✨ Elevate Your Kitchen Game with Style!
The KitchenArtPro 2 Cup Adjust-A-Cup is a versatile measuring tool designed for modern kitchens. Made from durable, BPA-free ABS and SAN plastic, it features a sleek satin finish and patented design for easy measuring of liquids, dry, and semi-solid ingredients. With a capacity of 2 cups and a user-friendly plunger for sticky ingredients, this space-saving tool is perfect for any culinary enthusiast.
Material Type | ABS and SAN plastic |
Color | Satin |
Item Dimensions | 5.5 x 3.5 x 10.25 inches |
Item Weight | 0.4 Pounds |
Capacity | 2 Cups |
S**R
Love, love, love!
Love, love, love this measuring cup. Makes cooking and bakiing with sticky or oily ingredients so much easier and more precise. And very easy to clean and store as well. What a great kitchen tool!
J**T
Nice!
Super handy, easy to clean. Just don't submerge it, the main body will take in liquids.
K**.
Great measuring cup
This is the most versatile measuring cup and quickest to set. I really like this measuring cup. Well worth the money.
A**N
Decent could use some fixes; PERFECT for waffles!
update: i finally found the 'trump card' for this exact tool. I have NEVER been able to get just the right amount of waffle mix into a waffle iron. My new waffle iron calls for 1 '1/3 cups of mix so i decided to try this tool out for the job. It worked without flaw, i can't imagine a better way to pull off that chore; my older 'wonder cup' style was so hard to push compared to this it would be a struggle to actually empty. The batter was just the right texture that it didn't stick to the top of the plunger i didn't even have to scrape it off just push the plunger and go.add'l update; my first copy had a bad seal so amazon swapped it no-charge-for-shipping etc. sadly that won't get the feedback to the source very well but at least the second one will 'hold water' which the first didn't. It doesn't hold water great though.. a tiny bit will leak through the seal but i didn't buy it for water, apparently i bought it for making waffles! If i don't use it for anything else it will be worth it for me. (i love waffles)=====1) mine came with some labeling smeared as others have commented on; this is definitely a quality control issue; the label ink seems pretty solid, it's as if it was boxed up before the ink was dry.2) there is a flaw in the desgn that allows the wobble. there should be a set of 'ribs' on the plunger to keep it centered in the outer tube. a very simple fix: wrap an o-ring around the inner plunger so that there is a second place to hold the plunger centered. make sure it's not too tight. even better; put an array of tiny rubber stick-on feet around the inner-tube (i did 3-around about every inch) it makes the center piston stay perfecly centered with the added bonus that it also holds any position very well. basically it's a design correction to fix the biggest flaw. if i can figure out how to add a picture later i will. again, quality control issue. the design of the seal is fine, but mine has a flat spot from a mold release or somethihng where water will just dribble right on through.3) mine came with a faulty seal; it literally 'won't hold water'. since i have much better tools for measuring water-like liquids i think i'll be ok with that since the primary use i have for this tool is measuring brown sugar, i'm not sure if i'll be sending it back.4) dishwasher safe may not mean dishwasher friendly. i'm not sure there is any gain in running the plunger through the machine, but the exterier tube is a solid tube of polycarbonate or similar very strong plastic. as long as it doesn't rub violently around in the mashing to rub off the lettering it should be fine for a long time. I don't expect i'll be needing to run mine through the dw.5) precision. i did a simple test of measuring 1c of water and it was within 1 tsp accurate. that amount of error is definitely withing the error bars of me eyballing the meniscus of the water. i'm satisfied with that result.6) pouring ability. agreed it should have a spout! what up with that? you can pour fine if the receptical it's going into is big enough to commit to 100% pour but often you'd want to slowly pour it in; forget about that plan.7) star rating. i'd give it 3.5 because of the quality control issues that are apparent but i'm rounding up because the overall design is superior to the lower quality soft-plastic models like schmamered schmef design. I've used that one for years, it 'gets the job done' but this one is an infinite improvement in 'touch and feel'. the other design has a closed plunger for measuring liquids not relying on the seal but it's nearly impossible to read through the thick opaqe plastic.8) read the directions: people are pulling the seal off by pulling straight not twisting as it says in very clear lettering on the top of the disc. the static coefficient of friction of a rubber ring on polycarbonate under pressure is 'off scale' it *should* rip off the disc. it would be better if they made this more clear but they are serious do not pull w/o twisting.8a) you could surely re-glue should you pull it off; that part is well out of the way of touching your food so it won't be needed to use a 'food safe adhesive'.9) storage suggestion; you can avoid that problem by following one of these ideas: a) NEVER store completely closed; just like a syringe will pull the rubber boot right off if stored fully depressed, you can expect problems if the first motion is to PULL out the pluger. If you leave even a cm of space or make sure to PUSH the plunger out you will never put the 'tension' type of force on the part so you can't break it that way. b) as mentioned in 'a'; PUSH the plunger the first time you use it after storage even just for minutes; the seal will 'stick' to the outside wall. if stored 'open a little' you can push it closed first then pull & twist open or if stored fully closed, push on the black seal to get things moving. and c) to help keep the seal from wearing out prematurely *and* help avoid self-destruction, put the plunger in backwards or store separately (even better). They made a slight bevel on the BOTTOM of the tube and when the plunger is put in backwards, there is about 10% of the force on the seal. it greatly reduces the problems assosated with the seal being tight.I'm going to contact the company about the manufacturing defects on my copy and i will post a follow-up to see what they suggest in regard to my faulty model and i'll adjust my star score accordingly.-awr
M**X
Not diswasher safe, but handy
I am a big fan of Alton Brown's "Good Eats" series. He uses these plunger style measuring cups and I wanted to as well. Overall, they are more trouble than they are worth. When you fill the cup, you pull the plunger down to the indicator line. If you are filling the whole two cups or such, this mean you will have 90%+ of the plunger sticking out of the bottom and in your way. While in this position, the plunger often comes close to falling out and spilling everything. (I haven't had this happen, yet, but I fear it each time.)However, when you are measuring a gooey liquid like honey or ketchup this device is perfect! You get every perfectly measured drop out of the cup.Finally, this cup has way too many measurements on it. This is one time where you can have too much of a good thing. You can see it is COVERED in meaurements both U.S. and Metric and in both dry & wet volumes. This printing has not stood up to more than four runs through my dishwasher. Also, the plunger has become full of water and I can't figure out how to empty it out. Unless I can, I'll have to get rid of this as the water will become stagnant.Not as good as I hoped and I won't buy another. However, when I really need it, the cup works beautifully.
D**R
Heavily used, looks great, works great.
I read some of the reviews for this, and I was a little worried, but my fears were unfounded. This is an ideal size for most everything I do, and I use the smaller one (bought at the same time) for the rest. Very easy to clean, just turn the base when putting it back together to overcome the silicone rubber not wanting to slide on the clean plastic. Once it is started on, it goes back to working very well. This is a solid value for the use it gives me. I always hand wash this, so I have no idea how it does in the dishwasher.
J**L
Dry and liquid measure marks
Helps me pre-measure ingredients for bread machine. I prepare "golden honey" (honey, turmeric, ginger, pepper) in it and helps me get it combined and put into squeeze bottle with no waste on side of measuring devices! (Replaces one I dropped on floor too many times.) Wash "core" by hand. Measuring sleeve is dishwasher safe. (The core can hold water if put into dishwasher.)
P**.
As a foreigner this helps reduce my anger towards US recipes.
Like majority of the world, we usually measure things in grams, or milliliters. When you get a recipe from an American website, you are expected to have 3/4 cups of this, 2 tablespoons of that, 6 oz of this other thing ... and so you end up making a mess with a ton of different items. This did solve my pain.PROS:* All in one! I can use ONE item to make an entire recipe!* Very easy to clean! I even used oil and had no issues wiping it clean with some soap. Very simple to clean both parts.* Lightweight / Space saver - I honestly threw away all my other measuring cups/devices, they just added clutter to my cabinets. This one did replace all of them.CONS:* I have a fear that the markings will eventually vanish since it's done with some sort of ink. So I would not run this through a dishwasher (anymore)CONCLUSION: Every kitchen does need something like this, one item, all your measurements, 1 thing to clean by the end of the recipe! Perfect for me.
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1 month ago
2 months ago