Specifications
- Capacity
- 12 qt
- Popping method
- Kettle
- Oil needed
- Yes
- Wattage
- 300 W
- Butter tray
- No
- Dishwasher safe
- No
- Weight
- 9.0 lb
- Footprint
- Medium
- Color
- Black
- Noise
- High
The Little Bambino is a real-deal tabletop kettle popper that delivers oil-popped, movie-theater flavor and a fun centerpiece, but it asks for counter space, oil, and a tolerance for noise. Buy it for the experience, not for fast everyday snacking.
Check price on AmazonHome-theater and game-night hosts who want authentic oil-kettle popcorn and like the look of a small theater-style machine on the counter.
You want quick, hands-off, low-mess popcorn, you have limited counter space, or you'd rather skip oil and frequent cleanup.
The Great Northern Little Bambino is a tabletop kettle popcorn maker built around a 2.5-ounce stainless kettle, so it makes the same oil-popped popcorn you'd get at a theater rather than the dry, hot-air kind. With a 12-quart catch capacity, one batch easily fills a couple of large bowls, which suits movie nights and small groups.
It runs on a modest 300-watt heater and a stirring kettle, and oil is required for every batch. There's no butter tray, and it isn't dishwasher safe, so plan on wiping down the kettle and tempered-glass dome after use. At 9 pounds and a medium footprint, it's heavier and bulkier than a hot-air popper and is meant to live on the counter rather than get tucked into a cabinet between uses.
The trade-off is character. In glossy black, it reads as a deliberate movie-room piece, and the kettle method gives you control over oil and seasoning. Just know it runs loud, so it's a make-the-popcorn-then-watch appliance rather than something you'd run quietly during a film.
The 2.5-ounce kettle and 12-quart catch area are sized for batch popping: you load oil and kernels, the kettle stirs, and one run yields enough for two or three people. The 300-watt element is modest, so this is about steady kettle heat rather than speed, and oil is part of every batch by design. Skipping the oil isn't an option here the way it is on a hot-air popper. Because the machine is rated loud and isn't dishwasher safe, the realistic routine is pop a batch, then clean the kettle and glass dome by hand afterward.
Based on its 4.5-star average across roughly 5,200 ratings, buyers of tabletop kettle poppers like this tend to praise the authentic theater taste, the generous batch size, and the showpiece look. Common complaints for this style center on the noise level, the cleanup that comes with using oil, and the counter space a medium, 9-pound machine demands. Shoppers who expect quick, mess-free popcorn are usually the ones who find the kettle routine more involved than they wanted.
Yes. It's a kettle popper, so oil goes in with the kernels for every batch. That's what gives it the theater-style flavor, but it also means more cleanup than a hot-air popper that pops dry.
It pairs a 2.5-ounce kettle with a 12-quart catch capacity, so a single batch comfortably fills a couple of large bowls. That's enough for a small group on movie night.
It's rated high for noise, so expect it to be loud while popping. It isn't dishwasher safe and has no butter tray, so the kettle and tempered-glass dome are cleaned by hand after each use.