Look, we need to talk about kitchen appliances. If you’re anything like me, you’ve got a toaster shoved in one corner, a waffle maker collecting dust in a cabinet, and maybe a sandwich press you haven’t seen since 2019. The countertop real estate struggle is real, and it’s a problem that designer Nikhil Thomas Zachariah just solved with BrioChef.
Picture this: one sleek appliance that houses a griddle, sandwich maker, toaster, and waffle iron all in one sculptural package. Yeah, you read that right. Four appliances, one footprint, and honestly, it looks like something that wandered off the set of a sci-fi movie and decided to make you breakfast instead.
Designer: Nikhil Thomas Zachariah
The design itself is striking. That bold coral-orange body with black cooking surfaces isn’t trying to blend into your kitchen. It wants to be seen, and frankly, it’s earned the right. The form flows in this organic, almost architectural way, with a raised section on the left housing the griddle and sandwich maker, while the right side keeps the toaster and waffle maker ready for action. It’s like someone finally asked, “What if kitchen appliances were actually cool?”
But here’s where BrioChef goes from “pretty cool” to “okay, I’m interested.” Everything is modular. Those cooking surfaces? They pop out with spring-release mechanisms, making cleanup actually manageable instead of that weird scrubbing dance we all do with traditional appliances. The griddle has removable bars that flip between flat griddle mode and sandwich press grooves. The toaster and waffle modules lift right out. All of it is food-grade material that you can clean with whatever you already have under your sink.
The touch display embedded in the surface is another smart move. It’s not just a timer and temperature control (though it does that). It actually walks you through recipes step by step. So if you’ve never made a proper Belgian waffle or you’re not sure how long to press a panini, the appliance literally guides you. It’s like having a patient friend who actually knows how to cook standing in your kitchen at 7 AM, except this friend doesn’t judge you for making a grilled cheese for dinner.
Let’s talk about real-world usage because that’s what matters. Morning rush? Throw eggs on the griddle while your bread toasts. Lazy Sunday? Waffles on one side, bacon on the griddle. Late-night munchies? Grilled cheese in minutes. The versatility here isn’t just a nice feature but the entire point. You’re not just consolidating appliances; you’re opening up possibilities because everything is actually accessible and ready to go.
The thoughtful details pile up when you look closer. There’s an oil and liquid drain built into the griddle section because of course there is. Warning lights tell you when surfaces are hot so you don’t learn that lesson the hard way. The lid design on the griddle and sandwich maker allows waste to be removed while cleaning, which sounds small until you’ve tried to clean out a traditional sandwich press and wanted to throw the whole thing away.
From a design perspective, BrioChef does something that kitchen appliances rarely achieve: it makes you reconsider what’s possible in the space. We’ve been trained to accept that kitchen gadgets are clunky, single-purpose items that we hide away. This challenges that assumption entirely. Why shouldn’t an appliance be modular, beautiful, and smart all at once? The compact footprint means this could work in a tiny studio apartment, a college dorm, or a sprawling kitchen where you just want less clutter. It’s democratizing in that way, meeting people where they actually live and cook rather than assuming everyone has unlimited cabinet space.
Is BrioChef going to revolutionize your entire life? Probably not. But it might revolutionize your morning routine, your countertop organization, and your willingness to actually make breakfast instead of grabbing whatever on your way out the door. And honestly, in a world where most kitchen gadgets are forgettable at best, creating something that’s genuinely useful, thoughtfully designed, and kind of gorgeous? That’s worth paying attention to. Sometimes good design is about solving problems we didn’t even realize we’d been tolerating. BrioChef makes a compelling case that the four-appliance breakfast setup was one of those problems all along.
The post This Smart Griddle Just Combined 4 Breakfast Gadgets Into One Device first appeared on Yanko Design.

