The Food Lab: Better Home Cooking Through Science

(Nandana) #1

up for a couple bucks a pair. Otherwise, you can find
acceptable models online, like the Extra-Long Chopsticks
from Hong Kong Imports Ltd. ($2).



  1. Wine Key
    Regular corkscrews and $100 rabbit-shaped models will get
    your cork out, and fast. But with a little practice, a waiter’s
    wine key will open wine bottles (and beers) just as fast, and
    make you look infinitely cooler. The key is to use it as a
    lever. If you are pulling on it hard, you’re doing it wrong! I
    keep a few in my cutlery drawer (like pens and razors, they
    tend to wander off into the world on their own from time to
    time), as well as one in my knife kit.

  2. Citrus Juicer
    Every professional kitchen has its own hazing rituals, and as
    a young chef-in-training, I endured a period of time—a
    good eight months or so—when my first duty every single
    morning was to ream twenty-four limes, twenty-four
    lemons, and a dozen oranges for fresh juice to use on the
    line during service. And the only tool I was allowed to use
    to do the job (lest I risk being called a wimp—believe me, a
    wimp is the last thing you want to be in the macho world of
    professional kitchens) was a wood lemon reamer from
    Scandicrafts, Inc. ($4). It was two weeks before I could
    complete the task from start to finish without taking a break
    to nurse my painfully swollen hands, and I went through
    four of the reamers in the course of those eight months,
    slowly wearing them down until the grooved edges on the
    business end were as smooth and soft as river stones.

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