Much as I love Christmas and its comforting rituals, there’s one festive tradition I’d like to consign to history: the yearly giving of unneeded kitchen gadgets. Kitchen cupboards up and down the country, as well as shelves in charity shops and countless pages on eBay, are hosting these space-hogging dust-gatherers: smoothie makers (ever heard of a liquidiser?), wine aerators (what?), quesadilla makers (yes, really), the list goes on…
Every era has its pointless Christmas gift kitchen gadgets. In the Eighties it was those mini hedge-trimmer electric knives. In the Nineties it was mini doughnut maker/bakers. A few years ago everyone was going bonkers over cupcakes, prompting sales of a dedicated cupcake maker, so you could more easily knock up your own innocuous mini sponges weighed down by supersize swirly dollops of fatty, oversweet gloop. I wonder just how many thousands of cupcake makers were gifted the first Christmas the gadget was available? Now, of course, it’s discontinued.