![]() ![]() Holding from the top does allow for greater leverage and makes pressing down firmly on the pizza easy when slicing. We tried a few like this: a Zyliss model, an Oxo one, the Kitchy pizza cutter wheel, and a very nice Rösle stainless-steel pizza cutter, which was our favorite of this design because it was large, sturdy, and had a well-made handle. When we began testing, we were partial to a simple wheel pizza slicer with a protective cover on top. As for the purported serving capabilities, the spatula base was capable of passing small slices across the table, but if a pizza slice had more sauce and heft, it didn’t make it. However, the odd shape and bulky size ended up being more gimmicky than helpful, proving a solid pair of kitchen shears would do the slicing job better. Dreamfarm claims that the Scizza “perfectly slices any pizza on any surface.” The scissors were also supposed to be useful in serving the pizza. We had pretty high hopes for the Dreamfarm Scizza Scissors. That being said, we are sort of splitting hairs here both are exemplary pizza cutters. The Oxo’s weight is concentrated in the handle, not the blade we preferred the added power of a weighty blade in the PL8 model to help slice cleanly through the pie. The cleanup is marginally more annoying than the Checkered Chef model-you have to clean under the metal piece that attaches the wheel to the handle-but the parts are streamlined so it isn’t a big deal. The sharp stainless-steel blade is made of high-quality material and looks sleek. It also has a cushy, comfortable grip in that signature Oxo way. ![]() It’s heavier and has a larger wheel than other models we tested, but it cuts more precisely. But after cutting through a lot of pizzas, we realized that the heftiness of this Oxo model allowed for more control and less hand-flailing. When we first started testing wheel cutters, we thought we would prefer the smaller models because the size seemed easier to hold and maneuver. ![]() The runner-up wheel: Oxo Good Grips 4-inch Pizza Wheel and Cutter Since the only thing worse than a crowded kitchen drawer is one full of cheap and broken gadgets, we tested 13 pizza cutters and came away with a clear top pick for pizza cutting. A pizza cutter definitely has its place, but instead of settling on the first one you see at the grocery store, set your sights on the best. Could you use a chef’s knife? Sure, but depending on how big the pizza is and whether you’ve taken a knife sharpener to your blade recently, you might end up with less than perfect slices. Still, they’re vital for that clean-cut pizza slice-and, okay, fine, for cutting flatbreads, quesadillas, and homemade waffles (yes, you read that right). They pretty much have a single use-slicing pizza-and even in this age of easily accessible home pizza ovens and plentiful pizza stones, it isn’t like you’re going to use one every day, unless you’re eating pizza every day, in which case, strong play. And yet, pizza cutters on the whole can be a bit frustrating. "All we can say at this stage," the Domino's spokesperson told the Independent, "is that the idea has legs… or wings… or jets.You’re looking for the best pizza cutter. To that point, though, considering that Gravity Industries' suits startat roughly $483,000 and can only carry two pizzas at once, it's not clear whether Domino's could feasibly adopt this delivery method at scale anytime soon.īut faced with the question, the pizzamaker chose to play things close to the vest, if you will. "Keeping pizza piping hot using the jet suit is definitely an unusual utilization of our tech and pizza isn't in our normal flight plan," the spokesperson told the Independent. "But being able to exceed the average delivery time by flying through the Somerset fields and feed campers with the pizza delivery experts certainly shows the future of fast delivery service." Questionable ScalabilityĪ spokesperson for the company behind the stunt, jetpack firm Gravity Industries, admitted that the delivery was an "unusual utilization" of their suits, but said that pizza-by-jetpack could be the "future" of efficient delivery. "I can't wait to see one land on my doorstep in the future," she added. "I've never seen a jet suit, let alone one delivering pizzas." ![]() "Seeing a jet suit thing fly over Glasto was wild," festival attendee Natalie Dixon, who witnessed the event, told the Independent. Distributed by □ #PublicRelations /exXqDiTQycĪccording to the report, Glastonbury-goers were unsurprisingly impressed. Excited to unveil the first ever pizza delivery via jetpack- a groundbreaking initiative from orchestrated by □ #JamPrime’s combo of video, photography & drone expertise vivified this incredible story. ![]()
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