Besides the constant worry, the worst portion of being a parent to young children is the noise — oh the noise, noise, noise, noise. Dozens of inexpensive disposable toys squabble over the eye of your toddler by piercing the memory of your formerly carefree existence with sound. Enter the EaTheremin, with its goal of creating blanched kale a fun to eat game for even the foremost finicky of children. Here’s the way it works: touching the EaTheremin fork to the moist mastication factory of a human completes the electric circuit to emit “music.” The sound varies based upon the standard of the relationship (the wetter the higher) and resistance of the food. As an example, foodstuffs with a special outer and inner consistency will create richer and more complicated sounds as you bite into them, whereas chicken skins will create a vibrato effect because the dermis stretches against your carnivorous ways. Boy, that does sound fun! See a slightly overzealous demonstration on video after the break.
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