The MilkCapper™ is a re-engineered milk cap that ends the dried-milk "crusties" on your gallon jug — the flakes that fall into your cereal, your coffee, your kid's breakfast. Two-piece design: screw on the base. Pop the lid. Done.
You open a fresh gallon. You tilt it. And dried milk flakes — the crusties — tumble into your kid's cereal. You pick them out. Or you don't. Either way, you're grossed out.
You open a fresh gallon. You tilt it. Milk flows through the engineered spout and back down into the jug. Nothing pools, nothing dries, nothing falls in. The pop-top keeps it fresh.
The standard gallon-jug cap is a 50-year-old design. It has no inner lip, no pour spout, and no drainage. Milk pools around the threads and around the rim — and dries there between pours. Every. Single. Time.
The MilkCapper™ snaps onto the standard gallon-jug opening — on top of your existing cap base — and adds what every cap has been missing: an engineered pour spout with an inner lip at the perfect angle.
Milk flows through the spout and back down into the jug. Nothing pools, nothing dries, nothing falls in. Pop the snap-on top closed, put the jug back in the fridge, and it's ready for next time.
Screw on the base. Pop the lid. Pour. No more crusties.
The base fits over any standard gallon-jug cap. Just twist it on like a normal cap.
The lid snaps on with a clean click. Child-safe, dishwasher-safe, leak-resistant.
Milk flows through the engineered spout. No crusties. No waste. No picking flakes out of cereal.
In 2013, Tommy Tornroos — a Marietta, GA audio engineer who'd had it with the crusties in his cereal — called his alma mater. Southern Polytechnic State University (now part of Kennesaw State) put a fresh "rapid design and engineering" class on the problem. Assistant Professor Randy Emert and his students went through 4 prototypes before they got one that worked.
The design hit the news. USA Today, 11Alive, and WFMY all ran the story on the same day. A small Indiegogo campaign was launched. The product went viral on Reddit. And then — life happened. Manufacturing capital wasn't there, the Indiegogo didn't fund, and the design went back into a drawer.
Thirteen years later, Tommy has the manufacturing capital. The design files. The engineering relationships. The GS1 UPC. The Cappers, LLC entity. milkcapper.com. And a Reddit thread that still gets comments from people with milk-crustie problems.
So the MilkCapper is back. For real this time.
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