Cold Drinks Kitchen Gadgets

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Summary

This video explores various gadgets for cooling drinks, showcasing a USB desktop fridge, a manual ice shaver for slushies, beer chilling sticks, and large ice cube molds.

Highlights

USB Desktop Fridge Review
00:00:00

The video begins by introducing a USB desktop fridge, powered by a USB plug with two settings. It features a fan and a metal base plate designed to cool drinks. A test is conducted with two cans of Coke, one in the fridge and one out, for an hour to compare temperatures.

Manual Ice Shaver and Slushie Making
00:01:10

A manual ice shaver is unboxed and tested. It comes with an ice cube tray, a catch tank, and rotating blades. The shaver produces fine ice shavings, described as 'snow.' The shaved ice is then used to create delicious fresh fruit slushies using watermelon, strawberries, cherries, and mango.

Beer Chilling Sticks for Quick Cooling
00:04:21

The video then demonstrates beer chilling sticks, which are stainless steel probes filled with liquid and kept in the freezer. They are inserted into warm bottles to quickly cool drinks without dilution. A temperature test shows a significant drop from 21.7°C to 14.9°C after a few minutes, and the sticks allow drinking while cooling.

Large Ice Cube and Sphere Trays
00:06:06

Two types of large ice cube trays are introduced: one for large cubes and another for spheres. The trays are filled with water and frozen overnight. The video shows how to release the large ice cubes and spheres, noting that the spheres were cloudy and asking for tips on making clear ice.

Creative Fruit-Infused Ice Spheres
00:07:23

The ice sphere mold is then used to create ice with various fruits and juices. Examples include lemon and lime, whole strawberries, strawberry and kiwi, and cucumber with mint. Additionally, some molds are filled with homemade summer fruit juice and orange juice, which then add flavor to drinks as they melt.

USB Fridge Test Results
00:09:03

The video concludes by revealing the results of the USB fridge test. The can in the fridge dropped from 21.9°C to 12.8°C, a significant temperature difference compared to the room-temperature can. Condensation on the metal base plate and a temperature reading of 10.5°C on the plate confirm its cooling capability, although the top of the drink remained warmer.

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