Panasonic NB-G110P Flash Xpress Toaster Oven, Silver
- "FlashXpress" double Infrared Light cooks up to 40-percent faster than conventional toaster ovens
- Automatically calculates the cooking time for Bread, Frozen Foods and Reheating, so guessing is eliminated, Digital Timer
- 6-menu illustrated preset buttons for easy of use
- Instant heat eliminates preheating for quick cooking (Temperature Settings 250 - 500 Degree F)
- Meaures 10 1/4" (H) x 13" (D) x 12" (D), 7.5 lbs, Silver
Panasonic NB-G110P FlashXpress Toaster Oven
Enjoy delicious hot breakfasts, instant healthy snacks, and a host of savory side dishes, tempting desserts, and even main courses with help from Panasonic's NB-G110P FlashXpress toaster oven. A fabulous stand-in for your main oven--and a smart, helpful sidekick when hosting large events--the toaster oven brings extra cooking capacity and welcome efficiency to any home or office kitchen.
Amazon Verified Purchase
I bought my first Panasonic Flash Express toaster about 15 years ago after I saw it in a Popular Science magazine that I must have seen in a doctor's office or bookstore because I haven't been a subscriber in decades. Since then I needed another just months after they stopped importing them. Prices on the dwindling stock reached $250+ for a toaster that sold for $99.95 on Amazon. Eventually I bought a slightly used one for our garage apartment which eventually was brought downstairs when the original unit finally declared "toasted". Speed forward several years (imagine the clock hands spinning like in the movies) and I'm thumbing through the Popular Science today at the grocery store and go the the "What's New" section - THE PANASONIC FLASH EXPRESS IS BACK!!! Could tell that the button labels were slightly different but everything else was the same. Thought it might be a cruel trick by Panasonic but this listing does give hope that there might be more in the pipeline. Panasonic and Amazon better get prepared to sell a bunch. Go to the original Flash Express listing and look at the hundreds of reviews and the associated dates. Many if not most of those folk are ready for a new toaster. Many of their friends who had been repeatedly subjected praise for a no longer available household appliance may decide to give it a try and see what these legions of toaster aficionados see in a piece of electrified sheet metal. If Amazon was smart (and they are) they would send a note to previous Flash Express owners and let them know it is available again. Expecting them to see it in Popular Science is a one in a million shot. Not.
The previous model was introduced before social media existed. As soon as it has its own Facebook page and Tweeter hashtag sales of this toaster alone may be able to lift the currently miserable fortunes of Panasonic.