Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The first Kenwood product was a toaster invented by Kenneth Wood, which was brought to market in 1947, known as the A100. 1950s–1960s. Three years later in 1950, the first version of the Kenwood Chef Kitchen machine was launched at the Ideal Home Exhibition. 1970s–1980s. The company's first food processor was launched in 1979.
A microwave oven or simply microwave is an electric oven that heats and cooks food by exposing it to electromagnetic radiation in the microwave frequency range. [1] This induces polar molecules in the food to rotate and produce thermal energy in a process known as dielectric heating .
The brand recognition of Kenwood eventually surpassed that of Trio. In 1986, Trio bought Kenwood and renamed itself Kenwood. George Aratani was the first chairman of Kenwood USA Corporation, and was later succeeded by Kasuga. [2] In October 2008, Kenwood merged with JVC to form a new holding company, JVCKenwood. KX880SR audio cassette tape deck ...
Kenwood Corporation, Japanese maker of radio and electronic equipment, owned by the Japanese company JVC-Kenwood Kenwood Limited , British maker of small kitchen appliances owned by the Italian company De'Longhi
In the late 1960s, a commercial food processor driven by a powerful commercial induction motor was produced. Robot-Coupe's Magimix food processor arrived from France in the UK in 1974, beginning with the Model 1800. Then, a UK company Kenwood Limited started their own first Kenwood Food Processor, 'processor de- luxe,' in 1979. [10]
Toshiba is responsible for a number of Japanese firsts, including radar (1912) [citation needed], the TAC digital computer (1954), transistor television, color CRTs [22] and microwave oven (1959), color video phone (1971), Japanese word processor (1978), MRI system (1982), personal computer Pasopia (1981), laptop personal computer (1986), NAND ...
Star Licks Productions (also known as StarLicks) was an instructional music publishing company conceived by Mark Freed and co-founded by Andrew Cross and Robert Decker.The company was at the forefront of creating instructional videos featuring well-known musicians demonstrating their unique musical styles and techniques on-camera.
The word kettle originates from Old Norse ketill, "cauldron".The Old English spelling was cetel with initial che-[tʃ] like 'cherry', Middle English (and dialectal) was chetel, both come (together with German Kessel "cauldron") ultimately from Germanic *katilaz, that was borrowed from Latin catillus, diminutive form of catinus "deep vessel for serving or cooking food", [1] which in various ...