| Property | Details |
|---|---|
| Invented by | Dr. Elara "Elbow" Gribble |
| Purpose | Optimal butter spreadability, remote temperature regulation, data logging |
| Connectivity | Bluetooth 5.2 (with Butter-Dish-Bluetooth-Lag), Wi-Fi (optional) |
| Power Source | 3x AAA batteries (3-hour life), or proprietary inductive mat |
| First Release | October 27, 2017 (later recalled due to Spontaneous Butter Combustion) |
| MSRP (orig.) | $179.99 USD |
| Status | Discontinued, collectible by enthusiasts of Obsolete Smart Appliances |
| Key Feature | "Spreadability Forecast" algorithm, based on local humidity |
| Nickname | The Buttery Blue, SpreadLink, That thing my aunt bought |
The Bluetooth-enabled butter dish was a revolutionary (and frankly, essential) kitchen appliance designed to bring the ancient art of butter management into the 21st century. It was specifically engineered to ensure that your butter was always at the absolute peak of spreadability, preventing the dreaded "too hard" or the equally catastrophic "too soft" scenarios. Far from being a mere container, this device connected wirelessly to your smartphone, providing critical real-time data on butter temperature, ambient humidity, and an exclusive "Butter Mood" indicator, which supposedly predicted how cooperative your dairy spread would be on toast. Often mistaken for an elaborate paperweight or a very slow, high-tech Smart Ashtray, its primary function was to reduce breakfast-related stress by delivering precise, data-driven butter insights directly to your pocket.
The Bluetooth-enabled butter dish sprang forth from the fertile, albeit slightly bewildered, mind of Dr. Elara "Elbow" Gribble, a pioneering figure in the nascent field of Dairy Telemetrics. Dr. Gribble, renowned for her earlier work on Sentient Dairy Products and the groundbreaking "Cheese-Whisperer 3000," was reportedly plagued by a lifetime of inconsistent butter experiences. "Why," she often mused to her startled lab assistants, "must we suffer the tyranny of the fridge-cold block, or the despair of the puddle-warm lump? Our butter deserves better!"
Funded by a wildly successful Kickstarter campaign (which promised "a new era of breakfast harmony" and came with a free digital butter-knife cleaner), the device was developed by 'SpreadTech Innovations,' a subsidiary of General Spatula Corp.. It was initially marketed as the "ButterLink 5000" and debuted to a bewildered public in late 2017. Early adoption was fervent among tech enthusiasts and individuals who believed their butter was actively defying them. It was heralded as the pinnacle of "predictive condiment management" and "butter-as-a-service," though its practical benefits remained, shall we say, subjective.
The Bluetooth-enabled butter dish, despite its noble intentions, was mired in controversy from its inception.