5 kitchen things I can’t do without
June 24, 2012 by SusieEach of us has a different approach to kitchen equipment. Some of us–whether because we’re just starting out as cooks, or we live alone, or because we’re minimalists or purists–have a fairly austere selection: a couple of good knives of different sizes, cutting board, measuring tools, a few good pots. The rest of us tend to accumulate. Some of us love quirky little gadgets, like lemon zesters and olive pitters and gnocchi boards and butter stamps. Some of us have a weakness for electric appliances, like crockpots and blenders and waffle irons. Some of us like vessels from elsewhere, like tagines and iron nailhead teapots. Every apparatus weakness a cook can have, I have. I have to struggle with myself every time a kitchenware store has a “$25+ free shipping!” sale. Yet over time, I have come to realize that some of the things I acquired impulsively have become treasured, multi-use members of my kitchen. So, without further ado, here are 5 things I’ve learned to love. They aren’t essential in the way a knife or a bowl is essential. Yet I can’t imagine doing without them.
1. OXO Good Grips 2-qt Batter Bowl.
You wouldn’t believe how often you end up needing a huge bowl
with a pour spout and a small footprint and a no-skid base.
Just a few examples: pouring soup into a blender.
Rapid-cooling ice cream base (sealed ziploc bag in ice
water). Storing a leaky bag of marinade and meat in
the fridge (or just holding a lot of marinated meat period).
And, of course, making pancake/waffle batter. The
measuring marks are just a bonus.
2. High-heat silicone spoonula.
These are unbeatable–as heat-resistant as wood, as flexible
as rubber. They don’t hurt non-stick pans or anything else,
and they won’t melt (up to a point). You can cook caramel
with them. You can scrape out corners and wipe out bowls with
them. You can spoon out sips of soup to taste for salt.
Mine was a wedding gift from Williams-Sonoma. It’s 14
years old and still going strong though a bit stained and charred
on the handle.
3. Cuisinart SmartStick immersion blender or “stick
blender”. A friend gave me one of these a couple
of years ago and I am still wondering how I managed to do without
it my whole life. It’s not just a better replacement for most
applications of a traditional blender, where you have to pour and
scrape and wash multiple containers. It’s also perfect for
smoothies, or for beating eggs when your kid absolutely, positively
won’t eat eggs with visible white. You can even get an
attachment that whips cream in no time flat.
4. Bench scraper. I’d never heard
of these before cooking school, but once I got one I never looked
back. In a kitchen you’re constantly needing a small, flat,
rigid plane for stuff: cleaning off your counter, dividing
dough, cutting up gnocchi, transferring small chopped stuff to the
stove. I like the kind with the ruler printed on it, which
makes it easy when you need to make sure your cookies are coming
out exactly 2″ in diameter, or your dice are really
1/4″. And any time something sticky/gooey/spready/crumbly
lands on something flat, and you wish it hadn’t, it’s a
lifesaver.
5. Spiral skimmer. I had seen
these in Chinatown for years before deciding it was OK for me to
get one, and even then I feared I’d end up never using it.
Wrong! Although these are really for deep-frying, there
are so many times you want to strain things out instead of
pouring things through a colander. You end up using
a slotted spoon (too small!) or worse, your hands (ouch!). If
you blanch vegetables or boil ravioli or dumplings or soak dried
mushrooms, you can pull them out of the bowl/pot super-fast with a
7″ skimmer. The spiral design is better than mesh, which
traps water through surface tension. Plus, although I’ve
never done it, I bet you could separate eggs really
easily with a spiral skimmer. Yes, recipe testing is part of
my job. But you don’t need to cook professionally to make
your life just a bit easier in the kitchen. None of these
things is terribly expensive–I think the blender is $35.
Everything else is $5-15. Go for it! indulge yourself.
(Or make a cook you love very, very happy.)
Categories
- All Posts (6940)
- Antipasto (2135)
- Author Articles (247)
- Book News (935)
- Cookbook Giveaways (983)
- Cookbook Lovers (257)
- Cooking Tips (109)
- Culinary News (299)
- Food Biz People (552)
- Food Online (791)
- Holidays & Celebrations (272)
- New Cookbooks (149)
- Recipes (1500)
- Shelf Life With Susie (231)
- What's New on EYB (133)
Archives
Latest Comments
- Atroyer7 on Danube Cookbook Review and Giveaway
- demomcook on What foods do you look forward to the most for each season?
- demomcook on Danube Cookbook Review and Giveaway
- Darcie on How cookbooks can help build resilience
- mholson3 on Danube Cookbook Review and Giveaway
- Rinshin on How cookbooks can help build resilience
- sarahawker on Danube Cookbook Review and Giveaway
- Sand9 on Danube Cookbook Review and Giveaway
- hankintoby29 on Heritage Cookies of the Mediterranean World – Cookbook Giveaway
- WBB613 on Feasts of Good Fortune Cookbook Giveaway