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Food

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May 8, 2008 23:00

By

Judi Rose,

Judi Rose

2 min read

Judi Rose answers readers’ queries on stir-frying, utensils and cheesecake with no cheese

 

I am putting together my wedding-gift list and would like to include some kitchen utensils. There is so much choice and many new twists on traditional tools that I’m a bit bewildered. Which do you think are genuinely useful, and which are just gimmicks?

Here are my favourite “non-traditional” kitchen tools: Silicone is really big at the moment, and with good reason. Silicone utensils are heat resistant, kind to cookware, comfortable, easy to clean and virtually indestructible. Some of my “must-haves” are: silicone spoons and spatulas (slotted and regular), measuring spoons, a silicone-tipped whisk, spatter shield and colander (the collapsible ones are terrific if storage space is limited). Silicone pastry brushes are useful even if you do not bake — great for basting, brushing on marinades or smearing a pan with oil, and they’re much easier to care for than a bristle brush.

Utensils with “comfort grip” handles (silicone or otherwise) are more comfortable to use and less likely to slip out of your hand — so put a can opener, kitchen shears, measuring jugs (large and small), an apple corer and a potato peeler (all with a non-slip handles) high on your list. Other useful “modern” gadgets: A salad spinner, a strong, dishwasher-proof garlic press (metal not plastic), microplane graters (coarse, medium and fine) and an instant-read thermometer (invaluable for avoiding undercooked chicken and overcooked steak). In the “gimmick” category, I would put plastic vegetable choppers, garlic “peelers” (a good thwack with the side of chef’s knife does the job just as well), and garlic/onion odour-removing stones and bars. Lastly, avoid highly specialised single-purpose tools like mushroom brushes and avocado slicers.