🥖 Spread the Love, Not the Mess!
The Stainless Steel Butter Spreader is a versatile 3-in-1 kitchen gadget designed for effortless butter spreading, curling, and cheese cutting. Made from high-quality stainless steel, it offers durability and corrosion resistance, ensuring it stands the test of time. With an ergonomic design for safety and a lifetime warranty, this butter knife is perfect for both adults and children, making breakfast a breeze.
Blade Material | Stainless Steel |
Product Care Instructions | Machine Wash, Hand Wash Only |
Handle Material | Stainless Steel |
Item Weight | 2.4 ounces |
Item Length | 6 Inches |
Blade Length | 4 Inches |
Blade Edge | Hollow |
Special Features | Rust Resistant |
Style | 1 set butter fm |
Color | SILVER |
J**E
Good Butter Knife
Got one for my husband and one for my son's house. They seem to like it. It really works when the butter is cold from the fridge.
L**O
The perfect butter spreader!
This butter spreader is excellent quality! The size and feel of it are perfect! It’s great to butter toast or spread on corn on the cob! Super fast shipping too! You get two for an excellent price!!
B**T
Good for soft butter
Picked this up expecting to use it to spread butter and cream cheese. Works just fine for butter that's the right consistency and temperature. It does not work well with cold butter or cream cheese, which is too stiff and viscous to squeeze between the holes. If your butter is too hard, perhaps cold and right out of the fridge, you may be disappointed.
B**I
Works. But doesn't excel.
After a month of use I'm downgrading from a 4 to a 3 because I've stopped using the knife. It makes butter curls like in the photo -- but at the price of completely mangling the butter stick and making bread-buttering a mentally taxing activity. If you are specifically after curly butter, then great; this is the knife for you. If all you want is an easy way to spread cold butter so it will melt nicely on your toast...this is not the answer you're looking for. It takes too much technique to get good curls, then spread them on the bread without mashing them back together or gouging a hole in the bread with the open tip of the knife. The stick of butter gets progressively more and more deformed as you use it; the top starts to "mushroom" and the ends don't get scraped as much as the middle, which forms a saddle. With about 1/6 of the butter stick left, you can no longer make a good pass, nor hold onto it anywhere to properly resist the action of the knife. And this is assuming you have a dedicated stick of butter just for spreading. If someone else has cut out a sloppy chunk of butter, it's even harder to make a clean pass. I'm using refrigerated butter. I've found that I can make my own thin "shavings" that melt just fine on toast using a "normal" knife at a very low angle. I guess I'm grateful that this knife taught me the fine motor control required to finally be able to never use it again?My original review below:The finish is smooth and seems durable, while the knife is solid with good weight, and very stiff. Which is good, because you need to use firm pressure with it for good results.I'm about halfway through my first stick of (refrigerated, not frozen) butter with this tool and I'm getting the hang of it. There is definitely a knack to its use, which requires modulating pressure and adding a slight turn in the wrist as you progress down the stick of butter, along with a one-way "sawing" motion so that you start with the holes nearest the base of the blade touching the butter and end with the ones near the tip. This prevents the curls from getting so long that they break off, and lets them fan out so that when you apply them to the bread, they don't just smash back together into a non-melting blob. Your first few strokes will leave divots in the butter that ruin every subsequent stroke until your technique improves. If someone in your household is a "sloppy butter cutter" who gouges haphazardly and leaves mangled butter sticks in their wake, you will have a frustrating time using this tool on those ragged surfaces.This would all be fine, except for the large hole at the tip. While having a "3 in 1" tool is a clear marketing advantage, I have no use for this larger butter curler, but it makes the act of actually buttering bread destructive, tending to tear and rip the bread itself if you use the knife to spread in any direction other than "broadside". This matters particularly because the very best motion for putting the curled butter onto the bread evenly and "laying down" so it will actually melt involved drawing the blade lengthwise (in the direction of the handle). This lays the butter curls down nicely but rips the bread with this hole.The shaving/curling action could be a lot smoother and require less pressure if the holes were cut at an angle, or with an actual chamfer, the way the serrated edge is. Instead, they are cut straight through, perpendicular to the blade. But this would be more difficult to manufacture and might introduce a left/right handedness to the design.I think the "perfect" version of this tool would have neither the serrations nor the single hole at the tip, but rather a set of curling/shaving holes along both edges, made at an angle to the blade so that they actually sliced without requiring so much force. This could be done so one side is lefty and the other is righty. It wouldn't be as "idiot proof"...but it would work very well. That'd be a 5-star butter knife.
C**S
Love it
Love it! Great size. Nice heft. The one it’s replacing that disappeared was smaller. And it is a hoot to use.
T**.
Better Spreader
Works like it was described. Nice little butter knife.
L**T
Didn’t really work like the picture shows.
I had high hopes for this, but it didn’t work like the picture shows and there was no information about how to use it. I thought maybe the butter needed to be a little warmer or colder, but there was nothing to tell me how to use the knife in any way.
D**T
wprks well.
performed as expected.
Trustpilot
1 week ago
1 week ago