This collection of modular porcelain dishware is from designer Christian Bjorn for Menu — the same Danish company that brought us Henriette Melchiorsen's Rubber Vase. These dishes are elegant enough for serving and practical enough for prep and storage — they can be used in the freezer, oven, refrigerator and are both microwave and dishwasher safe.
The black silicon feet on each dish allows one to take a dish straight from the oven on to a table without a trivet. In the fifth picture, you can see that two dishes can be stacked with tealights to help keep food hot.
Though we love the Adonde modular dinnerware, we find this small collection from Menu to be much more practical. Three different sizes will be available.










White Enamel Flatwa...
Brilliant. I love these. But they'd need a lid to go in the freezer or fridge.
What does "gift fair" mean?
to me it implies that I can enter to win this.. which would be neat because they look really nice and really useful. I'd say no lid is fine. A bit of plastic wrap is easier to find than the matching lid.
perhaps you guys should change the spelling to "gift fare" if you aren't going to send me some.
Oh please tell me there are lids?????
They look a bit like pet food dishes... albeit very pretty ones.
I add my request for lids. Then they'd be perfect.
Ha! I was thinking they looked like pet food dishes too!
Definitely feeling the pet food dish vibe...
I prefer the Programma 8 series of modular dishes by Alessi: http://www.unicahome.com/p17616/programma-8-sets-by-alessi.html
Clever concept. The collection is to bring food from the oven to the table not for food storage; this is why they is no lids. You can even stack them for heating into the stove: a true timer saver for big parties - no need for two stoves. I will spotlight the collection.
antimatt: gift fair refers to the trade show (it is for the gift stores) called Gift Fair that was at the Javits Center.
Are these for sale anywhere? I followed the links from the article (and am probably missing something obvious) but none of them seemed to lead to pricing, etc.