Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Lifestyle
Rhik Samadder

Kitchen gadgets review: Evenslice bread slicer – ‘not the best thing since sliced bread'

Rhik Samadder contemplates the Evenslice
Rhik Samadder contemplates the Evenslice. Photograph: Christian Sinibaldi/Guardian

What?

The Evenslice (£20.99, Lakeland) is a depth-variable frame edged with metal trim. Loaves held against a fixing backplate may be segmented evenly by a bread knife sawn down the guide rails.

Why?

Excellent question.

Well?

Let’s go back to why. Before I dismiss this futile bread-shelf as another marker of civilization in decline – which, don’t worry, I am about to do – I’ll admit I wasn’t always brilliant at cutting bread. Early attempts were too thick at the top, tapering into transparency halfway down, like a sarcastic slice of the world’s driest cake. But I got the hang of it after the age of, ooh, eight. Even if I hadn’t, legend tells of pre-sliced loaves that you can buy in any shop now. What about homebaked, artisanal jobbies? If you routinely hand £10 over a trestle table in exchange for walnut-speckled pain au levain, you definitely won’t want this unsophisticated oddity in your house.

So who is it aimed at? The actually stupid? Anally retentive bakers who test their brownies against a set square and make cupcakes with a compass? Even if you do require toast to be unerringly uniform down to the micron – perhaps you’re in charge of Elton John’s breakfast – I’m not sure this is the gadget. (Although, stood up, it does look a bit like a music stand on which to cut bread, one page at a time.)

Rhik Samadder tests the Evenslice
Are you an anally retentive baker? Photograph: Christian Sinibaldi/Guardian

While it folds down fairly flat, the thick plastic is unpretty. In use, it’s hard to keep the whole knife in contact with the steel rails throughout. It naturally wants to angle away; besides which, the feel of metal sliding down metal makes my fillings vibrate. Thickness is controlled by a reversible plate that slots into sequential grooves, and it manages seven settings. I’m impressed with the thinnest: an even, 3mm sliver I probably couldn’t pull off unaided.

Nonetheless, that “why?” is as difficult to get past as the back end of a bus. What’s next? An app that reminds you to shut your eyes at night? Velcro underwear? Ye gods. If you can’t slice bread without training wheels, you probably don’t know which end of the knife to hold either. Get outta the kitchen!

Redeeming features?

Regretfully in line with sizeist media propaganda, the best setting is the thinnest. For heavy rye bread or cold meats, it could be worthwhile.

Counter, drawer, back of the cupboard?

Ironically, not the best thing since sliced bread. In the drawer (assuming you don’t need instructions on how to open a drawer). 2/5

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.