Great video as always. 🙂 I would add few items to my essential kitchen tools: 1. Mortar and pestle 2. Pyrex measuring jug or generally measuring cups 3. Fish spatula/ turner Have fun in Europe 🙂
As I allow other people to cook in my kitchen, there is one rule about the wooden spoons: round ones for sweet and squarish ones for savoury (also have a dedicated wooden board for sweets) - learned very early that I did not like garlicky strawberries ;-)
Regarding the blender, you can get a kit with a stick blender, mini food processor and whisk for about £40. Since I got I only get the big food processor out if I’m doing something pretty big. For blitzing up a bit of a veg or something the small one is great. Secondly, and this might be sacrilege, but I ditched my box grater for one of those ones you grate over a box or bowl with various ‘lids’ for different gratings. Easier to clean and for stuff like grating cheese you’ve then got it stored in something straight away.
I have a pyrex jug which is essential for measuring and also prepping stock, sauces and marinades, can go in the microwave. A silicon mitt and spatula. I also second the stick blender, very versatile. I also have a pastry mat for all kinds of food prep which is good for easy cleanup.
I spent 15 years working all levels of professional kitchens. This is pretty close to the collection I would pull out of my own kitchen if asked. If I'm being nitpicky, I'd probably sub out the brush for a silicon one (Less chance for random 'hairs' in the food. Actually had a pot pie sent back once for that) The mandolin demands a blood sacrifice! For a lot of folks commenting about a fish spatula - I have several and use them quite a bit still, but wouldn't consider it 'essential' for home use. They were great in restaurant work being lighter, nimble, and allowing things to drain. But at home every single one of those things is much less of a concern and I have a regular, really old flat spatula that I use just as often. BTW- 1000% agree about the tweezers. Might be useful for the Michelin places serving 3 bites at a time. Mostly useless otherwise.
A proper HIGH power emersion blender A proper HIGH power spice grinder Good gawd the impact of having these gadgets has made on food experience at home, jeez. The sheer amount of money saved since is crazy on all the things able to now make myself, and sooo easily, instead of having to buy from store. Has blown my mind entirely. Best purchases bar none in my 20 years having my own kitchen.
Protecting rejuvenating wooden utensils and tools: use butcher block conditioner. It's made of natural mineral oils and waxes, food safe, and tasteless. I recommend a bit of sanding first if you're noticing a bit of fraying of the wood particles.
Hi Andy and Katelyn. I'm just starting out as an apprentice chef in Sydney and just wanted to say that your videos are a massive inspiration for me and your passion for food across the world really resonated with me and caused a turning point for me to chase my dream job in the industry!
A sieve is essential if you are making cakes it helps get air into the flour to make it lighter and easier to move. ladle is good I use 2 different shaped ones. I like the glass juicers like a shallow bowl with a lump in it. Hah ! if you make big pots of soup you have to have a very long spoon,I had to make mine,couldn't buy what I wanted. The round perforated spoon thing is a skimmer !
I got rid of my lemon juicer like yours because I prefer the old glass lemon squeezer that the army hat got it’s name from. It was too bulky for my gadget drawer too whereas the glass one fits in the bowl cupboard. I love the tactile action of squeezing the lemon on this trusted ancient kitchen gadget from my mum. Obviously I’m just a home cook😉
Thank you for this Andy, I’m still a stainless steel, glass kinda girl, I’ve very few of the new scrapers, sorry can’t think of the name, Don’t like plastic, have very little in my pantry containers. Glass is my main. Cheers you two, walk the light n shiny, Peace ✌️
What glove do you use? I've convinced myself I need a $50 chainmail glove to protect from a mandoline. I believe that isn't true, but I really don't want to learn the hard way that a random cloth no cut glove wasn't good enough.
@@cdub42 I believe that a cheaper one would do as well. The expensive chainmail gloves are meant to protect against accidental stabbing as well, which really isn’t needed for the mandoline.
Ehhh, I've always known a chinois as a specific sieve with a very fine mesh. Not just the shape, cus the less fine version is called a china cap. All regional I'm sure.
I'm kinda between you two. Chinoise, to me, carries implications of shape (conical), size (relatively large, again like a [very stereotypical] East Asian hat), and fineness (as small as it gets). Like I wouldn't call a large conical colander a chinoise, but I also wouldn't call a small conical strainer a chinoise. However, language evolves, and in a high efficiency environment like a pro kitchen, and with the obviously most important distinguishing characteristic of a chinoise being the fineness of mesh, I'd be surprised if they didn't call any super fine mesh strainer a chinoise, regardless of shape or size.
I know this is a weird comment considering the video, but I watched your pancake video where you asked for your favourite pancake toppings and I have a very strange one: We used to put mince on our pancakes and roll them and eat them. We also had sweet ones with brown sugar and cinnamon spread over them and rolled again. Our pancakes were also very large similar circumference to a crepe but the thickness of a 'classic' pancake and same ingredients. My grandma used to make them for us as kids growing up in South Africa and they're still some of my favourite pancake toppings or fillings lol
I use the dough cutter as a bench scraper to protect my knives. Love my stick blender. My juicer is heavy metal from my great grandmother shaped like yours.
Spot on with microplane, they are the only ones to buy and more than that the metal ones are the only ones to buy, they do make a plastic one that has a metal insert but eventually the tabs break and the metal part will come out constantly its a few bucks cheaper but not worth saving the money
Was just going to post the same thing, but you beat me. I think they are just really big weevels😃. Mind you, Andy said in an earlier vid how much he hates English correctors, so we'll both be on the $hit list...
18:00 The Japanese mandolin - three rules of knife safety - 1. Keep the blade facing away from you. 2. Move the knife, not the food. 3. Keep good sight of the blade ... and this thng breaks all three rules and that's why everyone who has used one has cut themselves! :) There's a great video where Rick Stein explains how dangerous they are, and then promptly deeply cuts himself on camera. :D
Agree. I don't have chef fingers, but good tongs are a must - and not a chef. I only use the long ones (tongs) for getting things out of the top cupboard that I can't reach, cause I'm short! :)
Wait the dough cutter is still coming? That's awesome, you definitely made me a convert there Andy I always use it when I cook. Feels like I've been waiting on news there for months, I'm so keen to get it!
I found a different juicer that doesn’t require hand strength to operate. It’s the Dreamfarm Fluicer Fold Flat Easy Juicer and I find it much easier to use (I have Rheumatoid Arthritis so my hand strength is not always good) as it uses the bigger arm muscles. It’s also easier to store as it folds flat.
Thanks for your rec. Discovered this after reading your comment. Don't have a juicer so I went out and got this one. Can confirm it's AWESOME. And bonus, my lil kids can use it on their own to squeeze lemons and small oranges.
LOL. I was gonna call you out on the juicer, but you did talk about the fork. I saw a collab with you and ... dang I can't recall who the other person was, but I subbed ... and you juiced a lime with a fork and I was like YES!!! I don't need to go get a juicer!!! 8)
yeeaah and when chef finished his speech he started to clean work surface just right away😂 this is kind of professional habits you never reed of and you are doing it already automatically 🤘🤘🤘
I'm not sure how much longer I can afford to keep watching, I have a you tube window open and a browser window where I but everything that Andy has HAHAHAHA so far I have the board, the Microplane and the Mortar and Pestle . . . . . . . . actually that something Andy missed, no mortar and pestle!!!!!!!!!!
Caution is indeed advised with the mandolin. I was preparing a meal for my wife (then girlfriend) one night and using one to prepare a bunch of vegetables. When I was almost done, I didn't account for my thumb well and chopped the corner off. Luckily, I was able to clear my board of any contaminated veg, wrap my thumb in paper towel and duct tape, and finish the meal. My thumb hurt like hell but she ended up marrying me.
The mandoline is a Benriner. People recommend the regular over the "super" one which is wider. I wish I knew that before I bought mine. But they're good and sharp. Recommended.
Best thing i found for tongs is going to a commercial kitchen shop. No stupid clip, solid stainless steel, good spring. Nisbits stock some really good ones and they're nice n cheap.
Great video. The mandolin brand I think is Benriner, I have had one for years and love it, I don’t use the guard either, I find it annoying and counterproductive, I have never cut myself.
Cracked up over the "weasels" in flour 4:57... don't think a fine sieve would be needed! Bloody weasels are as big as a cat... (tongue in cheek comment - I KNOW Andy meant weevils!)🤣😆🤪
i second the why sift flour? thing if i'm making it smooth and getting lumps out with a sieve to then add a wet ingredient and it basically goes lumpy shaggy again anyway
There are a couple battery-powered, cordless stick blenders out there. It's a game changer. No more trying to find an outlet by the range or having a cord dangle over an open flame.
I used mandolin once... I knew... and I kept talking to myself and thinking: be careful, be careful, be careful. Watch Your fingers... On the third move I cut the skin from my knuckle xD
Cheap box graters are made with thinner metal. They flex alot which makes it easier to get your knuckle especially on the coarsest side. I just bought a cheap one (I moved into my own place) and I regret not spending $20 more *looks at the nick on his knuckle*.
Pro tip. When you get close to the end of the thing you're grating, hold it onto the grater with the pads of your fingers as you move it back and forth. Unlike knuckles, they will actually skip over the grater without getting cut. 😊
Fair enough, but I have a cheap box grater from my student days, when things would just appear and be left behind in shared flats - those items hold sentimental value. Can’t replace it.
I don’t think you’re not handling them correctly, I think the long, narrow shape is really stupid: when you use the whole length you have very little control towards the end; slipping seems inevitable. I don’t like them.
What about tools you use on your grills? One of my favorites is a mop brush - essentially a shrunken version of a floor mop! Also surprised Katelyn didn’t have a wine corkscrew in her bar collection!
Hey guys, watching from Footscray here! Just wondering where you get the different size baking sheets, with the perfectly fitting racks?? Can’t find them at chefs hat or anything ! Thanks!
Hehehe I think a piece of biltong on a string would be a better way to get weasels out of your flour... but only after they decided they'd made enough mischief/mess
Chopped nearly a centimetre off the tip of my finger last year with a mandoline. Takes bloody ages to heal! But you only do it once. Also these videos are costing me Money! You’ve convinced me to finally invest in a meat thermometer. I also love the tongs with the sieve thing? No idea of proper name, but for taking small things out of boiling oil. So good!
I've used a digital thermometer for years, but finally invested in a fancy one. Big difference in useability. If you can afford it I recommend spending a bit more (I got the thermopen, but I'm sure there are others.)
Hi, did I miss hear? You use a balloon whisk for making pastry? Surely fingers for rubbing in fat and flour and possibly a pallet knife for mixing the few spoons of water. Get that whisk anywhere near, and you'll have a giant blob in the balloon and ages of clearing it out, eugh🥴.
i have some cheap wooden tongs, they look more convenient than metal ones. it's so convenient chopsticks would probably work well but normal japanese styled ones feel a bit short for me. my immersion blender has extra parts like a whisk and a blender
Chef! Or sift flour when working at collage with a bunch of kids, you will never believe the things you find. Also test salt before use …. For some reason it seem to end up being sugar even when labeled salt in collage
The four that seemed the most unnecessary to me where the Emerson blender, microplane, citrus juicer and the benriner and these are now the 4 things i would never want to be without
My mum took the giant wooden fork off the wall in the 70’s and whacked me with it 😅 one of the prongs broke so the red mark looked hilarious 😂 so we both laughed 😂
Maybe it's because I use a lot of spices (I have three shelves of a cupboard full, plus some overflow bags on top of the cupboard), but I would rank mortar and pestle as more essential than most of these, with the exception of spatulas and wooden spoons obviously. And it's very easy to clean and as long as you're only grinding dry spices, you really don't need to clean it between every use, just wipe it off the remaining powder with a paper towel. And I'm too clumsy and too ADHD to dare use a mandolin... I'd rather spend 4 times as long carefully slicing with a knife than waving my fingers near that blade. (I have used one with a holder thingy that does mostly protect your fingers as long as your hand doesn't slip off it; but it's messy and annoying to clean anyway) So if you're clumsy like me and love spices, swap the mandolin for a good mortar and pestle. Just try to find one where the bowl is larger than your fist (if it's the same size or smaller than your fist, it feels cramped to use and is annoying to empty and clean) and preferably in stone. Porcelain mortar and pestles seems to smooth to grind hard spices well; and I wouldn't trust them for hitting the spices to crush them for fear of breaking it (I think they are intended more for leafy herbs and chemistry or pharmacy work rather than spices); and while cast/wrought iron mortar and pestles are just as robust and rough as stone; they tend to clang and ring like a bell when you use it which gets annoying quickly.
Instead of wooden spoons try bamboo spoons etc.. Bamboo is stronger, natural anti bacterial… wash in dishwashing you wish. I really like bamboo boards too..any are also nonstick and can be used safely in a non stick pan….
Wooden spoon...? My mom used a Japanese wooden rice paddle for pottery work. I recieved it once. Spoons wished they could dish that out 😂 EDIT: as for the cooking chopsticks, I made a special set for my mom that were like a combination of tongs and chopsticks. They were a pair about 16" (~400mm) long, about 1/4" (~6mm) square profile, with 2 pieces about 3" (~70-80mm) glued and nailed in between. I think they were made from maple? She's used them for the past ~35 years, and they're still holding strong!
Did you do some ai postprocessing and cloning or did you upgrade to four gas stoves instead of your induction? It looks very weried :D In your one pot video there only has been one stove. Great video as always and very informative!
Great video as always. 🙂
I would add few items to my essential kitchen tools: 1. Mortar and pestle 2. Pyrex measuring jug or generally measuring cups 3. Fish spatula/ turner
Have fun in Europe 🙂
Agree mortar and pestle is a must!
You need your measuring spoons and measuring cups. I need my kitchen scales.
As I allow other people to cook in my kitchen, there is one rule about the wooden spoons: round ones for sweet and squarish ones for savoury (also have a dedicated wooden board for sweets) - learned very early that I did not like garlicky strawberries ;-)
Regarding the blender, you can get a kit with a stick blender, mini food processor and whisk for about £40. Since I got I only get the big food processor out if I’m doing something pretty big. For blitzing up a bit of a veg or something the small one is great.
Secondly, and this might be sacrilege, but I ditched my box grater for one of those ones you grate over a box or bowl with various ‘lids’ for different gratings. Easier to clean and for stuff like grating cheese you’ve then got it stored in something straight away.
I have a pyrex jug which is essential for measuring and also prepping stock, sauces and marinades, can go in the microwave. A silicon mitt and spatula. I also second the stick blender, very versatile. I also have a pastry mat for all kinds of food prep which is good for easy cleanup.
Would like to see Andy cook a semi complex dish with only his essential 5 tools and his favourite knife. Would be a fun video.😅
Andy: This shouldn't go in the dishwasher.
Katelyn: oh ok 🤦🫣🙃
I spent 15 years working all levels of professional kitchens. This is pretty close to the collection I would pull out of my own kitchen if asked. If I'm being nitpicky, I'd probably sub out the brush for a silicon one (Less chance for random 'hairs' in the food. Actually had a pot pie sent back once for that)
The mandolin demands a blood sacrifice!
For a lot of folks commenting about a fish spatula - I have several and use them quite a bit still, but wouldn't consider it 'essential' for home use. They were great in restaurant work being lighter, nimble, and allowing things to drain. But at home every single one of those things is much less of a concern and I have a regular, really old flat spatula that I use just as often.
BTW- 1000% agree about the tweezers. Might be useful for the Michelin places serving 3 bites at a time. Mostly useless otherwise.
A proper HIGH power emersion blender
A proper HIGH power spice grinder
Good gawd the impact of having these gadgets has made on food experience at home, jeez. The sheer amount of money saved since is crazy on all the things able to now make myself, and sooo easily, instead of having to buy from store. Has blown my mind entirely. Best purchases bar none in my 20 years having my own kitchen.
Protecting rejuvenating wooden utensils and tools: use butcher block conditioner. It's made of natural mineral oils and waxes, food safe, and tasteless. I recommend a bit of sanding first if you're noticing a bit of fraying of the wood particles.
Hi Andy and Katelyn. I'm just starting out as an apprentice chef in Sydney and just wanted to say that your videos are a massive inspiration for me and your passion for food across the world really resonated with me and caused a turning point for me to chase my dream job in the industry!
I keep a dedicated toothbrush in my kitchen for washing graters and mesh strainers
Think you forgot scales!
BOH videos are awesome. Such good chill/cosy vibes. Keep it up
good point!
A sieve is essential if you are making cakes it helps get air into the flour to make it lighter and easier to move. ladle is good I use 2 different shaped ones. I like the glass juicers like a shallow bowl with a lump in it. Hah ! if you make big pots of soup you have to have a very long spoon,I had to make mine,couldn't buy what I wanted. The round perforated spoon thing is a skimmer !
I got rid of my lemon juicer like yours because I prefer the old glass lemon squeezer that the army hat got it’s name from. It was too bulky for my gadget drawer too whereas the glass one fits in the bowl cupboard. I love the tactile action of squeezing the lemon on this trusted ancient kitchen gadget from my mum. Obviously I’m just a home cook😉
You two are adorable and work well together. Hope to see more of these, it’s a great format.
Thank you for this Andy, I’m still a stainless steel, glass kinda girl, I’ve very few of the new scrapers, sorry can’t think of the name, Don’t like plastic, have very little in my pantry containers. Glass is my main.
Cheers you two, walk the light n shiny, Peace ✌️
Cool video.
I am happy! I have almost all Andy put on the table. And I use it a lot!!!
I just use the no-cut gloves with my mandolin these days. So quick and easy it's a no-brainer because you will slip and fail otherwise.
What glove do you use? I've convinced myself I need a $50 chainmail glove to protect from a mandoline. I believe that isn't true, but I really don't want to learn the hard way that a random cloth no cut glove wasn't good enough.
@@cdub42 I believe that a cheaper one would do as well. The expensive chainmail gloves are meant to protect against accidental stabbing as well, which really isn’t needed for the mandoline.
A chinoise is a conical strainer named after it resemblence to a chinese hat. Chinoise is chinese in French. A sieve is a sieve. Love your work chef.
Ehhh, I've always known a chinois as a specific sieve with a very fine mesh. Not just the shape, cus the less fine version is called a china cap. All regional I'm sure.
I'm kinda between you two. Chinoise, to me, carries implications of shape (conical), size (relatively large, again like a [very stereotypical] East Asian hat), and fineness (as small as it gets). Like I wouldn't call a large conical colander a chinoise, but I also wouldn't call a small conical strainer a chinoise. However, language evolves, and in a high efficiency environment like a pro kitchen, and with the obviously most important distinguishing characteristic of a chinoise being the fineness of mesh, I'd be surprised if they didn't call any super fine mesh strainer a chinoise, regardless of shape or size.
The only thing I would add is a digital kitchen scale.
Love you two. Real people doing real shit haha
Andy pls bring the crew to Chicago. So many good eats here brother
I know this is a weird comment considering the video, but I watched your pancake video where you asked for your favourite pancake toppings and I have a very strange one:
We used to put mince on our pancakes and roll them and eat them. We also had sweet ones with brown sugar and cinnamon spread over them and rolled again. Our pancakes were also very large similar circumference to a crepe but the thickness of a 'classic' pancake and same ingredients. My grandma used to make them for us as kids growing up in South Africa and they're still some of my favourite pancake toppings or fillings lol
I use the dough cutter as a bench scraper to protect my knives. Love my stick blender. My juicer is heavy metal from my great grandmother shaped like yours.
Spot on with microplane, they are the only ones to buy and more than that the metal ones are the only ones to buy, they do make a plastic one that has a metal insert but eventually the tabs break and the metal part will come out constantly its a few bucks cheaper but not worth saving the money
I have an “original” and one from a German manufacturer, and they’re exactly the same. And I don’t like either.
Thanks Andy!🙂
Good info on good cooking tools.
i like the fact you mention what can be cheap and what to invedt in. etc.
4:53 If you've got weasels in your flour, then I think your problems are too big for a sifter! :D
Was just going to post the same thing, but you beat me. I think they are just really big weevels😃. Mind you, Andy said in an earlier vid how much he hates English correctors, so we'll both be on the $hit list...
Exactly, weevils in the flour. And I know what that really means, when younger, i remember the flour always had them.
18:00 The Japanese mandolin - three rules of knife safety - 1. Keep the blade facing away from you. 2. Move the knife, not the food. 3. Keep good sight of the blade ... and this thng breaks all three rules and that's why everyone who has used one has cut themselves! :)
There's a great video where Rick Stein explains how dangerous they are, and then promptly deeply cuts himself on camera. :D
Caitlin's face regarding a mandolin in the dishy.Sprung😂
Agree. I don't have chef fingers, but good tongs are a must - and not a chef.
I only use the long ones (tongs) for getting things out of the top cupboard that I can't reach, cause I'm short! :)
The Japanese mandolin brand is Benriner. They are also an essential in my kitchen.
Thank you for the pots and pans acknowledgement ❤
I made some wooden chopsticks from ipe and maple in high school like 30 years ago. They regularly go into the dishwasher.
Decent setup, I like a good fish spat too 👌🏻
Matt catching endless strays this episode, gotta love some good ol' sledging
Wait the dough cutter is still coming?
That's awesome, you definitely made me a convert there Andy I always use it when I cook.
Feels like I've been waiting on news there for months, I'm so keen to get it!
In Europe a ladle would’ve been a number one essential as we eat alot of soup. Weird that you don’t use it as much
We do? I rarely eat soup, almost never. But I do have a ladle.
I have a benriner mandolin. It's the best I've ever had and used. Worth it's weight In gold.
I found a different juicer that doesn’t require hand strength to operate. It’s the Dreamfarm Fluicer Fold Flat Easy Juicer and I find it much easier to use (I have Rheumatoid Arthritis so my hand strength is not always good) as it uses the bigger arm muscles. It’s also easier to store as it folds flat.
Thanks for your rec. Discovered this after reading your comment. Don't have a juicer so I went out and got this one. Can confirm it's AWESOME. And bonus, my lil kids can use it on their own to squeeze lemons and small oranges.
@@yoweemma glad it works for you too. ☺️
I just got on back of house channel, but I really enjoy it so far. thanks for sharing.
LOL. I was gonna call you out on the juicer, but you did talk about the fork. I saw a collab with you and ... dang I can't recall who the other person was, but I subbed ... and you juiced a lime with a fork and I was like YES!!! I don't need to go get a juicer!!! 8)
Weasels in the flour! What a lovely image. Definitely need sifting out. Just one would fill the whole cake tin.
yeeaah and when chef finished his speech he started to clean work surface just right away😂 this is kind of professional habits you never reed of and you are doing it already automatically 🤘🤘🤘
I'm not sure how much longer I can afford to keep watching, I have a you tube window open and a browser window where I but everything that Andy has HAHAHAHA so far I have the board, the Microplane and the Mortar and Pestle . . . . . . . . actually that something Andy missed, no mortar and pestle!!!!!!!!!!
All hail the juicer. Went for years without one then finally caved. Best. Decision. Ever.
This is a great video, great info!
Caution is indeed advised with the mandolin. I was preparing a meal for my wife (then girlfriend) one night and using one to prepare a bunch of vegetables. When I was almost done, I didn't account for my thumb well and chopped the corner off. Luckily, I was able to clear my board of any contaminated veg, wrap my thumb in paper towel and duct tape, and finish the meal. My thumb hurt like hell but she ended up marrying me.
Anyone else anxiously waiting for Andy to come back to the giant chopsticks
And storage options too, please Andy!
Andy’s handy tools. 😊
The mandoline is a Benriner. People recommend the regular over the "super" one which is wider. I wish I knew that before I bought mine. But they're good and sharp. Recommended.
Oh he said it. The teal vs tan but.
Best thing i found for tongs is going to a commercial kitchen shop. No stupid clip, solid stainless steel, good spring. Nisbits stock some really good ones and they're nice n cheap.
The stick blender is really useful. I make a lot of pureed soups and it is far easier to use than a blender.
Great video. The mandolin brand I think is Benriner, I have had one for years and love it, I don’t use the guard either, I find it annoying and counterproductive, I have never cut myself.
You will.
Cracked up over the "weasels" in flour 4:57... don't think a fine sieve would be needed!
Bloody weasels are as big as a cat...
(tongue in cheek comment - I KNOW Andy meant weevils!)🤣😆🤪
I'm shopping for an immersion blender... I love a tutorial and/or comparison.
i second the why sift flour? thing if i'm making it smooth and getting lumps out with a sieve to then add a wet ingredient and it basically goes lumpy shaggy again anyway
I've recently retired and gotten into cooking, so videos like this are really helpful to me. So the more videos like this the better.
My fingers always cramp up with chopsticks, so I use cooking tweezers instead and that works great. 😅
hah, good idea, have the sane issue
There are a couple battery-powered, cordless stick blenders out there. It's a game changer. No more trying to find an outlet by the range or having a cord dangle over an open flame.
I used mandolin once... I knew... and I kept talking to myself and thinking: be careful, be careful, be careful. Watch Your fingers... On the third move I cut the skin from my knuckle xD
Same. Used it once and took a chunk of skin off my pinkie, right at the tip. Unbelievably annoying for at least two weeks.
Cheap box graters are made with thinner metal. They flex alot which makes it easier to get your knuckle especially on the coarsest side. I just bought a cheap one (I moved into my own place) and I regret not spending $20 more *looks at the nick on his knuckle*.
Pro tip. When you get close to the end of the thing you're grating, hold it onto the grater with the pads of your fingers as you move it back and forth. Unlike knuckles, they will actually skip over the grater without getting cut. 😊
Fair enough, but I have a cheap box grater from my student days, when things would just appear and be left behind in shared flats - those items hold sentimental value. Can’t replace it.
those micro planers are great at zesting your fingers as well if you're in a rush and not handling correctly haha
I don’t think you’re not handling them correctly, I think the long, narrow shape is really stupid: when you use the whole length you have very little control towards the end; slipping seems inevitable. I don’t like them.
I really like "wooden" spoons made from bamboo. They're thin and light but very sturdy.
Great! I never sift flour. Pure laziness, but good to know it doesn’t make a difference 😂
Sifting flour aerates it. And it does make folding much smoother and easier.
The brand of mandolin is Benriner. They don't look like much but they perform better than anything else.
Can confirm
I have everything except the long chop Sticks, oh and no babe either 🤣🤣
What about tools you use on your grills? One of my favorites is a mop brush - essentially a shrunken version of a floor mop! Also surprised Katelyn didn’t have a wine corkscrew in her bar collection!
It is not the brand on the mandolin, it says "watch your fingers"✌
Tweezers are the fastest way to get shell fragments out of your eggs.
Loved the video. I did not see a garlic press, rolling pin for baking and a crab cracker.
Or a duck press.
Hey guys, watching from Footscray here! Just wondering where you get the different size baking sheets, with the perfectly fitting racks?? Can’t find them at chefs hat or anything !
Thanks!
Give Essential Ingredient a go. You'll feel it in your wallet, tho.
Ebay and Temu have them and they're very good quality actually, if you don't mind cheaping out - been using mine and they're holding up well!
Kitchen tools with Andy 🎶
Thank you for justifying my skepticism about sifting flour
The intro is 🐐'd
I have the exact green model of ベンリナー . Essential for slicing cabbages.
Great video!
12 stitches from a microplane and now have permanent nerve damage in my thumb - went almost to the bone. i now wear a safety glove.
Regarding sifting flour, cake/pastry flour (at least in North America) is notorious for clumping. I never sift all purpose or bread flour.
Hehehe I think a piece of biltong on a string would be a better way to get weasels out of your flour... but only after they decided they'd made enough mischief/mess
Fairly sure the wooden spoon in my mothers house spent more time in her hand chasing after me than it did stirring dinner on the stove
Love my stick blender!
Chopped nearly a centimetre off the tip of my finger last year with a mandoline. Takes bloody ages to heal! But you only do it once.
Also these videos are costing me
Money! You’ve convinced me to finally invest in a meat thermometer.
I also love the tongs with the sieve thing? No idea of proper name, but for taking small things out of boiling oil. So good!
I bought cut resistant gloves on eBay for like $12, highly recommended
@@jezo-matic991 good idea! I’ll try to find some.
I've used a digital thermometer for years, but finally invested in a fancy one. Big difference in useability. If you can afford it I recommend spending a bit more (I got the thermopen, but I'm sure there are others.)
I'll back a fork against firewood every time for my use.
Oh skewers !!
Hi, did I miss hear? You use a balloon whisk for making pastry? Surely fingers for rubbing in fat and flour and possibly a pallet knife for mixing the few spoons of water. Get that whisk anywhere near, and you'll have a giant blob in the balloon and ages of clearing it out, eugh🥴.
i have some cheap wooden tongs, they look more convenient than metal ones. it's so convenient
chopsticks would probably work well but normal japanese styled ones feel a bit short for me.
my immersion blender has extra parts like a whisk and a blender
Chef! Or sift flour when working at collage with a bunch of kids, you will never believe the things you find. Also test salt before use …. For some reason it seem to end up being sugar even when labeled salt in collage
The four that seemed the most unnecessary to me where the Emerson blender, microplane, citrus juicer and the benriner and these are now the 4 things i would never want to be without
Definitely add a digital kitchen scale to the list.
My mum took the giant wooden fork off the wall in the 70’s and whacked me with it 😅 one of the prongs broke so the red mark looked hilarious 😂 so we both laughed 😂
Everybody had those in the Seventies. People first brought them back as souvenirs from in Africa, but soon they started importing them.
Next pots and pans please!!!
Great video Andy.. Make another about nonstick kitchen tool, spatsula etc.
Benriner is the japanese brand of Mandolin, new models come in all white as well with some new functions
Maybe it's because I use a lot of spices (I have three shelves of a cupboard full, plus some overflow bags on top of the cupboard), but I would rank mortar and pestle as more essential than most of these, with the exception of spatulas and wooden spoons obviously. And it's very easy to clean and as long as you're only grinding dry spices, you really don't need to clean it between every use, just wipe it off the remaining powder with a paper towel.
And I'm too clumsy and too ADHD to dare use a mandolin... I'd rather spend 4 times as long carefully slicing with a knife than waving my fingers near that blade. (I have used one with a holder thingy that does mostly protect your fingers as long as your hand doesn't slip off it; but it's messy and annoying to clean anyway)
So if you're clumsy like me and love spices, swap the mandolin for a good mortar and pestle. Just try to find one where the bowl is larger than your fist (if it's the same size or smaller than your fist, it feels cramped to use and is annoying to empty and clean) and preferably in stone. Porcelain mortar and pestles seems to smooth to grind hard spices well; and I wouldn't trust them for hitting the spices to crush them for fear of breaking it (I think they are intended more for leafy herbs and chemistry or pharmacy work rather than spices); and while cast/wrought iron mortar and pestles are just as robust and rough as stone; they tend to clang and ring like a bell when you use it which gets annoying quickly.
@19:57 you call it spider, I call it strainer (potaato / pottatto)😀
Instead of wooden spoons try bamboo spoons etc.. Bamboo is stronger, natural anti bacterial… wash in dishwashing you wish. I really like bamboo boards too..any are also nonstick and can be used safely in a non stick pan….
Wooden spoon...?
My mom used a Japanese wooden rice paddle for pottery work. I recieved it once. Spoons wished they could dish that out 😂
EDIT: as for the cooking chopsticks, I made a special set for my mom that were like a combination of tongs and chopsticks. They were a pair about 16" (~400mm) long, about 1/4" (~6mm) square profile, with 2 pieces about 3" (~70-80mm) glued and nailed in between. I think they were made from maple? She's used them for the past ~35 years, and they're still holding strong!
Did you do some ai postprocessing and cloning or did you upgrade to four gas stoves instead of your induction? It looks very weried :D In your one pot video there only has been one stove.
Great video as always and very informative!
Microplane good for rough heel skin as well..... Just me? OK. :D
I heard they were originally designed for woodworking actually
@@dannyangeleno You should see my heels. :)