I Want One Of Those
#1
Posted 27 April 2005 - 02:16 PM
http://www.viceversa...temID,1447.html
#2
Posted 27 April 2005 - 02:50 PM
That's the funniest thing that I've seen all day.I'm not sure if this counts as professional cookware, unless perhaps you are Leon the Professional.
http://www.viceversa...temID,1447.html
skewing old
#3
Posted 27 April 2005 - 04:42 PM
I covet that thing, even though it is a little sick. I just did some searching and apprently it is not for sale yet, according to some random website chatter.That's the funniest thing that I've seen all day.
#4
Posted 28 April 2005 - 01:28 PM
http://www.art.uiuc....a_04/flood.html
#5
Posted 20 May 2005 - 10:04 AM
If anybody is in the market for an egg separator, try this site.I'm not sure if this counts as professional cookware, unless perhaps you are Leon the Professional.
http://www.viceversa...temID,1447.html
http://www.stupid.com/stat/EGSP.html
Homer: Well, I think the veal died of loneliness.
#6
Posted 22 August 2005 - 04:04 PM
And finally it goes on sale...I'm not sure if this counts as professional cookware, unless perhaps you are Leon the Professional.
http://www.viceversa...temID,1447.html
Voodoo knife holder
#7
Posted 25 January 2006 - 09:26 AM
Help homeless pets find a home, Strut Your Mutt 2013.
#8
Posted 25 January 2006 - 09:31 AM
#9
Posted 25 January 2006 - 09:36 AM
#10
Posted 25 January 2006 - 10:17 AM
#11
Posted 25 January 2006 - 10:57 AM
The more I buy, the less space I have to put themThe more kitchen gadgets I buy the less I use.
![]()
#12
Posted 26 January 2006 - 02:25 PM
Silicone Basting Brushes ISI or MIU
oxo angled measuring cups
Digital Instant Read Thermometers
Microplane Graters
The one gadget that I've been waiting for since Christmas that seems to be gone everwhere is the Trudeau Pot Clip.
#13
Posted 26 January 2006 - 02:42 PM
I like the idea of these, but they crack way too easily due to heat/cold.oxo angled measuring cups
#14
Posted 26 January 2006 - 03:04 PM
I LOVE my silicone basting brush! Instant-read thermometers and microplane graters are also indispensible in my kitchen.There are only a handful of innovative gadgets that I've really come to appreciate and would encourage anyone to check out that already hasn't.
Silicone Basting Brushes ISI or MIU
oxo angled measuring cups
Digital Instant Read Thermometers
Microplane Graters
The one gadget that I've been waiting for since Christmas that seems to be gone everwhere is the Trudeau Pot Clip.
I tried the Oxo angled measuring cups. The concept is good, but they really don't last. They aren't dishwasher-safe--the markings wear off after a while. And mine fell out of the cabinet and landed on the counter, cracked. I've gone back to standard Pyrex, for a lot less money.
#15
Posted 26 January 2006 - 03:16 PM
While I thought my original post was going to bring out a list of items that seemed rather odd, I guess I will add to the list of useful items.
I really like the push up measuring cups that Alton Brown touts for thick liquids and such.
Help homeless pets find a home, Strut Your Mutt 2013.
#16
Posted 26 January 2006 - 03:20 PM
#17
Posted 26 January 2006 - 03:35 PM
The plunger cups are also available from the man himself.I really like the push up measuring cups that Alton Brown touts for thick liquids and such.
On the subject of measuring devices, I also get a ton of use out of the Emsa Perfect Beaker.
As for recent device acquisitions, the Zyliss Rotary Grater has been very well-behaved. There's a second drum available for softer cheeses - in the event that your shop doesn't sell the package with both drums, you can send Zyliss a check for $7 and they'll send you the soft-cheese drum.
Edited by Principia, 26 January 2006 - 03:35 PM.
Five people are in a restaurant, and the bill comes to £112.48. If two people had starters but no wine, one person has had wine but no dessert, one person is moaning that they had the vegetarian and that was cheaper, another person had no starter or dessert, but ordered an extra bottle of wine without asking anyone else, calculate the number of different Switch/Visa/Carbon/Delta cards you can hand the waiter before they kill you.
#18
Posted 26 January 2006 - 03:35 PM
#19
Posted 26 January 2006 - 03:42 PM
I have been coveting my sister's sizzle plates (left over from when she had a restaurant)! I've looked around to try to find them or something similar, with no success. Where could a mere home cook like me get my hands on a couple of sizzle plates?I seriously think for 95% of my cooking all I use is a good pairing knife, cutting board, bowls for holding chopped stuff, and a 10 inch All-Clad fry pan. Add to the list a couple sizzle plates, tongs, and a spoon and a fork and I'm probably up to 99%.
#20
Posted 26 January 2006 - 05:15 PM
#21
Posted 26 January 2006 - 07:23 PM
Thanks! I Googled like crazy and couldn't find them! These are perfect!Sizzle plates are excellent and I use them all the time at home.
Sizzle Plates
#22
Posted 27 January 2006 - 12:54 AM
has anyone seen the doohickey that looks a little like a plastic bazooka and cooks pasta? You pour in boiling water, set it on the countertop, and however many minutes later you have a cylinder full of cooked pasta (or vegetables or whatever).Thanks! I Googled like crazy and couldn't find them! These are perfect!
here's the link: pastaexpress.tv.
i swore i saw one roll out of the kitchen at notti bianche the other day. i assume they're tired of "breaking the pasta to make it fit" in the pot.
#23
Posted 27 January 2006 - 03:34 PM
After years living in a New York City apartment with storage space at a premium, my unbreakable ironclad rule is No Single-Use Gadgets. (And 2 uses may not be enough, either!)The more I buy, the less space I have to put them
![]()
Current winners include a silpat knockoff from Sur La Table (the first thing I've ever found that was actually CHEAPER there) -- great for minimizing the clean-up burden after kneading bread dough, as well as the usual applications. But the list of doodads I couldn't live without is pretty short.
How about a thread about hardware-type tools we use in the kitchen (recognizing the Microplane as grandaddy of them all)? I'm very fond of the needle-nose pliers I use to pull bones out of salmon fillets...
#24
Posted 27 January 2006 - 04:06 PM
How about the $10-$15 simple blow-torch for making creme brulee? Sure beats those fancy shmancy gormet ones. PVC tubing is good for some dessert work too.After years living in a New York City apartment with storage space at a premium, my unbreakable ironclad rule is No Single-Use Gadgets. (And 2 uses may not be enough, either!)
Current winners include a silpat knockoff from Sur La Table (the first thing I've ever found that was actually CHEAPER there) -- great for minimizing the clean-up burden after kneading bread dough, as well as the usual applications. But the list of doodads I couldn't live without is pretty short.
How about a thread about hardware-type tools we use in the kitchen (recognizing the Microplane as grandaddy of them all)? I'm very fond of the needle-nose pliers I use to pull bones out of salmon fillets...
Help homeless pets find a home, Strut Your Mutt 2013.
#25
Posted 28 January 2006 - 02:07 PM
They also work well for blistering and peeling the skin off of red peppers and chiles.How about the $10-$15 simple blow-torch for making creme brulee?
#26
Posted 03 February 2006 - 10:17 AM
Oh, and even better, it comes in a set of two, so you can make sure you and your +1 look utterly ludicrous.
Five people are in a restaurant, and the bill comes to £112.48. If two people had starters but no wine, one person has had wine but no dessert, one person is moaning that they had the vegetarian and that was cheaper, another person had no starter or dessert, but ordered an extra bottle of wine without asking anyone else, calculate the number of different Switch/Visa/Carbon/Delta cards you can hand the waiter before they kill you.
#27
Posted 03 February 2006 - 10:21 AM
That is what I am talking about!Here's another doozy: Pizza Fork.
Oh, and even better, it comes in a set of two, so you can make sure you and your +1 look utterly ludicrous.
Help homeless pets find a home, Strut Your Mutt 2013.
#29
Posted 03 February 2006 - 11:21 AM
#30
Posted 03 February 2006 - 11:29 AM
Ding Ding Ding.......Ladies and Gentlemen, we have a winner!!Here's another doozy: Pizza Fork.
Oh, and even better, it comes in a set of two, so you can make sure you and your +1 look utterly ludicrous.
#31
Posted 03 February 2006 - 11:32 AM
I agree with your list - my family lost everything in a house fire a few months ago and are living in a rental house with rental everything while we rebuild. Having had high quality kitchen gear before, then being exposed to the truly awful rental line which visually appears to be good quality but fails in use in every way, I no longer take for granted a good paring knife and chef's knife, as well as the All-Clad fry pan, an OXO peeler, a sturdy spatula, a real corkscrew, and a range of better quality wine glasses (Lord knows a bottle of wine is needed after watching your house burn down on April Fool's Day). I am spending a lot of time browsing the kitchen stores and catalogs - restocking the kitchen will be the one brighter spot in this whole experience.I seriously think for 95% of my cooking all I use is a good pairing knife, cutting board, bowls for holding chopped stuff, and a 10 inch All-Clad fry pan. Add to the list a couple sizzle plates, tongs, and a spoon and a fork and I'm probably up to 99%.
Hooters of America, May 2002
#32
Posted 03 February 2006 - 01:29 PM
Edited by crackers, 03 February 2006 - 01:30 PM.
#33
Posted 03 February 2006 - 01:43 PM
Although that particular cocktail party doesn't look like very much fun.I don't have this. I don't even know where I can buy it, but a "Thup" would sure solve a lot of cocktail party problems.
Nelson Muntz: I dunno. Guts...Black stuff... And about fifty Slim Jims.
#34
Posted 03 February 2006 - 01:57 PM
Hooters of America, May 2002
#35
Posted 03 February 2006 - 02:41 PM
it's now motorized. http://www.shopatron...=HGW10475/208.1Growing up, we had a variation of the pizza fork - it was a spaghetti fork - there was a handle on the side that when turned, also turned the tines and wrapped the spaghetti around the fork so you did not have to actually turn the whole fork. My brothers and I fought over that one fork so many times, I think my mom threw it away. I have never seen another like it.
#36
Posted 03 February 2006 - 04:27 PM
Admittedly, I used mine to touch up my chicken skin over on the Palena Chicken Project thread.They also work well for blistering and peeling the skin off of red peppers and chiles.
#38
Posted 03 February 2006 - 05:02 PM
NOt to mention the motorized ice cream cone. It even comes in your choice of four colors. Is this a great country or what?I can't believe that nobody mentioned the Octodog yet. Behold the Octodog!.
![]()
#40
Posted 04 February 2006 - 10:17 AM
Fish Sticks?
In memory of David Weber of Malvern Racing and StephenB. Good friends gone forever.
#41
Posted 04 February 2006 - 03:28 PM
No need to order any for me - I have a similar item (called beginners chopsticks or some such). They were handed out at the end of a Shirley Fong-Torres Wokwiz "I can't believe I ate my way through Chinatown" tour in San FranciscoPersonally for the Korean dinner, I'm going to order a bunch of these for people who can't use regular chop sticks.
Fish Sticks?
Jackie B.
We are the music makers, and we are the dreamers of dreams.
Wonka/Dahl/O'Shaughnessy
#42
Posted 04 February 2006 - 04:10 PM
I've seen you use chopsticks...I'm ordering two pairs for you...No need to order any for me - I have a similar item (called beginners chopsticks or some such). They were handed out at the end of a Shirley Fong-Torres Wokwiz "I can't believe I ate my way through Chinatown" tour in San Francisco
![]()
In memory of David Weber of Malvern Racing and StephenB. Good friends gone forever.
#43
Posted 09 August 2006 - 06:33 PM
#44
Posted 09 August 2006 - 06:38 PM
I actually own something like this. It's essentially an expandable round knife, on a handle with a spring. You place it on the end of the cob, and strip quickly down. The spring is just strong enough to keep the blades on the cob all the way around, cutting the kernels clean off the entire cob in one pass. You can literally do an ear in 3 seconds.I want the Corn Zipper.
Your go now. Keep it real, though. No wine pods.
In the summer, one of my wife's favorite dishes to make is corn souffle, so this device comes in handy when she has a dozen or two ears of corn to deal with.
#45
Posted 09 August 2006 - 06:53 PM
I just bought a Corn Zipper this weekend at La Cuisine in Old Town! (So now you know where to buy one locallyI want the Corn Zipper.
Your go now. Keep it real, though. No wine pods.
#46
Posted 09 August 2006 - 07:06 PM
#47
Posted 09 August 2006 - 07:49 PM
#48
Posted 09 August 2006 - 08:23 PM
I saw this today and immediately wanted one. I gave up eating corn-on-the-cob some years ago, due to the mess and the fact that I just HATED all that crap between my teeth. Plus, I make a lot of things which require taking the fresh kernels off the cob. The WaPo says they sell these at Home Rule on 14th Street--one of my favorite places in the city. These two guys bought this building that had been shuttered for almost 30 years and turned some of the detritus they found into an interesting mosaic for their cash register counter. I found myself explaining what had happened in 1968 to an entrepreneur who hadn't actually been born at the time.I want the Corn Zipper.
Your go now. Keep it real, though. No wine pods.
#49
Posted 09 August 2006 - 10:03 PM
Trying.To.Stifle.Joke.I want the Corn Zipper.
Your go now. Keep it real, though. No wine pods.
#50
Posted 10 August 2006 - 07:38 AM
I think a Vortex Genie would make a great addition to any bar. And maybe an Anti-Griddle to replace the frozen ice/slush/granita components with equivalents made on-the-spot from the cocktail itself.
--------Dëgg kaani la (Truth is a hot pepper)--- Wolof proverb
0 user(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 0 guests, 0 anonymous users











