Deep search
Search
Copilot
Images
Videos
Maps
News
Shopping
More
Flights
Travel
Hotels
Real Estate
Notebook
Top stories
Sports
U.S.
Local
World
Science
Technology
Entertainment
Business
More
Politics
Any time
Past hour
Past 24 hours
Past 7 days
Past 30 days
Best match
Most recent
Salt Spoon, CES
We Tested an Electric Salt Spoon That Might Help You Stick to Your Low-Sodium Diet
The Kirin Electric Salt Spoon at CES 2025 will add a salty taste to your food, though it shocks your tongue to do it.
A utensil that shocks you? What to know about Kirin's Electric Salt Spoon at CES 2025
Japanese company Kirin invented a spoon unveiled at CES that uses electricity to mimic the sensation of salt hitting your tongue.
The Electric Salt Spoon is the weirdest thing at CES 2025
There was one booth at CES Unveiled, the first big annual event at the Consumer Electronics Expo, that was busy the entire night. And rightfully so. The booth had easily one of the weirdest products, if not the weirdest product you'll see at this year's CES. That product is Kirin's Electric Salt Spoon.
Can an electric spoon from Japan help reduce your salt intake? Its inventors explain
The spoon uses an electric current to make food taste saltier, so you don't feel the need to add more, and the risks of salt overconsumption You might not have thought that the spoon needed reinventing.
This wild electric salt spoon wants to make healthy soups taste better
Food giant Kirin wants to make low-sodium diets more appetizing with the Electric Salt Spoon, which can enhance the salty flavor of certain soups and curries using electric currents.
Kirin offers a taste of its electric salt spoon at CES 2025
On the first night of CES 2025, Kirin Holdings, a Japanese company known for its beer and beverages, showed off its new electronic spoon that makes your
CES 2025's Kirin's Electric Salt Spoon Can Literally Give You Mild Shock: What Does It Really Do?
Kirin's Electric Salt Spoon at CES 2025 delivers a salty sensation through an electric shock—quirky, but does it actually work? Here's the shocking scoop.
I just tried an electric spoon that makes food taste saltier, and it's easily the weirdest thing at CES 2025
Since it’s January, health is at the top of a lot of people’s minds. We all have our own ways of approaching new health habits, but if your resolution is to eat healthier, I just tried a gadget at CES 2025 that might be able to help.
Electric salt spoon
Revolutionizing low-sodium diets, the Electric Salt Spoon lets users enjoy the sensation of saltiness without consuming actual salt. Using controlled ions and electricity, it simulates a salty taste,
This electric spoon from Japan promises to reduce your salt intake
You might not have thought that the spoon needed reinventing. But innovators in Japan say otherwise and are convinced that a more high-tech spoon can help us eat more healthily. A new kind of spoon from Japanese company Kirin uses a light electronic current to make food taste saltier than it actually is,
2d
on MSN
This spoon could be the secret to making low-sodium food taste better — but it’ll shock your tongue
The Electric Salt Spoon works by sending a gentle electric current to your tongue while you slurp, amplifying the savory ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
1d
‘Shocking’ electric spoon enhances ‘saltiness, umami’ in healthy, low-sodium diet
Kirin Holdings has won two awards for the gamechanging electric spoon at the CES Innovation Awards 2025, as per it.
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results
Trending now
Los Angeles wildfire updates
California fires: How to help
Court allows report release
SCOTUS rejects Trump’s bid
'Pizzagate' gunman killed
Judge scraps Title IX rules
Illinois passes Karina's Bill
Peacock president to exit
1.2M-year-old ice core
Teen arrested with a gun
Mortgage rate inches up
Sworn in as NH governor
Presidential palace attack
Grizzly bears stay protected
DOJ sues Pennsylvania city
Appeals her disqualification
Wycheck had CTE
Freed after brief detention
Settles opioid lawsuit
EC fined for data breach
Crime leader pleads guilty
La Nina finally arrives
Oscar nominations delayed
New Orleans hires Bratton
Ex-FBI informant gets 6 yrs
Russian strike in Ukraine
Santos' sentencing delayed
Lebanon's new president
Clarifies Siri privacy stance
Bill to sanction ICC OK'd
Economic growth forecast
Feedback