In the Fall of 2018, Cleve Oines seasoned 4 steaks with salt and freshly ground black pepper.
It took 73 cranks of the pepper mill.
- At crank 10, Cleve wondered if there was a better way. Pre ground pepper degrades rapidly once ground, so it isn't an ideal option.
- At crank 20, he adjusted his pepper mill to the "COARSE" setting in order to increase the output. The difference was imperceptible.
- At crank 30, he wondered why there was such wide variation in grind size, with huge chunks of pepper popping ponderously from the pepper mill preceding particulates of petite pepper powder. Preposterous.
- At crank 40, he wondered if pepper mills hadn't been updated since the 5th century when peppercorns were used as currency, or perhaps since they were used to embalm Pharaoh Ramses II in 1213 BC. It certainly seemed like the pepper mill was designed to conserve its precious spice...
- At crank 50, he considered the possibility of pepper mills as home fitness devices, then he remembered that cranking pepper mills is boring. More pepper with less cranks was the answer.
- At crank 73 he stopped grinding, and resolved to build a better pepper mill.
786 days, 54 revisions, 11 prototypes, 82 tests, and 4,673 sneezes later, the MÄNNKITCHEN Pepper Cannon was born.
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7. Problems Solved:
1. Speed: The MÄNNKITCHEN Pepper cannon possesses coarse settings that produce obscene quantities of ground pepper. Up to 10x the output of standard pepper mills. You'll say: "that's too much pepper" for the first time in your life. You may briefly consider writing a review containing the words "too much pepper", but you'll remember that you willingly purchased an item called the Pepper Cannon. Then you'll decrease the coarseness until the output is merely excessive. You'll pepper your eggs with 1/2 crank instead of 5, and with your extra time you'll cure cancer and give your partner proper lovin'. You're welcome, World.
2. Grind Quality: Too many pepper mills use wobbly drive shafts that turn an undersized self-dulling burr set. The male and female burrs grind against each other (which is way less fun than it sounds) resulting in dull, chipped burr teeth and allowing larger than desired pepper particles to pass. The Pepper Cannon from MÄNNKITCHEN uses a heavy gauge, double-bearing supported, rigid drive shaft, powering wicked-sharp burrs made of high-carbon stainless steel, hardened in the fires of Mount You-get-the-point. You can grind everything from pixie-dust fine powder up to 1/4 cracked pepper, and thanks to precision engineering it only grinds black pepper-not its own teeth.
3. Adjustment Creep: "Let's put the grind adjuster on a threaded shaft in direct contact with the rotating top!" said no good designer ever. A rotating grind adjuster in direct contact with a rotating top is a recipe for wildly inconsistent ground pepper. The grind adjuster on the Pepper Cannon is on the bottom where adjusters belong, and it won't move unless you move it. Consistent grinds, all the times.
4. Cumbersome Filling: "I've got it!" said the same bad designer, "Let's make it so the grind adjuster ALSO holds the top on-that way it has to be removed completely in order to refill the mill!" No. Just... no. The Pepper grinder from MÄNNKITCHEN features a top that pops off with the push of a button for easy filling, then presses back into place with a satisfying metallic "Click". No need to RE-move, RE-place, and RE-calibrate your grind adjuster just to RE-fill a pepper mill, because that's RE-dundant.
5. The Bloody Hand Conundrum: You've seasoned meat on one side, now what? You've got to flip it over and season the other side, which means you'll either have to wash your hands mid-seasoning OR handle your pepper mill with a bloody hand. We've all been there. The MÄNNKITCHEN pepper mill features a removable base cup. You can use it without the cup in normal operation, or you can grind a pile of pepper into the cup then sprinkle it directly from the cup when one-handed peppering is preferable.
6. Durability: The MÄNNKITCHEN Pepper Cannon is milled from a solid chunk of Aerospace Grade Aluminum. Not plastic. Not wood. Not glass. It's metal. Machining it from metal allows us to achieve the very strict tolerances required for precision parts to produce exceptional results while adding strength and durability. It's not the cheapest way to build a pepper mill, because that's already been tried. A lot.
7. Sustainability: Aluminum is the most abundant metal on planet Earth, is 100% recyclable and can be recycled indefinitely.
30 Kommentare
Put me down on the list for a salt cannon too. (Couldn’t find where to sign up)
Happy Thanksgiving!
Cheers,
Jon
This is exactly what I’ve been looking for….. too bad it ended up being so much. If the kickstarted is successful and you end up being able to make this and sell it for around $70 in the future, let me know I’ll buy one for sure.
Dude, you had me at “aerospace grade aluminum”. I went to KS yesterday and backed the project.
Received an email today about the “Salt Cannon”.
Details? Do tell…
Will any more giveaways be done?
Hi All-thanks for your comments! I received over 50 replies via email with price guesses ranging from $350 to under $50. The average of all guesses was $115, and the actual MSRP will be $199 with Kickstarter backers getting it for $149 with free shipping anywhere in the US. International shipping will be $22. The guy who won the drawing guessed $74.99 and had this to say when he received his Cannon: “The quality is astounding. I think my original street price needs a significant upward revision.” Is it expensive? Yes. It also outperforms the top rated mills by 5-16X (speed at course settings) has superior grind consistency, build quality, and dramatically more grind options. Launching a limited quantity of Pepper Cannons on Kickstarter Nov 4, 2020 at 11 AM ET, 8 AM Pacific. https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/mannkitchen/mannkitchen-pepper-cannon-the-pepper-mill-for-pepper-lovers/
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