[BlindTlk] the Ninja foodi: useable by the blind or not?
Judy Jones
sonshines59 at gmail.com
Wed Oct 23 17:24:25 UTC 2019
I have a Ninja food processor that is push button.
Judy
“Embrace each day with His mercies and blessings.”
-----Original Message-----
From: BlindTlk [mailto:blindtlk-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Peter Wolf via BlindTlk
Sent: Wednesday, October 23, 2019 10:10 AM
To: Blind Talk Mailing List
Cc: Peter Wolf
Subject: Re: [BlindTlk] the Ninja foodi: useable by the blind or not?
Ray,
We have a product called instant pot, which seems to be about the same as a ninja pot. We love it. For comparison, their website is instantpot.com. I mention ours because I cannot tell if ninja pot has raised buttons or another tactile indicator for the controls. Ours does. It seems to have about the same functions, with each function and adjustment control, being a button on the front of the unit. But, each button has a slightly raised, domed surface.
There’s the low and high pressure cooker setting stuff, timer, etc.. But also for cooking different things, there is a button for each. For example, if we want to cook brown rice, the second raised button down from the top right corner is the whole grain setting. You just dump the rice in, cover with water, close it up and push that button. It cycles through cooking, which in that case is 40 minutes, then drops into hold mode, keeping it warm until you turn it off.
We have also done other things such as pressure cooking. The pressure cooker business is fantastic by the way, because unlike having to monitor the just right amount of heat (guess), and time until it goes dry or burns up inside (guess)…it runs both temperature and end of cooking timer.
This cannister is also stainless, not the non-stick teflon coated stuff, which is now known to be toxic as it wears. As long as I’m out here, broadcasting the coolness of this unit…remember that if you are cooking in any of these pots, whether stainless or the teflon coating types, never, never scrub abrasively. Soak it overnight, then use a brush the next day. That way, the cooking surface inside the pot will remain smooth and relatively non-stick, and won’t develop sticking areas, which will eventually always need abrasive scrubbing and will burn food there. Bon appetite!
Peter
Connecting With the Wisdom of the Earth
Executive & individual coaching, consultation, and nature-based facilitation
www. Wolf Leadership Institute . com
707. 829 - 0776
> On Oct 23, 2019, at 9:09 AM, Raymond Foret Jr via BlindTlk <blindtlk at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>
> Okay,
>
> Does anybody here know if the Ninja Foodi (a cooking pot) is useable by a blind person. I know it has buttons and each button performs a certain function but I don’t want to count on the customer service rep to try to answer this because I suspect they know nothing about whether or not a blind person could use one.
>
> Thanks.
>
>
> Sent from the first computer with built-in screen reader access for the blind:
>
> Sincerely,
>
> The constantly barefooted Ray
>
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