Richard Grace, inventor of one of the greatest tools the kitchen has ever seen, neither knows how to cook nor cares to learn. In the mid-’90s, he set out to make a wood-carving rasper. He ended up with a culinary masterpiece called the Microplane: a cheese-grating, citrus-zesting, nutmeg-dusting revelation that today costs as little as $12 on Amazon. He’s an inventor in the truest spirit of the word, someone who treats ideation as a profession, not a calling. He doesn’t speak in buzzwords and has never hosted a TED Talk. He simply makes things and finds uses for them later.
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“My father gets bored very quickly and he’s always thinking of different ways to solve a problem,” said Chris Grace, Richard’s son and the CEO of Grace Manufacturing, the family business that oversees Microplane. “Ask most people how many uses they could think of for a paper clip, they’d give you maybe half a page. My father might give you 10 pages. He’s still coming up with uses for that etched tooth.” He was referring to the dozens of razor-sharp, jagged teeth found on every Microplane.
When I asked Richard, at Microplane’s Arkansas factory, about potential uses for the tool, he leaned back in his chair, cracked a small grin and let loose: wall-hanging art, fasteners, interlocking washers, horseshoes, stints, medical instruments for optical surgery, table-saw blades and stainless steel sandpaper — which, according to him, would’ve worked if not for a tester using it improperly and hurting themselves. But never once did he expect the photo-etched tooth to make its way into the kitchen.
Microplane was conceived in a conference room in 1991. Back then, Grace Manufacturing was in the business of making small photo-etched parts for mechanical computer printers. Then the dot-matrix printer arrived, spelling an all-but-certain demise for the family business. The end in plain sight, Richard, his brother and a team of Grace’s brightest sat down in a whiteboard-filled room to brainstorm what they might do to stave off oblivion. “That was the cool term at the time, ‘brainstorming,’” Richard said.
The family was well-trained in the process of chemical photo-etching metals, and, as they had observed many, many times, the finished products were often exceptionally sharp. Richard swore he was buying Band-Aids “by the bushel.” So, as he tells it, “All those hours spent drawing up whiteboards, and we decided we were going to make something sharp.”