Dad makes spit-free fan that blows out birthday candles in a hygienic way

Make a wish for a spit-free recipes.

A Virginia family-and-friends” target=”_blank”>dad< without spraying saliva spit onto the icing.

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Mark Apelt’s battery-powered Blowzee is activated when someone blows into it, activating a fan that’s supposed to put out the flames.

“The user’s breath is redirected away from the cake,” the Blowzee’s product description says.

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Apelt, 44, told The Daily Progress he came up with the idea during a pre-pandemic beer with friends when they discussed a recent party where the 6-year-old sprayed saliva onto the cake.

“I mean, you like cake but suddenly you’re like, ‘no thanks, I’m on a diet’ after you watch that,” Apelt told The Progress in a report published Monday.

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“We talked about how we don’t do that with any food other than birthday cake,” he said. “I mean, you don’t do it with hamburgers. No one finishes cooking a hamburger and then blows on it and says, ‘here’s you hamburger.’ OK, you blow on soup, but you blow on your own soup.”

The Blowzee design came after a few other false-start prototypes, including a filtered mask.

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It sells for $14.99 according to its website, though its listed on sale for $9.99.

The coronavirus pandemic has made people much more conscious of germ-spreading but as social distancing and mask restrictions are lifting, a return to the old practice of blowing out candles may be expected.

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Even before COVID-19 was a concern, some experts found the idea of blowing out candles stomach churning. A 2017 study showed blowing out candles could increase the amount of bacteria on a cake by 1,400 percent.

To read more from the New York Post, click here.

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