Where to start?
Yes, the original GE Toaster oven was more of a pop-up toaster with a warming drawer at the bottom. They may have called it a "toaster oven" but it sure wasn't a Toast-R-Oven. That "R" makes a huge difference!
Chach, I definitely prefer mac & cheese made with real cheese. But I also appreciate the Velveeta kind. Sometimes, that artificial cheeze tang is a good thing! Oh, and by the way, that 1.5 cups of cheese in the recipe is just a starting point, you know. I'd have used the whole 2-cup bag, but Honey and I needed a snack...
(Man, I really love italics! And exclamation points!!)
I have never actually used the Rock N Mix. Haven't really had it long enough to. Still, I don't see it getting used too often, and here's why: I'm lazy. If something needs mixing, I have my nice chrome Mixmaster that operates with no intervention on my part. The Rock N Mix would require me to perform said rocking.
Vers, I forgive you for belittling Presto appliances. I'd love to get a Hot Dogger, but there's generally a silhouette of a weiner dog on it, and that makes me feel kind of uneasy...
As for Ronco "appliances", yep, they're cheap crap. Venus, I don't dare try to cut a potato with the Veg-O-Matic. It'd probably crumble under the force! The instructions, by the way, make a huge point of telling the operator to RAM the top down on the poor, unsuspecting vegetable.
But back to their cheapness. The interesting thing about Ronco stuff is that its total cheesiness actually transcends itself, becoming something both desirable and hilarious at the same time. I mean, come on--the Pocket Fisherman? Record Vacuum? In-the-shell Egg Scrambler? These are icons, my friends, icons. As a kid, I can remember commercials for pre-Ronco junk (when it was still Popeil Brothers.) One item was called "Steamset" which was a set of hair curlers that were heated up by sitting in a box-thing that boiled water in the bottom. Been trying to get one, but when one shows up on ebay, it goes for crazy money!
Here's the fun part: included with the Steamset was a "facial sauna" attachment to take advantage of all that steam. This "attachment" was just a sheet of plastic that one rolled into a tube and stuck one's face over!
Now that's marketing!
veg