use on others.
We used to use our electric wok when our kids were young. We just use our regular wok now that we're empty nesters. 🤣
We aren't big fans of the slicer/shredder. The Salad Sh**ter is the only one that stuck for us.
I'm with you here ! I'm still using the electric can opener, the fondue kit is always a big success with guests because it's fun to use, and my sister -in-law has a big electric wok that she regularly uses. I had a manual soda stream for a while , now I have a more sophisticated version. But those appliances are must-haves if you cook regularly.
No need to use asterisks. Shooter isn't a dirty word.
You cant really say that nobody wants these items back, people said this about Vinyl and Cds but what happened vinyl and cds have made a big comeback
The hot air popcorn Maker was practical.
Even in the late 70s, microwaves. Were like buying a Rolls Royce and putting one in your kitchen. Plus, microwave bags of popcorn weren't common until the 80s.
Food dehydrators are a big thing now 🤷♀️
Your research leaves a lot to be desired! A lot of these "gagets" are still extremely popular. 😂😂
I still love and use my showtime rotisserie a lot. I have 2 now the big one & the smaller one. GOD BLESS
Kitchens are generally bigger, today, and can accommodate larger appliances better. In addition to the traditional L-shaped countertops, many kitchens also have a center island that provides a lot more space and work surface, and also extra cabinet space beneath them.
@@jrnfw4060 Hi ,ironically we are living in a 22ft rv on land we got last year. Sadly it will be 2 or so years before we see that. One step at a time and one day at a time. But before GOD SENT US HERE, IN GA . WE wore out two showtime.
The first month here I found our biggest one, and then the little one. Love them. Can't wait for a real kitchen again.
GOD BLESS YA'LL
Yep a food dehydrator might have been a little bit better if it had a fan to help circulate the heat around it
Some jerky makers have a fan.
I remember those popcorn popper that had the rod in bottom that spins the corn. and the top used as a bowl. These poppers did a good job at popping corn. We used our almost every night. Thanks for doing this, it brought back memories of the simplicity of the 70s.
I own a dehydrator now. Two actually. They works great. You just rotate the shelves. We have 5 apple trees and it gets used every fall. Also used for anything else I have extra of. With food cost being high and freezer space needed for meat, dehydration for future use is ver practical.
the OG salad shooter is the bomb! it slices or shreds and cleans up easily--plus i don't worry about hacking a finger off! And my H went out and scored a retro hot air popcorn popper--the slim one that doesn't use oil..best purchase ever! use your organic non-gmo popcorn, no oil, little sea salt if you want--and you have a healthy treat. Just bc something is old doesn't mean you throw it away✌️
I had an air popper. It worked pretty well, I just didn't use it all that much. One thing that I liked about it was that it would melt your butter for you while popping.
Do not ever throw away anything just because it is old. Some of the older designs are far better than anything done today. Some of the designs of today are just taking old designs and adding window dressing.
The utility value of just about any kitchen appliance is inversely proportional to how specialized and fancy it is. Microwaves, refrigerators, toasters and drip coffee makers have withstood the test of time for a reason and the less gadgety and more straightforward they are, the better.
A simple mandolin is all you need for slicing. Unless making a ton of food, I don't even bother with my food processor. It is also just fun practicing my knife skills. I feel more involved that way, instead of letting the machine do it.
Microwaves were expensive and still new back then ,popcorn maker was excellent ,we used the hell out ours when I was a kid.
I've had popcorn poppers over the years, and hubby and I still have one, today. I still use it. Much better than Jiffy-Pop used on the stove top, and microwave popcorn always left kernels either unpopped or burnt. Popcorn poppers are easy to use. Once the kernels are popped, just pour them out into a large bowl and add melted butter or coconut oil, and salt, if desired.
These appliances are still popular.
I’ve had my salad shooter since the late 70’s & I still use it. It works perfectly. I use a lot of cheese so I use it mainly for that. It saves me time & these day..aches from my hands. 👍😁
I love my salad shooter and was so pleased to inherit my Mom's. She actually was on her second. Easier to slice larger amounts of veggies and grate carrots & cheese. Not weird at all..
Big Lots actually still sells the hotdog toaster. A friend of mine actually bought one last October and it works great, but it's very difficult to clean.
We absolutely want the popcorn popper back!! My Mom had one and we used it well into the early 2000's till it broke. The popcorn tastes so much better than microwave popcorn.
Still I have a salad shooter and I still love it!
I've got a dehydrator and salad shooter in my kitchen right now.
If you still make jerky, dry your own fresh fruits and vegetables, etc., then nothing can replace a powered multi-tray food dehydrator. Those old weak ones from Ronson were no good, but the modern ones are amazing. Eat organic with no preservatives? There's only the food dehydrator.
I still use an electronic can opener
They still sell the hot dog toaster and I gave it as a gift about 5 years ago to my brother who loves hot dogs and the 4th of July🇺🇸 🤗
I used to have one that electrocuted the hotdog. The hotdog was impaled on two spikes and house current was sent through the meat. Kinda gruesome and a little dangerous but it did work.
Had an air popper in college. Loved that thing & finally wore it out.
1:53 WHY DOES SHE HAVE AN APPLE WATCH??? 🤣
I love fondue but don't need a dedicated fondue pot. Any double boiler will work. The key is not in the pot, it is in using the right ingredients in making the sauce.
Hubby and I had two electric can openers during our marriage. Our first was avocado green, our second harvest gold.They didn't always work well. We never had the ones that were also knife sharpeners. When our last one died, we got rid of it and now we use manual can openers. They don't always work well, either, but they're smaller and easier to store.
I loved my presto salad shooter and I had it in the 90's. Can't find another like it 😢
My mom had a Salad Shooter when I was
a kid and I enjoyed using it too! Miss it🙁
I still have the rotisserie you featured. Easy to set up and use. Most parts dishwasher safe. As good as Costco chicken
I have the hotdog thing and as a history major and a film studies co major mostly in classical Hollywood films and film noir I love this!
I always liked the idea of the Salad Shooter.:)
I remember a lot of these gadgets from the 80's and 90's. They were advertised to me, and I wasn't watching those types of ads as a kid.
We loved the popcorn and hot dog machines
Loved them ALL
We loved our Salad Shooter ❤😊❤
I liked the popcorn popper
Nothing wrong with a popcorn maker. Microwave popcorn isn't good for you. And who wants to stand over a stove popping popcorn and cleaning a pot?
The popcorn maker was good, for those of us who did not own microwaves. My husband used the popcorn maker, I bought him in 1974, for his 24th, or 25th birthday, when he was my boyfriend, and a law student, until I replaced it with the hot air kind, after we were married. I didn't want a microwave, until my husband gave me one for Christmas, around 1990. I had stove, and an oven. I only used it to defrost meats.
The icer crusher was more of a danger, than anything, because of the little fingers, (and sometimes drunk ones!) that would get hurt, when a cube got stuck. It was just easier, to grab a flor sack cloth, put ice in the middle, gather up the sides and whack it, on the sides of a counter a few times.
Literally every one of these items is still available today.
I have the same popcorn make eith the center spin bar and the upside down bowl for a lid, and I like it.
Stores still sell food dehydrators .
I own two. I can use all 10 shelves on one, or split them up and use both when dehydrating different things that take different temperature or just can not be done at the same time.
My mom still uses the popcorn maker till this day and so do I, my 15 year old son also loves making his popcorn this way versus the microwave.
I loved our ice crusher. I used it daily because I put the ice in tea, soda, water, and even milk to keep drinks ice cold..
The 70s soda stream maker may not have had the flavours we have today but it did have the flavours that were available from the shops at the time. Soda was more basic back then.
One of my college friends had a popcorn popper in her dorm room. Back then (early 80's), hotplates and microwaves weren't allowed in dorm rooms. I guess she was allowed to have the popcorn popper, but of course I never asked 😉😊
The old air popper was/is the best. I still use it. The one I have is decades old. Way better than the weird microwave or messy stovetop option.
I love my Showtime Rotisserie Oven. The meats turn out juicy, succulent, and browned on the outside. Yes, it has to be cleaned after use but it is well worth it.
The bread maker was great. I used mine to the point that the computer part of it went bonkers. It was from the 90s, I believe.
Wrong about the popcorn popper. Many people I know including my family use it regularly.
Walmart still sells a hotdog toaster today, I have two salad shooters, the problem with hot air poppers it the popcorn shriveled when buttered, the only problem I ever had with my dehydrators was the plastic trays cracked from the heat, the only thing the electric knife sharpener was good for was turning your knives into paring knives. All they did was grind the blades down to nothing, I still have and use my fondue pot for shrimp fondue all the time.
Food dehydrators are useful - if you have a garden an e.g. apple trees. Dried apple slices are delughtful snacks.
We had the yellow top popcorn maker and the one that spouted into the bowl in the 70's.We also had a "Dynamite 8" 8 track player.
Ronco came up woth so many junk appliances,especially when Chrostmas came arpund.
Glad I didn't have all of the items though I do admit to having more than half of the list and still using my dehydrator, rotisserie, popcorn popper, and a few others. I kinda wish we could get a new Electric Wok the later designs with the temp controller were not as bad as the original ones. Some kitchens still don't have the best stove position in layout for traditional wok on the burner. and its not practical to redesign the layout just to get the elbow room needed. Hope there weren't too many people who pointed out two of your items on the list were effective repeats.
Rummage sales are great for picking up a hot air popcorn popper....like 3/8 sales we've gotten to.
Joke of the day: Question - What do you call a vegetarian with the runs? Answer - Salad Shooter!
Lame joke, @shawngabriel7397.
@dragonfirepeach4000 that was a very old joke that came out when the first salad shooters were made.
Like this a lot thumbs up but a great deal of these are really eighties phenomena.
i got a popcorn popper in my home and a light blue aqua Microwave and Toaster
The Salad Shooter will be back with easier clean up, more blades, and it will be wireless.
I have always wished for a cordless version!
Saw a "really cool kitchen items on Amazon" yesterday that featured an electric can opener with a knife sharpener and a bottle opener.
Funny! I have 3 food dehydrators. All 3 were going and in peak garden season, they go for days on end.
Today's soda streamers are no better or worse than they were 50 years ago.Frankly, I would rather just go ahead and buy one from the store.Considering how expensive it is to buy the ingredients to get one
The hotdog toaster and popcorn popper seems like they would be popular with college students back them. I had one of those food dehydrators that I never used…… My husband got many years out of the salad shooter
My family had a popcorn popper in the 90s, and it was fun as a kid. We ended up tossing it because the wiring was getting messed up
A common theme in all of these appliances, and why some have not survived is that they are not used regularly. Either because they are for special occasions or because there are other simpler alternatives. A lot of these could be replaced simply by learning some knife skills. In the case of the crushed ice maker, I make crushed ice for cocktails just by tapping the cube with the back of a spoon. If I am mixing drinks, there is the added bonus of showing off my bartender skills.
hot air poppers are still plenty easy to get as well as food dehydrators
We have an electric can opener and it's the best! Way better than struggling with a manual one or using the point of the knife to open cans
I still have my electric can opener 10 years and it still works great
We now have air-fryers to dehydrate foods.
20:36 Electric Woks
You opened this part of your clickbait listicle, with the Breville US market Gourmet Wok EW30XL, a late 1990s product.
So much for this listicle for being about 1970s appliances.
I gave my fondue pot to my friends when I moved across country. They were borrowing it often and I didn’t use it except with them 😂
I still use the shredder attachment to my kitchenaid. Use it a lot.
Most of these appliances were either from the 1980s and beyond or some were from decades long before the 1970s
Very few were popular or even available in the 1970s
As an example, the video compares popcorn makers being an unnecessary item because microwave popcorn was so easy and convenient. Microwave popcorn wasn’t even on the market in the ‘70s and most people didn’t own or even know what a microwave oven was. They didn’t become popular until the ‘80s.
Other appliances like the rotisserie oven. These were around back in the 1950s and yes they were big bulky things, that took up a lot of space. You would very often find them at the local thrift store in the 1960s
As usual for this Channel, much misinformation and lack of knowledge
Duuuuuuuuude. I still have--and LOVE--my oil popcorn maker. Nothing tastes nearly as good. And, okay, it's a one-use appliance. But popcorn out of this bad boy tastes AMAZING, while, when my coworkers make microwave popcorn, it either smells like cat pee or burnt leaves. I'll keep my bulky, weird oil popper. And my kid has already claimed dibs on it when my popping days are over.