It literally does everything from making the aata dough, rolling and cooking it - quite an innovation! As a kid we used to have those telebrand - semi -automated rotimakers. It still used to be a painful activity for my mother. Having this machine at my house now has solved so many problems. Totally love the ease brought in cooking by this machine.
Our machine failed after making 1800 rotis. Their support is not helpful and they wash their hands as soon as their warranty expires. They are trying to sell refurbished product to me at nearly the price of new.
I've tried it. There is a thickness setting and after warms up in like 10 mins it starts making roti's every 20-30 seconds. Also you can control it from your phone as it is connected to the home wifi. So you can start right when you leave work or whatever. It was also $600 when it was still being funded a couple months ago. CNET missed a lot of details.
My relatives have Rotimatic. Even at the thinnest setting, Rotis are as thick as a paratha. It is nowhere near what a roti is (at least in Gujarat.) $600 was a teaser only; it was for the people who paid up front or put a deposit four years back. As of this year, when the Rotimatic became available in the USA, the price is $999 +$100 shipping, that is a total of $1,100. CNET is right in its assessment.Of course, it forgot to mention that the machine is quite noisy too.
I am using Rotimatic every day. Of course you can't compare it to the home-made phulka but it is way better than the frozen rotis we used to eat. We got used to the taste within a week. Also, don't forget hassle of making rotis after working in the office the entire day. Seriously, my wife and I can't think of going back either to cooking rotis at home or eating frozen store rotis.
I think the fact that they're unable to make the roti thinner is entirely due to the design. This machine uses a pressing action rather than a rolling action to flatten the roti. I find this machine VERY fascinating. I'm not an expert at roti, I'm just looking at this machine from a design standpoint having dealt with similar industrial machines for many years. One things for sure, this machine definitely operates like an industrial machine. lol .... There are clearly a few servomotors in there listening the sound it makes and obviously loadcells to control the pressing force which may further explain why it's expensive. This is a complicated machine, no doubt about it.
Making rotis by hand requires..... two hands. Unless you're an Indian goddess with multiple arms, you're going to have to make rotis AFTER you finish cooking the rest of your meal. Rotimatic should cut total cooking time by half for a quick meal.
I think the CNET review missed the entire point of convenience & efficiency the machine brings to the tiresome job of making the rotis at home after a hard day's work. For working professionals this machine is no less than a miracle
My relatives have Rotimatic. Even at the thinnest setting, Rotis are as thick as a paratha. It is nowhere near what a roti is (at least in Gujarat.) $600 was a teaser only; it was for the people who paid up front or put a deposit four years back. As of this year, when the Rotimatic became available in the USA, the price is $999 +$100 shipping, that is a total of $1,100. CNET is right in its assessment.Of course, it forgot to mention that the machine is quite noisy too.
Bhavana looks like there is an army of home cooks ( who sell home made rotis) that are posting bad reviews. We have this machine . It is just fantastic!
Our machine failed after making 1800 rotis. Their support is not helpful and they wash their hands as soon as their warranty expires. They are trying to sell refurbished product to me at nearly the price of new.
Wow CNET, you wrote off a highly useful machine based on one users review? So much for credibility. I have this machine and for my family it is a huge help. 2 working parents, 2 busy kids, who has the time to make dough, roll out rotis at the end of a workday? Let alone the energy!. Here are my thoughts on it. Pros: convenience, makes a roti per min, saving you time and effort. Make as many as you want, no wastage. Has options to control thickness, roast level, oil. Has options to use different types of wheat flour. Options to make puri or roti. Is wifi connected, updates are pushed easily to machines. Roti tastes good, fully cooked, puffed up perfectly. Pays for itself in the long run. I was spending 25 per week ordering rotis. Customer service has improved by leaps over the last few months. Easy to clean, low maintenance( wipe down the mixing container, empty water container every use). How to videos come with the rotimatic app . Cons: huge price tag. Not without issues. I've had water container issues but they replaced it. Dough ball getting stuck, which I realized I could avert by doing a quick clean before warm up. Long warm up and cool down time -5-6 mins to warm up.Warranty can be longer for $1000 machine. Not meant for Gujarati style rotis which Mona was referring to in the video, which are literally tissue thin. No option for additives in the flour but people have experimented and made it work. If you're looking for mom made uber perfect chapatis look elsewhere. It makes perfectly tasty, fluffy chapatis but I can't compare it to chapatis my mom makes. But then She adds ingredients like milk, yoghurt to make it tastier. Overall Pros largely outweigh cons. There is nothing that beats the convenience of piping fresh rotis on demand!
you got it wrong about indian people mate.. The product is almost sold out everywhere in India and around the world. There is waiting list of months to get into the delivery queue. Still living in the pre-colonial era thinking about Indian's as snake Charmers? Probably you are stilling mortgaging your car and home.. where as working professionals in India are driving BMW and Merc fully paid
Rotimatic still needs some fixing like making it thinner so it's a Roti not Naan which is thicker and less nutritious. As with all technology, other manufacturers like Kenwood, Moulinex, even Samsung will be able to recraft it and fix the flaws for that perfect roti. Then the price will drop to a more sensible figure like $499 or £400 in UK 🇬🇧. Until then, we will knead it the traditional way. 😇
It's a great machine for working women so their husbands could still eat hot fresh rotis, and it doesn't take long time plus rotis are very tasty. I have it and it is the most amazing purchase I made, don't agree to this review at all. Wrong Review CNET.
WIFI is only counting rotis check on thier website they just telling we served this amount of rotis so far mean this wifi sending usage data to them that's it
I have been using it in US. Its not that bad if u are fine with not so soft and for something which is somewhat between roti and bhakhari.. Good for people who are dieting as it uses just one drop of oil per roti. But for those who are used to eat fresh homemade roti, they are never going to like it.
Have seen this machine ‘in action’ at a friend’s. Yes it is convenient, but it is a compromise on quality. It’s like a huge printing-faxing machine, only louder! Rotis don’t even get cooked thru, the edges don’t get done unless it’s roasted to a crisp. If the objective is to eat hot rotis that someone (or thing) else makes, but you aren’t allowed to complain - this would be it!
Just use the featured attas (the one's that have setting for them). The website also, through user feedback tells u the setting to use for all other attas. Also, after a little while, I have noticed that the rotis get better, they are now bigger.
I can give up a thin roti if I don't have to make the dough, roll it, and cook it. Plus fresh while I eat is a bonus. For a working person, it is worth the money. If you use it once a day for a year, you are spending less than three dollars a day. Totally worth it.
Write Intent They are Singaporeans now. The whole project was initiated and funded by Singapore. The couple changed citizenship. So you can’t claim them as yours.
If the rotis were better than home made and much quicker and the device itself was near the 300 dollar range, it would be worth getting. It produces a sub par product, at a slower rate and for a grand, no thanks.
My relatives have Rotimatic. Even at the thinnest setting, Rotis are as thick as a paratha. It is nowhere near what a roti is (at least in Gujarat.) Four years back they announced a price of $500 but it was a teaser only; it was for the people who paid up front or put a deposit four years back. As of this year, when the Rotimatic became available in the USA, the price is $999 +$100 shipping, that is a total of $1,100. CNET is right in its assessment.Of course, it forgot to mention that the machine is quite noisy too.
Being a person whoabsolutely hated making rotis, once I turned 12, I was pretty excited when I heard about this.. Then, over the 4 years that it took to get it out in the market, I had a lot of time to think. The amount is WAY OVER THE TOP for something that we will use only to make 3-4 rotis 5 days a week, & may be 10 over the weekend, (any kind). It will not make STUFFED PARATHAS, the way we like it, & make most often. Then, there are the PHYSYCAL & stress busting perks of making the dough manually & the psycologically calming effects, literally a spiritually enlightening experience you have when you see the joy in the face of the person in whose plate you place the roti from the Tawa direct. As I said earlier, I hated making rotis, but the day I experienced thayt,I was comvinced there is nomatch to that. Well, I watch out for my carbon footprint too.
Poonam Abbi i saw a video where they showed more of the machine in use. It is very noisy. For 1000 dollars it could at least be quiet. I would not spend 1000 or even 500 dollars on a tortilla maker.
The roti expert cannot even say "roti" right. And the rotimatic is not supposed to be faster than home made although it is. The rotimatic is to save the time that one would spend making the roti, you turn it on and leave. It is to save the effort from adding water to flour and making a dough. Then one must, shape then into balls, flatten them and cook it. The "home made" rotis take time not only to make them but also clean up. Atta is all over the counter, the bowl in which you made the dough is hard to clean due to wet atta. And that atta spreads undoubtably to the kitchen floor. It is mess free. And to all the people that are big money savers. I, a 16 year old got a part time job and bought it within 90 work hours at minimum wage ($14 in canada). This is an investment to save time, you can literally make back the money if you consider time is money. For me each hour saved is $14, for all the other adults that hour is worth more.
anyone who likes Roti. I come from the west indies where there is a sizeable amount of black and Indian people and we ALL eat roti. but not this kind of roti. what this machine makes is shit.
I’m going to buy it. My roti is so outrageous that I’m fine with a thicker roti . Yum can’t wait . And for 1000 It’s a lot but better than doing it yourself if you suck
Has CNET tried making rotisserie by themselves? Everyone cannot make rotis that easily by hand. I prefer the rotimatic even though I can make decent rotis by hand. Just avoid all the work anytime you need rotis or pooris. And you can make them fresh 3 times a day if you wanted to. It easily makes up for the money spent.
Our machine failed after making 1800 rotis. Their support is not helpful and they wash their hands as soon as their warranty expires. They are trying to sell refurbished product to me at nearly the price of new.
Guess what, I bought an IPhone 6 And Watched an TH-cam videos from it for making Roti,Naan, and M happily sharing this Experience with u guy's.. Yeah.Think Big
That has to be one of the most useless products for the money. If a company is going to go for such an insane price markup, they should at least make sure that it would prepare foot that is at a level equivalent to a human who knows how to make the same food.
My relatives have Rotimatic. Even at the thinnest setting, Rotis are as thick as a paratha. It is nowhere near what a roti is (at least in Gujarat.) Four years back they announced a price of $500 but it was a teaser only; it was for the people who paid up front or put a deposit four years back. As of this year, when the Rotimatic became available in the USA, the price is $999 +$100 shipping, that is a total of $1,100. CNET is right in its assessment.Of course, it forgot to mention that the machine is quite noisy too.
this review was useless. they brought an indian "expert" who cant even pronounce roti. then the african girl is the one who says it's not as good as the real roti. doesnt make sense. also what about people who can't make a roti at all without this machine?
At least she knows how to make goto, only thing u probably know it say the name and eat, so don't judge people for their language, color or nationality
Simon Rai You’re silly. She didn’t say roti the wrong way; I’m guessing she is Gujarati because she said it the Gujarati way, “Rotli” and the thicker version “Bhakhri”.
This video is absolute and utter rubbish, rotimatic has completely revolutionized the concept of making rotis daily which is extremely tiring, the important areas to consider is using the right type of flour for the required setting, (we all knows it's not as good as mum's)....my only concern is how fragile the parts are.....only time will tell
My relatives have Rotimatic. Even at the thinnest setting, Rotis are as thick as a paratha. It is nowhere near what a roti is (at least in Gujarat.) $600 was a teaser only; it was for the people who paid up front or put a deposit four years back. As of this year, when the Rotimatic became available in the USA, the price is $999 +$100 shipping, that is a total of $1,100. CNET is right in its assessment.Of course, it forgot to mention that the machine is quite noisy too.
Very bad machine not designed for repair in the field. Making it very expensive repairs after warranty. Poor tech support that does not listen. Agents superficially polite and not helpful. Every time you need to contact it takes long time and you start new diagnosis with each agent. Very poor design perhaps by inexperienced business team that doesn’t properly understand important of customer satisfaction.
It literally does everything from making the aata dough, rolling and cooking it - quite an innovation! As a kid we used to have those telebrand - semi -automated rotimakers. It still used to be a painful activity for my mother. Having this machine at my house now has solved so many problems. Totally love the ease brought in cooking by this machine.
A better title would have been
"Rotimatic flatbread maker is cool, but not worth your dough"
Please address message I have to need in store address
Our machine failed after making 1800 rotis. Their support is not helpful and they wash their hands as soon as their warranty expires. They are trying to sell refurbished product to me at nearly the price of new.
I've tried it. There is a thickness setting and after warms up in like 10 mins it starts making roti's every 20-30 seconds. Also you can control it from your phone as it is connected to the home wifi. So you can start right when you leave work or whatever. It was also $600 when it was still being funded a couple months ago. CNET missed a lot of details.
oh , it was a Kickstarter campaign? well, seems this device marketed in a niche market. many people still didn't know roti.
I agree with Neal's view. CNET review missed a lot of points on how the machine has significantly reduced 35-40 minute job everyday
My relatives have Rotimatic. Even at the thinnest setting, Rotis are as thick as a paratha. It is nowhere near what a roti is (at least in Gujarat.) $600 was a teaser only; it was for the people who paid up front or put a deposit four years back. As of this year, when the Rotimatic became available in the USA, the price is $999 +$100 shipping, that is a total of $1,100. CNET is right in its assessment.Of course, it forgot to mention that the machine is quite noisy too.
I am using Rotimatic every day. Of course you can't compare it to the home-made phulka but it is way better than the frozen rotis we used to eat. We got used to the taste within a week. Also, don't forget hassle of making rotis after working in the office the entire day. Seriously, my wife and I can't think of going back either to cooking rotis at home or eating frozen store rotis.
Agree it is a bit noisy but so is my mixer
I think the fact that they're unable to make the roti thinner is entirely due to the design. This machine uses a pressing action rather than a rolling action to flatten the roti.
I find this machine VERY fascinating. I'm not an expert at roti, I'm just looking at this machine from a design standpoint having dealt with similar industrial machines for many years. One things for sure, this machine definitely operates like an industrial machine. lol .... There are clearly a few servomotors in there listening the sound it makes and obviously loadcells to control the pressing force which may further explain why it's expensive. This is a complicated machine, no doubt about it.
Finally a review that wasn't paid by Rotimatic
Making rotis by hand requires..... two hands.
Unless you're an Indian goddess with multiple arms, you're going to have to make rotis AFTER you finish cooking the rest of your meal. Rotimatic should cut total cooking time by half for a quick meal.
I think the CNET review missed the entire point of convenience & efficiency the machine brings to the tiresome job of making the rotis at home after a hard day's work. For working professionals this machine is no less than a miracle
My relatives have Rotimatic. Even at the thinnest setting, Rotis are as thick as a paratha. It is nowhere near what a roti is (at least in Gujarat.) $600 was a teaser only; it was for the people who paid up front or put a deposit four years back. As of this year, when the Rotimatic became available in the USA, the price is $999 +$100 shipping, that is a total of $1,100. CNET is right in its assessment.Of course, it forgot to mention that the machine is quite noisy too.
Bhavana looks like there is an army of home cooks ( who sell home made rotis) that are posting bad reviews. We have this machine . It is just fantastic!
Don’t try too hard. The machine is not worth it.
Our machine failed after making 1800 rotis. Their support is not helpful and they wash their hands as soon as their warranty expires. They are trying to sell refurbished product to me at nearly the price of new.
I personally like this machine because it kneads the dough, which saves a lot of time.
no machine can make better roti than my mother😄😄
If they can find a way to make it cheaper than this would be a time saver for me
Wow CNET, you wrote off a highly useful machine based on one users review? So much for credibility. I have this machine and for my family it is a huge help. 2 working parents, 2 busy kids, who has the time to make dough, roll out rotis at the end of a workday? Let alone the energy!. Here are my thoughts on it. Pros: convenience, makes a roti per min, saving you time and effort. Make as many as you want, no wastage. Has options to control thickness, roast level, oil. Has options to use different types of wheat flour. Options to make puri or roti. Is wifi connected, updates are pushed easily to machines. Roti tastes good, fully cooked, puffed up perfectly. Pays for itself in the long run. I was spending 25 per week ordering rotis. Customer service has improved by leaps over the last few months. Easy to clean, low maintenance( wipe down the mixing container, empty water container every use). How to videos come with the rotimatic app .
Cons: huge price tag. Not without issues. I've had water container issues but they replaced it. Dough ball getting stuck, which I realized I could avert by doing a quick clean before warm up. Long warm up and cool down time -5-6 mins to warm up.Warranty can be longer for $1000 machine. Not meant for Gujarati style rotis which Mona was referring to in the video, which are literally tissue thin. No option for additives in the flour but people have experimented and made it work. If you're looking for mom made uber perfect chapatis look elsewhere. It makes perfectly tasty, fluffy chapatis but I can't compare it to chapatis my mom makes. But then She adds ingredients like milk, yoghurt to make it tastier.
Overall Pros largely outweigh cons. There is nothing that beats the convenience of piping fresh rotis on demand!
Indian people spending $1000 on this ? you got the wrong demographic.
you got it wrong about indian people mate.. The product is almost sold out everywhere in India and around the world. There is waiting list of months to get into the delivery queue. Still living in the pre-colonial era thinking about Indian's as snake Charmers? Probably you are stilling mortgaging your car and home.. where as working professionals in India are driving BMW and Merc fully paid
You are talking about your mom and dad generation. The young people who need Indian food every day will pay for convenience.
It's marketed primarily for NRIs.
Rotimatic still needs some fixing like making it thinner so it's a Roti not Naan which is thicker and less nutritious.
As with all technology, other manufacturers like Kenwood, Moulinex, even Samsung will be able to recraft it and fix the flaws for that perfect roti.
Then the price will drop to a more sensible figure like $499 or £400 in UK 🇬🇧. Until then, we will knead it the traditional way. 😇
This machine, not only saves time. But also saves energy. For busy Moms out there, this machine will helps
Triggered every time they say Row-Tee
I was like....How is flatbread ROMANTIC?
It's a great machine for working women so their husbands could still eat hot fresh rotis, and it doesn't take long time plus rotis are very tasty. I have it and it is the most amazing purchase I made, don't agree to this review at all. Wrong Review CNET.
or.... husbands can learn how to make rotis.
1000 dollars for this machine is way too much!
they should have priced it at $199.99... but their production is so slow that its unbelievable!
WIFI is only counting rotis check on thier website they just telling we served this amount of rotis so far mean this wifi sending usage data to them that's it
I have been using it in US. Its not that bad if u are fine with not so soft and for something which is somewhat between roti and bhakhari.. Good for people who are dieting as it uses just one drop of oil per roti. But for those who are used to eat fresh homemade roti, they are never going to like it.
Have seen this machine ‘in action’ at a friend’s. Yes it is convenient, but it is a compromise on quality. It’s like a huge printing-faxing machine, only louder! Rotis don’t even get cooked thru, the edges don’t get done unless it’s roasted to a crisp. If the objective is to eat hot rotis that someone (or thing) else makes, but you aren’t allowed to complain - this would be it!
Just use the featured attas (the one's that have setting for them). The website also, through user feedback tells u the setting to use for all other attas. Also, after a little while, I have noticed that the rotis get better, they are now bigger.
I can give up a thin roti if I don't have to make the dough, roll it, and cook it. Plus fresh while I eat is a bonus. For a working person, it is worth the money. If you use it once a day for a year, you are spending less than three dollars a day. Totally worth it.
this product is actually conceptualized and designed in Singapore.
By an Indian couple living in Singapore
Write Intent They are Singaporeans now. The whole project was initiated and funded by Singapore. The couple changed citizenship. So you can’t claim them as yours.
If the rotis were better than home made and much quicker and the device itself was near the 300 dollar range, it would be worth getting. It produces a sub par product, at a slower rate and for a grand, no thanks.
My relatives have Rotimatic. Even at the thinnest setting, Rotis are as thick as a paratha. It is nowhere near what a roti is (at least in Gujarat.) Four years back they announced a price of $500 but it was a teaser only; it was for the people who paid up front or put a deposit four years back. As of this year, when the Rotimatic became available in the USA, the price is $999 +$100 shipping, that is a total of $1,100. CNET is right in its assessment.Of course, it forgot to mention that the machine is quite noisy too.
oh please i just bought it few months ago and its the best thing i have spend money on. love the rotis n puris. had made my life so much easier.
Where is it available in India
I just ordered it 1400 Euro here in Ireland
Gold Tipu Not worth it. You wl have a hard time when it breaks down, if u r living in Ireland.
@@kodhaivaradarajan2154
I bought it in 1500 euro its working fine so far 2 year support and warranty included came from Malaysia
Being a person whoabsolutely hated making rotis, once I turned 12, I was pretty excited when I heard about this.. Then, over the 4 years that it took to get it out in the market, I had a lot of time to think. The amount is WAY OVER THE TOP for something that we will use only to make 3-4 rotis 5 days a week, & may be 10 over the weekend, (any kind). It will not make STUFFED PARATHAS, the way we like it, & make most often. Then, there are the PHYSYCAL & stress busting perks of making the dough manually & the psycologically calming effects, literally a spiritually enlightening experience you have when you see the joy in the face of the person in whose plate you place the roti from the Tawa direct. As I said earlier, I hated making rotis, but the day I experienced thayt,I was comvinced there is nomatch to that. Well, I watch out for my carbon footprint too.
Poonam Abbi i saw a video where they showed more of the machine in use. It is very noisy. For 1000 dollars it could at least be quiet. I would not spend 1000 or even 500 dollars on a tortilla maker.
Poonam Abbi Fd dmsjrjjrndxndmdmdlkzjxbzn’b.
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Jajajahajagynybu
Rather than this I would buy a roti maker which costs around $40 and would make the dough with ✋
IMHO... Making the side dish is the tough part. Are there any "matic" for that? :-)
Where can you purchase it online. Seen something on fb but kind of leery.
I am selling mine which still has warranty and working perfectly.. ppl in California if interested let me know
What was the point of that?
The roti expert cannot even say "roti" right.
And the rotimatic is not supposed to be faster than home made although it is. The rotimatic is to save the time that one would spend making the roti, you turn it on and leave.
It is to save the effort from adding water to flour and making a dough. Then one must, shape then into balls, flatten them and cook it. The "home made" rotis take time not only to make them but also clean up. Atta is all over the counter, the bowl in which you made the dough is hard to clean due to wet atta. And that atta spreads undoubtably to the kitchen floor.
It is mess free. And to all the people that are big money savers.
I, a 16 year old got a part time job and bought it within 90 work hours at minimum wage ($14 in canada).
This is an investment to save time, you can literally make back the money if you consider time is money.
For me each hour saved is $14, for all the other adults that hour is worth more.
So it made for indian people?
anyone who likes Roti.
I come from the west indies where there is a sizeable amount of black and Indian people and we ALL eat roti. but not this kind of roti. what this machine makes is shit.
It ain’t shit Bobby . Black ppl eat thicker toro anyway
How much the price??
And is there delivery to 🇦🇪 uae??
I’m going to buy it. My roti is so outrageous that I’m fine with a thicker roti . Yum can’t wait . And for 1000 It’s a lot but better than doing it yourself if you suck
Soniya I definitely prefer the thinner roti. Can really taste the curry that way. Thick roti overwhelms and fills you up, too quick.
1000 for a roti? gtf outta here
Those of you who have used this, how much do you think it's worth?
I will wait for a better and cheaper version in this niche
I am selling my rotimatic which still has warranty.
Has CNET tried making rotisserie by themselves? Everyone cannot make rotis that easily by hand. I prefer the rotimatic even though I can make decent rotis by hand. Just avoid all the work anytime you need rotis or pooris. And you can make them fresh 3 times a day if you wanted to. It easily makes up for the money spent.
Our machine failed after making 1800 rotis. Their support is not helpful and they wash their hands as soon as their warranty expires. They are trying to sell refurbished product to me at nearly the price of new.
Its actually Roti Prata, a Singaporean dish. Shame that it is called flatbread here.
I never know that Indian Flatebread is only 4 inch , Rotimatic makes 4 inch , thats it.
why don't they make one of these for mexican corn tortillas?
U can make tortillas from Rotimatic
Some of these day one of these ridiculous gizmos will turn up to be pretty good. And it will start a huge wave of personal home robotics.
Exactly, then Skynet starves us to death...
ata kothae pabo bolban pilizz onlin pabo r koto dam atar
Guess what, I bought an IPhone 6 And Watched an TH-cam videos from it for making Roti,Naan, and M happily sharing this Experience with u guy's..
Yeah.Think Big
Well! I love roti and also have been eating roti my whole life. This product is excellent but too pricey.
RIDICULOUS ! Cost, concept, noise!
For mere $25 per month, I can hire a maid to cook 30-40 rotis a day.
nice review, thanks
1000 bucks for a noisy printer !!!! no way
beautiful roti
beautiful 😀👍
I think should be called chapati maker
Hm this one???
Why is the Indian girl saying ‘roli’?
ikr, its like she just found out what it is.
Lots of positive comments here amidst the negativities. But really, will you spend a grand on this? Ouch. Reality bites.
That has to be one of the most useless products for the money. If a company is going to go for such an insane price markup, they should at least make sure that it would prepare foot that is at a level equivalent to a human who knows how to make the same food.
My relatives have Rotimatic. Even at the thinnest setting, Rotis are as thick as a paratha. It is nowhere near what a roti is (at least in Gujarat.) Four years back they announced a price of $500 but it was a teaser only; it was for the people who paid up front or put a deposit four years back. As of this year, when the Rotimatic became available in the USA, the price is $999 +$100 shipping, that is a total of $1,100. CNET is right in its assessment.Of course, it forgot to mention that the machine is quite noisy too.
this review was useless. they brought an indian "expert" who cant even pronounce roti. then the african girl is the one who says it's not as good as the real roti. doesnt make sense. also what about people who can't make a roti at all without this machine?
At least she knows how to make goto, only thing u probably know it say the name and eat, so don't judge people for their language, color or nationality
Simon Rai You’re silly. She didn’t say roti the wrong way; I’m guessing she is Gujarati because she said it the Gujarati way, “Rotli” and the thicker version “Bhakhri”.
i got it for 100 dollars?
Ouch
Hargany brapA
This video is absolute and utter rubbish, rotimatic has completely revolutionized the concept of making rotis daily which is extremely tiring, the important areas to consider is using the right type of flour for the required setting, (we all knows it's not as good as mum's)....my only concern is how fragile the parts are.....only time will tell
I own Rotimatic and we make rotis every day. Our rotis are really good and we love the product.... this video is garbage.
Gaurav Kisan does it make thin soft rotis like handmade rotis?
Terrible review
My relatives have Rotimatic. Even at the thinnest setting, Rotis are as thick as a paratha. It is nowhere near what a roti is (at least in Gujarat.) $600 was a teaser only; it was for the people who paid up front or put a deposit four years back. As of this year, when the Rotimatic became available in the USA, the price is $999 +$100 shipping, that is a total of $1,100. CNET is right in its assessment.Of course, it forgot to mention that the machine is quite noisy too.
is that ruti is as same as home made and the taste also
It was worth it for me.
SKS
Have you tried Rotimatic ? Please let me know if it is good and how much you paid.
Karim Sumar Yes its worth it. Total is $1000 plus $100 shipping. $1100 landed cost.
very expensive
कहा मीलेगी हमे चाहीये फोन नं दिजीए
Wtf
fancy
yes true just like iPhone
Whaaa Faaaay enabled
Piadinetor 🇮🇹
Very bad machine not designed for repair in the field. Making it very expensive repairs after warranty. Poor tech support that does not listen. Agents superficially polite and not helpful.
Every time you need to contact it takes long time and you start new diagnosis with each agent. Very poor design perhaps by inexperienced business team that doesn’t properly understand important of customer satisfaction.
रोटी मशीन वाले कंपनी के नंबर चाहिए रोटी मशीन की कंपनी वाले के नंबर चाहिए मेरे नंबर 685
lol
Rmutyfhgj
Yum 👅 🤤🤤🤤🤤
Pointless review. Sorry.
1st