
"It's a stainless steel rod with a conical sort of egg cap at the end, which you place over the top of your egg like a birthday party hat. There's a ball-shaped weight on the rod, too, which you lift and let drop onto the cap. This cracks a perfect circle into the top of the shell without damaging the egg."
"To break it down, "eierschale" means "eggshell." "Sollbruchstelle" refers to a predetermined breaking point, while the "verursacher" ending translates to "cause." This makes sense when you see the tool in action."
"Created by a German company called Take2, the eierschalensollbruchstellenverursacher debuted in 1999 with a name exponentially easier to say: "Clack." This, of course, speaks to the satisfying sound the tool makes in action."
The eierschalensollbruchstellenverursacher is a German egg-cracking tool designed to eliminate the frustration of imperfectly cracked eggs. The 38-letter word breaks down into components: "eierschale" (eggshell), "sollbruchstelle" (predetermined breaking point), and "verursacher" (cause). The tool consists of a stainless steel rod with a conical cap and a ball-shaped weight. Users place the cap over a soft-boiled egg and drop the weighted ball, which creates a perfect circular crack in the shell without damaging the egg inside. Created by German company Take2 and debuted in 1999 under the simpler name "Clack," this tool offers a reliable solution for consistently achieving flawless egg-cracking results.
#egg-cracking-tool #german-kitchen-innovation #soft-boiled-eggs #kitchen-gadgets #eierschalensollbruchstellenverursacher
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