The Food Lab: Better Home Cooking Through Science

(Nandana) #1

things.



  1. A Y-Shaped Vegetable Peeler
    A regular vegetable peeler has a blade aligned with the
    handle, requiring you to hold both vegetable and peeler at
    an awkward angle, limiting your precision. With a Y-peeler,
    you hold the peeler as if you’re picking up an iPod, giving
    you far greater accuracy. The result is prettier vegetables,
    faster prep (once you get used to using it), and less waste.
    The Kuhn Rikon Original Swiss Peeler ($10.95 for 3) comes
    in assorted colors, has a built-in potato-eye remover, and is
    cheap, sturdy, and very sharp. I bought a set of a half a
    dozen in 2002 and still have four of them in perfect working
    order. (For the record, the other two were lost, not broken or
    worn out.)

  2. A 10-Inch Honing Steel
    Honing steels (sometimes incorrectly referred to as
    sharpening steels) are the long, heavy, textured metal rods
    that butchers and serial killers run their knives over before
    going at their meat.
    Many people confuse honing with sharpening, but there is
    a distinct difference. When you sharpen a knife, you’re
    actively removing material from the blade, creating a brand
    new razor-sharp beveled edge. When you hone a knife, all
    you’re doing is making sure that edge is straight. The thing
    about metal is, it’s malleable. That means that with regular
    kitchen use, that thin sharpened edge can get microscopic
    dents in it that throw the blade out of alignment. Even if the
    blade is still sharp, it can feel dull because the sharp edge

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