I keep hearing the new aphorism that you shouldn't have things that only have one purpose. It's a good thing to think about before buying something, and has been applied to everything from a wristwatch ("My phone keeps better time") to a warming drawer (they always list a bunch of things one can do like crisping up soggy cornflakes and rising bread, but it's basically just a box that heats to a low temperature, and that's all it does). Back in February, I started a thread that was questioning the labor savings of some small appliances and it turned into a great review of gadgets. It touched on this single purpose idea, but only tangentially. Now I'm contemplating the one useness, and wondering where you all hold the line.
My most recent gadget is the OXO cherry pipper. I was too bored with digging out cherry pips with a paring knife. The OXO pipper comes with a splatter shield, which is really great. But it's definitely one use. This kind of gadget is advertised to work on olives, which I don't doubt they would, but I hardly call that a different use. This lovely new gadget of mine was inexpensive and fits in my little gadget drawer, no problem.
I also have a big, heavy, Italian ice cream freezer, which was a birthday present. I even got to pick it out. I love it! But all it does is aerate goop while freezing it. It takes up a lot of counter space. The results are worth it, however. My best concoction so far was three kinds of pears (some sweet, some tart) and the juice of a lime. That's it. Really lovely sorbet. You can't buy that kind of thing. It doesn't keep.
The surprisingly multi-use thing that has made it into my new kitchen is the scale. My old scale was awkward to use and was dying. The new one looks like a pillbug, but the cover inverts to become a bowl, and reveals the display mounted on the side, rather than the same surface as the platform. It's a great scale. And you could use it as a bowl.
I don't at all mind if a gadget only has one purpose so long as it does its thing well. And I do think that single use appliances are silly when they're things like cupcake makers. You can make cupcakes in a toaster oven too, and it's not like it does the mixing the way a bread machine does. My exception is my egg steamer, which is as silly, but I grew up with one and I like it. I'm not really into small appliances, but I can see the point of a bread machine, and even a rice maker, even though it's really just as easy to bake bread or boil rice in a good kitchen (I've always thought these were for supplementing small or ill equipped kitchens).
Any normal kitchen should have: Knives of different lengths and edges, sharpening stone and steel, meat fork, cooking spoon, slotted spoon or skimmer, colander/sieve/strainer, wooden or silicone spoon/stirrer, pastry brush, spatula, scraper, tongs, whisk, masher, can opener, measuring spoons and cups, mixing bowls, baking sheets, pots and pans, string. A ladle and a baster are very useful, as well, and one can make do with a spoon and fork instead of a whisk and masher (I have, but bought a whisk as soon as I could).
Most of my gadgets are either in my knife drawer, gadget drawer or cooking utensil drawer, though a couple are with the mixing bowls (graters and spring chopper), and a few in the utensil drawer (tea things (infusers, etc.), egg separaters (I didn't buy them, but they're occasionally useful), and turkey zippers). In the baking drawer, besides wooden spoons, scrapes, pastry brushes, etc., are bench knife, pastry blender, rolling pin, mortar and pestle, pastry bags and tips, frosting texturer, egg slicer, food scoops, biscuit cutters, cookie cutters (not sure if they count, though), cake tester, thermometers, and oven rack puller (made by my father--I don't need to pull racks anymore). Most of my gadgets are for prep, however, and in the two smallest drawers:
In the knife and gadgets drawers, I have and treasure, besides my new cherry pipper, the tinsnips for cutting artichokes, hand press, hand juicer, reamer, jar wrench, apple slicer/corer, garlic press, garlic peeler, garlic mandoline, egg topper, can and bottle opener (listed because I have a rotary can opener that does everything, but I don't like using it for bottle tops and piercing cans), pickle slicer, pizza wheel, ice cream scoop (the rigid kind), mini masher, carrot curler, ice pick, nut cracker, mushroom slicer (will slice anything small and soft--a bit thickly, but useful for large quantities), avocado slicer, steel glove, poultry shears, tiny prep bowls, peelers, herb shears, lettuce knife (plastic kind), tomato knife (thin serrated). Plus the knives, stone and steel, of course.
Each drawer other than the knife drawer also has something of lesser utility. There's a set of melon hoops which work well enough, but I forget them because it's as easy to use a knife. There's a four bladed chopper (and chopping bowl which can also be used for other things), but the blades are too close to use for hard things, and I'd rather tear or snip herbs. There's an herb chopper that is supposed to work like a little food processor and doesn't--it was a gift or I'd just get rid of it. And there's a citrus drain. You screw it into the fruit and you're supposed to squeeze out the juice. It's a lot easier using a reamer, but it makes a nice core, much more easily than any actual corer I've ever used, so I keep it for boring holes. :)
There are lots of things I don't have and don't want or need, but having done this survey I do wonder whatever happened to my melon baller...
rhome410
NatalieChantal
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