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Fisher-Price Laugh & Learn Learning Kitchen by Fisher Price

Mini Refrigerators


Fisher-Price Laugh & Learn Learning Kitchen
(Toy) Fisher Price

To see more information click the "Watch it in Action" link below the main product images
Laugh and Learn Learning Kitchen is filled with learning and fun for baby in both English and Spanish
There are 4 modes of play: Learning, Learning in Spanish, Music and Imagination
Inside the fridge, there's yummy food and shape sorting fun
Open the refrigerator door to see the light come on, learn about opposites, or hear a sung song


Price: $39.99 $28.95


Customer Reviews:
  1. fun toy for learning and motor skills
    This is one of my son's Fisher-Price toys that he actually plays with. He is 17 months and is not interested in things that just make noise and flash lights anymore. With this toy he practices putting the shapes through the holes, turning on and off the light, putting the food on the shelf in the...
  2. Lots of fun but poorly built!
    This toy REALLY held my 10 month olds interest, she loves it BUT she has smashed her fingers twice in less than a week! It opens and closes too easily, the fridge door is too light compared to the sink side and when slightly moved one side always falls shut on the other. Since she likes to move...
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Does it work? Putting new, heavily promoted gadgets to the test

Looking for that perfect new gadget for the cook on your gift list? Read on.

Beacon Journal Home writer Mary Beth Breckenridge, consumer writer Betty Lin-Fisher and food writer Lisa Abraham tested out some of the newest and most heavily promoted products on the market to save you time, trouble, and, in some cases, money.

Eggies

I can't recall the last time we had so many requests to test a product as we did with the Eggies.

These gadgets, supposed to solve the age-old problem of shells that stick on hard-cooked eggs, seem to have captured everyone's attention.

The box, which cost $9.99, included enough Eggies to cook six eggs at a time. Each one has three parts: a top, a lid and a ring that secures the other two pieces together. None of us liked that there were a lot of pieces and parts to keep track of.

Basically, you crack an egg into half of the plastic Eggie, put on its top and screw the band around them, then put them in a pot of water to boil the way you would eggs in their shells.