5 Chopping Kitchen Gadgets Tested by Design Expert | Well Equipped | Epicurious

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 13 июн 2024
  • Design and usability guru Dan Formosa returns for another episode of Well Equipped, this time turning his expert eye towards 5 gadgets designed to help you chop through your kitchen tasks. Watch as he tests each device, putting them through the gauntlet while commenting on what works, what doesn't, and what he would've done to improve their design.
    Check out the products Dan reviews in this episode:
    Salad Chopper: amzn.to/3M25R3d
    Industrial Chopper: amzn.to/3M25R3d
    Microplane Mezzaluna Chopper: fave.co/3JK3CQy
    Cheese Chopper: amzn.to/37JPmKj
    Salad Cutting Bowl: amzn.to/3KIAyKG
    When you buy something through our retail links, we earn an affiliate commission.
    Still haven’t subscribed to Epicurious on RUclips? ►► bit.ly/epiyoutubesub
    ABOUT EPICURIOUS
    Browse thousands of recipes and videos from Bon Appétit, Gourmet, and more. Find inventive cooking ideas, ingredients, and restaurant menus from the world’s largest food archive.
  • РазвлеченияРазвлечения

Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @giovanni_gira
    @giovanni_gira 2 года назад +2139

    It would be cool to see some of Dan's designed gadget here on the channel

    • @deepakmenon7733
      @deepakmenon7733 2 года назад +57

      It would all be 5/5 tho.... Maybe the 40 year old Dans gadgets...

    • @yachishairclips2250
      @yachishairclips2250 2 года назад +32

      Need to upvote this!! Like, I wanna know if he recognized the gadgets he worked on and how they perform with him having no bias review

    • @SevenHunnid
      @SevenHunnid 2 года назад +7

      I got fired from my job because i almost fought my 50 year old coworker.. and It got toxic yo so now, i spend most of my time smoking weed on my RUclips channel now, meanwhile i get back to the hustle😅haha

    • @snorlaxjen
      @snorlaxjen 2 года назад +57

      I looked him up and he helped design some of the OXO good grips - well worth the money

    • @AshesAshes44
      @AshesAshes44 2 года назад +13

      It would be neat because he could walk us through the why, what, etc. Background scandals in the Oxo-verse?

  • @livithecow
    @livithecow 2 года назад +728

    Dan: already knows the industrial chopper doesn’t work
    also Dan: aggressive tomato pounding

    • @RabbitsInBlack
      @RabbitsInBlack 2 года назад

      More like: Dan is a moron and is not an expert.

    • @ps7ykLiTT
      @ps7ykLiTT 2 года назад +29

      he already had the change of clothes so I guess he figured "why tf not?" 'cause I would too LOL

    • @Jana_San_SS
      @Jana_San_SS Год назад +15

      I DIED at that! An old man banging a tomato. 💀

    • @johanvanderpants9363
      @johanvanderpants9363 Год назад +23

      Doesn't work? Every kitchen I've ever worked in has one and uses it daily. I've never seen someone try to use it for a whole potato or pepper though. He was trying to dice the pepper with the stem and seeds still in it. That test was flawed at best.

    • @FieserMoep
      @FieserMoep Год назад +4

      @@johanvanderpants9363 I used these too within the industry though only a vertical slicing array to cut tomatoes or other veggies into perfect slices.

  • @serenab5707
    @serenab5707 Год назад +135

    The industrial food chopper is a tool I'm intimately familiar with. The trick is to do it all in a single motion. Raise the handle all the way up to where it's nearly off of the guides and slam down with full strength. It's loud, it's messy, and a little frightening. You also should oil the rods.

    • @redarrowsmk3
      @redarrowsmk3 6 месяцев назад +9

      I’ve used the longitudinal version that actually does have a levered mechanical advantage. Even so, that “shock” hit is the best technique. Dan here is representing the layman kitchen users of America who struggle to solve problems with strength or creativity.

    • @DefinitelyNotRin
      @DefinitelyNotRin 5 месяцев назад

      It's a valid way of doing a review. If a consumer is unable to figure out a device, the device essentially has failed. It needs to be easy to use and easy to understand@@redarrowsmk3

    • @jenm1
      @jenm1 2 месяца назад +1

      That just seems dangerous

    • @fusionwing4208
      @fusionwing4208 Месяц назад +1

      something tells me that industrial chopper didnt exactly have a sharp grid, and I would think pushing down would still at least force the vegetable through, even if it looks bad afterwards.

  • @BerserkingKantus
    @BerserkingKantus 2 года назад +735

    At Carl’s Jr. we had a chopper that looked like the industrial chopper, it was for tomatoes and onions but it actually worked. I think it’s a copy cat that doesn’t work.

    • @Glernaj
      @Glernaj 2 года назад +79

      Yeah, I used pretty much the same thing at Jimmy Johns, it looks like it's a knock-off with either the blade array in upside down, or just blunt blades.

    • @284mbp
      @284mbp 2 года назад +46

      yup. it's a design that's been around for a while. they just tested a cheap knockoff here.

    • @zionkaushagen1228
      @zionkaushagen1228 2 года назад +33

      No it works, we used them at a small chain called Freshii. You’re not supposed to put the whole vegetable/fruit, your supposed to cut into thirds then use the dicer.

    • @ront7774
      @ront7774 2 года назад +15

      I've used one as well. But, if you look closely, doesn't it look like the blades are upside down?

    • @arnaldoalegria2209
      @arnaldoalegria2209 2 года назад +7

      We had one but it had a lever so you could apply more force, it was bigger too

  • @txchristopherreed
    @txchristopherreed 2 года назад +911

    I have to question if that industrial chopper accidentally had the blade array in upside down. It just seems too much to believe that something like that was really *THAT* bad of a failure.

    • @chiblast100x
      @chiblast100x 2 года назад +164

      I suspect he just simply took the unit from it's original box and tried to use it as it came, but these units always come with the blade unit inverted as a safety precaution. 99% of restaurants that use these will just store the blades in the ready to use position.

    • @binarypower
      @binarypower 2 года назад +123

      Blades were upside down for sure. I've used these in every pizza place i used to work for. They work great.

    • @arieldanielle23
      @arieldanielle23 2 года назад +44

      That was my first thought too. Those choppers are legit, I have one on top of my fridge.

    • @thomasschindler1319
      @thomasschindler1319 2 года назад +28

      I use one at work every day. Never has a problem. We usually use it for dicing things not slicing

    • @riaz8783
      @riaz8783 2 года назад +101

      I agree, but for him and the crew not to realise is still bad design. If a tool's function isn't obvious, then he's not going to be the only one to do this.

  • @hugawerewolf
    @hugawerewolf 2 года назад +861

    Love how everyone who's ever worked with restaurant/commercial food prep is coming to the industrial chopper's defense. I can't vouch for this particular brand but I can say from experience that generally these dicers work really well.
    I'd guess this particular product is either defective and misaligned or (as other commenters have suggested) the blades are inverted.

    • @Asgar1205
      @Asgar1205 2 года назад +43

      I mean he used the cheese chopper and the salad bowl so poorly, I wouldn’t be surprised if he used the Industrial chopper wrong as well

    • @mikeperez5666
      @mikeperez5666 2 года назад +15

      Use those Chopper and it never fails. I'm disappointed 😞. I think he but the blades the wrong or he's too old

    • @KatanaKamisama
      @KatanaKamisama 2 года назад +46

      Yes, maybe the blades were inverted. But also his use of the tool was terrible. No one dices a pepper WHOLE or a tomato WHOLE. You cut them in half. And for the pepper you remove the seeds and stem. Same for an onion, it should be cut in half.
      It's easy to blame a tool, but I think there is plenty to blame besides the tool in this case. His test was comically bad. Being a "design expert" doesn't automatically grant the ability to correctly use a tool. If the tool didn't work, no one would use it, and it wouldn't be in EVERY chain restaurant in the US.

    • @presidentjoethudbrandon7074
      @presidentjoethudbrandon7074 2 года назад +41

      I've used them... they are trash. The things smash everything and are a pain to clean.
      Just teach your prep crew to use a knife.

    • @wynnefox
      @wynnefox 2 года назад +11

      I was curious so poked about and that brand gets some high reviews on Amazon and have more expensive version with the handle like he designed. Checked out some vids of other people using commercial choppers like it have an easier time, so really makes me curious now if it is user error.

  • @Hibbity_Hobbity
    @Hibbity_Hobbity Год назад +80

    I have received 2 different brands of the “industrial choppers” as gifts and one of them did not work at all and the other is FANTASTIC! One of the differences was there are serrated blades and also there is much more leverage for the one I kept

  • @paulholmes1303
    @paulholmes1303 2 года назад +413

    For the Cheese Chopper, the block should have rested against the back plate. Otherwise the block squeezes back as the blade descends and also causes the whole 'drawer' to drift back as well. The lettuce chopper, try a half a head at a time, it would work fine.

    • @Mystachao2
      @Mystachao2 2 года назад +81

      Looks like he used the equipment without reading the instructions

    • @Getpojke
      @Getpojke 2 года назад +23

      Also when he put the cheese in the slicer it wasn't "square". It had previously been cut squint so had an overhang, hence why he was getting wedges instead of slices. The cranked the wheel up & was cutting thick slices that are more likely to get the blade stuck.

    • @nikkiewhite476
      @nikkiewhite476 2 года назад +14

      That salad chopper want made originally just for lettuce. Look up the original commercials. You were supposed to be able to cut up a whole salad in it. But the base/guide lines were not matched up so you could not cut all the way through. It was quite the scandal.

    • @kasperrasch1018
      @kasperrasch1018 2 года назад

      Also that way he can turn the gears in to store the cheese inside cheese chopper

    • @snowe..
      @snowe.. 2 года назад +7

      the drawer would have drifted back whether the cheese was against the back plate or not.

  • @drunkweebmarine9492
    @drunkweebmarine9492 2 года назад +274

    the second one was obviously faulty. i used one every day to prep at ruby tuesday and had zero problems

    • @bigtee2000
      @bigtee2000 2 года назад +13

      Literally thinking the same thing. I used one at the pizza place I worked at and it worked fine.

    • @rjptrucking4598
      @rjptrucking4598 2 года назад +36

      No I think he had blades on backwards or upside down. It's dumb ad hell. I've used them for years have one in my kitchen

    • @abdulsamadchanna1243
      @abdulsamadchanna1243 2 года назад +9

      every one I see has a lever instead of that slammer thing and they work great

    • @mayaceleste8523
      @mayaceleste8523 2 года назад

      I agree! I was a server for a long time and those things were great 👍🏽

    • @Walebaren
      @Walebaren 2 года назад +3

      I agree, hopefully they see this and he revisits it.

  • @PropheticOverflowMC
    @PropheticOverflowMC 2 года назад +145

    It amazes me how hilarious he is but yet he keeps a straight face 🤣

    • @beepboop7090
      @beepboop7090 2 года назад

      Big dad’s energy lol

    • @cwg73160
      @cwg73160 2 года назад +3

      Those lines are set up. How are you not seeing that?
      The RUclips comments section is the kindergarten of social media.

    • @pesty4592
      @pesty4592 2 года назад +1

      @@cwg73160 still funny

    • @cwg73160
      @cwg73160 2 года назад

      @@pesty4592 And a good steak is good because of all the vitamin C.

    • @PropheticOverflowMC
      @PropheticOverflowMC 2 года назад +1

      @@cwg73160 awww and clearly it's also where lonely and bored people come, like yourself, who have nothing better to do but be a troll. 😄🤷🏽‍♂️
      Furthermore, even when scripted, actors (which I'm sure he's not) still finds what they're saying to be funny. His ability to keep a straight face is still impressive

  • @jenguitar6477
    @jenguitar6477 2 года назад +70

    The fry chipper was acting almost like the blade was in upside-down.

    • @sethberry9185
      @sethberry9185 2 года назад +5

      I thought the same thing. I have trouble believing it's that much of a piece of crap lol

    • @tymarchie
      @tymarchie 2 года назад +12

      @@sethberry9185 its not, we use these in most restaurants in the US. a pizza shaped one for lemons, and this one for onions etc. He's just using it like a wimp. also the blades were backwards

    • @ephemispriest8069
      @ephemispriest8069 2 года назад +4

      I've used the second device myself. You need to use smaller pieces. Like a quarter potatoe or a slice rather than half. Yes, it still sucks.

  • @CrimFerret
    @CrimFerret Год назад +25

    I worked in a restaurant for a while and they had a lever action version of that commercial chopper thing that worked very well. It only got used for onions and potatoes (the latter to make home cut french fries). It was useful because it was very fast and we needed to cut a LOT of fries. For home cooking, I have yet to see a cutting or chopping gadget that beats a properly used knife in the result and certainly in the cleanup.

  • @alishanicole_
    @alishanicole_ 2 года назад +305

    There should be a "gadgets revisted" episode or 2 where Dan goes back and uses the gadgets he used incorrectly in other episodes and gets them right this time around

    • @alfredolares5783
      @alfredolares5783 2 года назад +7

      This is 5/5

    • @TheCotzi
      @TheCotzi 2 года назад +5

      Totally on our page some he used like he wanted them to be bad and som he hated but he ignored that there disabled people who use them to get around in the Kitchen this are not all gadgets for every person

    • @stinkyboy101
      @stinkyboy101 Год назад

      Nah he’s an old stubborn boomer that thinks everything is the devices fault and never his own. After reading some of the replies and seeing him double down I have to question the integrity of this series altogether. I mean what’s more likely; every restaurant and the hundreds of people commenting being wrong or the old man and his buzzfeed-tier team of “experts” being wrong?

    • @deadlilac
      @deadlilac Год назад

      Agreed.

    • @craigalexander9421
      @craigalexander9421 Год назад

      I agree with this. He should at least go back to the manufacturer to get advice. It is hard to believe that a product can fail that badly.

  • @lemminglegion9117
    @lemminglegion9117 2 года назад +66

    Anyone else annoyed that he didn't use the cheese slicer properly? The wheel is to adjust the platform and that panel at the back of the moving platform would help stabilize the cheese. It's not there for show its there for functionality

    • @_j_v_
      @_j_v_ 2 года назад +9

      yeah and the first slices weren't even because the cheese had been cut diagonally prior to this video

    • @zandert33
      @zandert33 2 года назад +5

      I guess one aspect of rating these is whether they are intuitive enough to figure out how to use them without guidance, but that drove me insane as well. Moving the cheese directly against the back would have stabilized it

    • @MieahChan
      @MieahChan 2 года назад +4

      Agreed, I own the cheese chopper. The case is so you can store the cheese in it and there are multiple blades for different types of cheeses. Including a wire cutter. I don't blame him for it not working I blame the crew for not giving him all the pieces that it comes with and setting it up to fail.

    • @flakken44
      @flakken44 2 года назад +2

      The whole white tray was getting pushed back by the blade coming down, not just the cheese (hence why the cogweel was moving) so the result would be the same even if you put the cheese against the back panel

    • @snowe..
      @snowe.. 2 года назад +2

      he wasn't using it incorrectly, the back plate wouldn't do jack to stop the tray from moving.

  • @nikkiewhite476
    @nikkiewhite476 2 года назад +22

    Two comments: the herb chopper, I wouldn't increase the amount of blades. I had a wood and steel one that had 3 blades and it was hell to use!! The blades were so close together that what ever herbs I was trying to chop would end up packed in-between the blades. Rather tightly actually, the more I used it the more got packed instead of staying in the cutting board to get cut further. It was a gift from an in-law so I tried to use it for a while; used various things like a chopstick, a fork... basically anything at hand to clean out between the extremely sharp blades except my fingers. Then it was out in a drawer and quietly forgotten about.
    Secondly that salad cutting bowl. In the original commercials you were supposed to be able to throw in all the ingredients to your salad, tomatoes, a hunk of cucumber, seeded Bell peppers and a bunch of lettuce, cut along the lines turn 90 degrees cut again and voila! Pour in a bowl, dress and eat your perfect salad. But the guide lines don't come down all the way as you saw. If I was redesigning this I would raised the bottom ¼ an inch and lower the guide lines ¼ an inch and make it out of a much sturdier plastic all over. Yes people want things to be "cheap" but that is less a concern of material costs and more a problem with companies demanding 400% profit after costs. Decrease the profit margins and we could get a lot better products.

  • @pandaaamonium_
    @pandaaamonium_ 2 года назад +208

    I usually tend toward agreeing with all of his assessments EXCEPT this time. I’m not sure what happened with the industrial chopper but I’ve worked in restaurants for fifteen years and been around and used several of that particular device, and they do exactly what they’re meant to do, and yes, you do have to slide down the length of the supports with a fair amount of force but if the blades are sharp, as with any tool designed to cut, they do work. I wonder if they just didn’t get a restaurant grade version for the purposes of the video

    • @DevilishDevi
      @DevilishDevi 2 года назад +20

      The blade was just upside down.

    • @Heatherb349
      @Heatherb349 2 года назад

      Exactly

    • @jessip8654
      @jessip8654 2 года назад +16

      @@DevilishDevi but why was the logo right side up if it was upside down?

    • @Sc4r4byte
      @Sc4r4byte 2 года назад +7

      @@jessip8654 other commenters have mentioned that during transport, the blades are usually inverted for safety.

    • @madsdesouza2683
      @madsdesouza2683 2 года назад +4

      @@jessip8654 the blades come in a rubber square that can be detached, so it’s easier to clean also

  • @sandwichdood6634
    @sandwichdood6634 2 года назад +46

    If only he knew how to use that secon chopper. Lol it’s a lifesaver when I’ve got tons of things to prep at my job.

    • @Fluffykunn
      @Fluffykunn 2 года назад +16

      RIGHT? I don't know if he played with it dumbly for entertainment or literally didn't know. But its a very poor representation of such a useful tool.

    • @chunksmash
      @chunksmash 2 года назад +6

      Yeah, this is the first one I've seen him do that made me mad.

    • @PaperGunner722
      @PaperGunner722 2 года назад

      What's the problem with how he used it? I assume the blades werent sharp enough? He used the drop down teqnique didnt he?

    • @wcline06
      @wcline06 2 года назад +6

      @@PaperGunner722 you need to slam it hard and fast so the food gets sliced instead of mashed and taking the core of a tomato and pepper is recommended because its not eatable and itll make it hard to dice. No one showed him how to use it

    • @PaperGunner722
      @PaperGunner722 2 года назад +2

      @@wcline06 That's what I thought he was doing? I guess it just wasnt fast enough

  • @raherql
    @raherql 2 года назад +65

    Ok. I've used the industrial chopper for years, and even when the inserts were starting to dull it worked fantastically. With dulled blades you do have to actually get a pretty forceful smash in, otherwise you don't reach the threshold required to cut the veggies, and you just wind up smushing them.
    But with a heavier, forceful and abrupt chopping motion, you wind up getting a whole potato's worth of fries every 3 seconds or so, perfectly cut and exactly even.
    Also there are multiple heads/inserts for the machine. So you can do a french frie potato cut, or you can do apple slices and cores, or you can do potato wedges, etc. A very useful time saver.
    ...also, might I suggest the expert in cases where he's getting no traction try double checking to make sure he's not operating the gadget wrong? I get that he's an expert, but even experts get it wrong sometimes.

    • @ghubbz2464
      @ghubbz2464 2 года назад +6

      Worked in kitchens for years the metal dicers are always great but that new blade hits different 😂😂

    • @YasEmisDaBus
      @YasEmisDaBus 2 года назад +1

      upside down bladesm

    • @Goldenfir
      @Goldenfir 2 года назад

      I have one as well and I love making fries with it, but it slices other veggies just as good. But you do have to be quick and have a little force.

    • @Texas-yeehaw
      @Texas-yeehaw 2 года назад +12

      You know he tests out the products before he makes the videos... Apparently him and others on the team tried a lot of different ways to try and get it to work. It just doesn't work!

    • @raherql
      @raherql 2 года назад

      @@Texas-yeehaw ruclips.net/video/QCB6AlRBxKw/видео.html
      ...maybe he shoulda asked this guy instead?

  • @bloodlove93
    @bloodlove93 2 года назад +55

    I love how his redesign of the salad cutter is literally an ulu knife...its a strange knife used in artic regions if I remember correctly.
    So....he accidentally created an old but not well known knife design.

    • @dearthofdoohickeys4703
      @dearthofdoohickeys4703 2 года назад +1

      I made a similar comment lol. I lived in the Arctic for a while so it jumped out to me. Everyone there owned one.

    • @catgrin
      @catgrin Год назад +3

      Ulu knives are great! I was gifted one about 20 years ago from an aunt who was working in Alaska. I still have it. Earlier this year, a friend went on an Alaskan cruise and asked if I wanted anything. Now I have two - one small one large. :)

    • @ktraschko6553
      @ktraschko6553 Год назад

      Exactly my thought! Ulu are so beautifully designed, and metal does way better than plastic chopping.

  • @creid976
    @creid976 2 года назад +24

    It’s interesting that people by these kitchen gadgets to make like easier but often times, especially for me, a knife or just a regular tool is a lot easier and faster. The kitchen gadgets that I’ve bought in the past never gets used because they make cooking harder or that I forget I have them

    • @Rylo151
      @Rylo151 2 года назад +4

      Just extra washing up to do after as well

    • @yeti25934
      @yeti25934 2 года назад +11

      Some of them are great for people with disabilities though. Hence the oiled left hand test

    • @creid976
      @creid976 2 года назад

      @@yeti25934 yes 100% agree!

  • @Tala_Masca
    @Tala_Masca 2 года назад +40

    Still 40 years? It must surely be 41 years by now! Great reviews as ever Dan!!! And such great humor! Thank you!

    • @chriscooks5437
      @chriscooks5437 Год назад +1

      Was it necessary to show people that you can't round numbers?

    • @Cj.h
      @Cj.h Год назад

      @@chriscooks5437 🤔🧐🤏

  • @joebartender
    @joebartender 2 года назад +54

    Pretty sure the blades were in the wrong way on the vevor. Used one for years and as long as the blades are sharp and in the right way it cuts great. But if you put them in dull side up...

    • @fidenciobustos5689
      @fidenciobustos5689 2 года назад

      Also he could have chopped then smaller

    • @chiblast100x
      @chiblast100x 2 года назад +12

      I suspect he just simply took the unit from it's original box and tried to use it as it came, but these units always come with the blade unit inverted as a safety precaution.
      I've said that same thing in four comment threads here, time to move on.

    • @jpbaley2016
      @jpbaley2016 2 года назад +1

      Considering how easy it is to use a lever action one, it most likely had the blades upside down.

    • @thatbloomer5642
      @thatbloomer5642 2 года назад

      @@chiblast100x which is exactly what a common customer would've done. It's a fair assessment since these ratings are based on what a normal customer would've experienced and Dan's expertise in design are for improving said design to better the experience.

    • @carrotisnotafruit1620
      @carrotisnotafruit1620 Год назад

      Also, the size of the potato in itself was way to big, things like 1-2 inches are easy, example, dicing sliced tomatoes or onions/ potatoes. Pretty ewsy

  • @Kaboomboo
    @Kaboomboo 2 года назад +30

    Glad I'm not the only one that thought there was something off with that chopper. When I worked at a restaurant they were used all the time and worked exactly as they were supposed to.

    • @notabrit3025
      @notabrit3025 2 года назад

      He used is wrong, or had the blade upside down,

    • @javrami4883
      @javrami4883 2 года назад

      I literally just used one today. That bit was driving me insane

    • @Texas-yeehaw
      @Texas-yeehaw 2 года назад +4

      @@javrami4883 did yours have a lever? Levers make all the difference in the world. I can't imagine trying to brute force a potato through tiny holes with just my arm. And I have worked in kitchens for years.

    • @javrami4883
      @javrami4883 2 года назад

      @@Texas-yeehaw I’ve used ones with and without. The lever obviously is better for more Dense foods, but I have never felt the need for it. Those blades are crazy sharp

  • @catlordenzo
    @catlordenzo 2 года назад +83

    A few things: You should probably have him try the ones he tested incorrectly over again the right way. Especially the industrial chopper.
    Also, the link for the industrial chopper is incorrect and is a link for the Salad Chopper over again. Someone should probably fix that as well.
    I don't know if anyone goes over and reads these, but it's probably a good idea to also have someone make sure that he will be using every product the intended way. It doesn't make sense to rate it just based off of "intuitiveness" when part of the point of having products like these is to see if it works better than the traditional way when used as intended. The "intuitiveness" should come as part of the redesign portion, not for the whole thing.

    • @gynoid9649
      @gynoid9649 2 года назад +7

      What if the one he is using is a bad one? All I see in many of these comments is that he is using it wrong, but it could easily be a problem with the brand he got as well.

  • @theBabyDead
    @theBabyDead Год назад +22

    I think the herb chopper should've gotten bonus points for being a 1-handed tool, where as the comparison tool needed 2.
    As per the lettuce slicer, I think that one was actually on track. If they made it a just a little bit bigger and put rubber grips on the bottom, this could also be a very useful tool for a one-handed person. You could state slicing lettuce is easy, which, sure, it is, but it does require 2 hands, so it could be useful.
    Still, neither was perfect though. And I definitely agree on the squared off top-handle for the herb cutter to give you a probably way better experience by feel.

  • @danielbergman434
    @danielbergman434 2 года назад +66

    The industrial press was used completely wrong. I have used this everyday, for 5 hours a day. It is an amazing device for dicing vegetables. (When used properly)

    • @applesauce3527
      @applesauce3527 2 года назад +5

      how do you use it properly?

    • @illicocorvum3341
      @illicocorvum3341 2 года назад +11

      @@applesauce3527 For the most part you are suppose to slice the onion or bell pepper so they are about a quarter inch thick and then lay it down to press which then dices it. That press in particular doesnt have enough torque to cut something like potatoes into fries. If youre dicing one onion its a complete waste of time. but if youre cutting like 10 lbs of onion its way faster to slice them all then dice them through that.

    • @Kingcobra1211
      @Kingcobra1211 2 года назад +4

      @@applesauce3527 it's intended for diced things. You would slice the veg in question and then put the slices in the dicer. In my last kitchen we'd use a Nemco horizontal slicer to make tomato disks, then put those disks in the dicer to get even dice. Same with onion and jalapeño to get Pico de Gallo with exact shaped dice.
      It is not intended or even rated for full veg or fruit. And I don't think it's rated at all for root veg like potato due to the starch content, but I could be wrong since in theory you could use it for dice potato in hash.

    • @sayeedkizuk5822
      @sayeedkizuk5822 2 года назад

      I knew there must have been an explanation

    • @danielbergman434
      @danielbergman434 2 года назад +5

      We have another tool that slices them into perfect thickness to them be run through the dicer. When you slice and dice hundreds of vegetables, this tool is essential.

  • @Tininha724
    @Tininha724 2 года назад +18

    Am I the only one who is genuinely happy when see that a video with Dan is out?
    Don't get me wrong, the Epicurious channel is fantastic, but I love Dan's videos.

    • @BallsngI
      @BallsngI 8 месяцев назад

      Dan is nice

  • @derekpotter528
    @derekpotter528 2 года назад +76

    I used the second type of chopper for 20 years. If you quarter or halve the vegetables it works perfectly

    • @sighheinrich
      @sighheinrich 2 года назад +4

      On Vevor's webpage there's even a handle with a lever, like the one he draw up.

    • @user-cf6zz7sq9m
      @user-cf6zz7sq9m 2 года назад +7

      Yes but tbh my guy is old too so it will be still hard for him to push tht

    • @matttorres5510
      @matttorres5510 2 года назад

      I use to slam that mofo for diced tomatoes

    • @soulcheftanya
      @soulcheftanya 2 года назад +1

      And there is one specifically for potatoes 🤣🤣 Im very surprised by this.

    • @Papillon_2010
      @Papillon_2010 Год назад

      Also u have to cut the top and bottom of potatoes or veggies without flat ends.

  • @PorcupineTreeEOJ
    @PorcupineTreeEOJ 2 года назад +22

    The Industrial one was used completely incorrectly. When used properly with smaller pieces of veg or the larger blades it is a very effective tool for a restaurant kitchen.

    • @arsentek
      @arsentek 2 года назад +5

      Yeah. I've ran through 100's of pounds of potatoes in drastically short periods of time.

  • @ghost-of-ohio
    @ghost-of-ohio Год назад +4

    I would like to point out that this series features a lot of gadgets that make daily tasks easier for people with disabilities. While it's goofy to some, it allows someone else to independently make dinner! Awesome series!

  • @Griever78
    @Griever78 2 года назад +25

    Thank you for another Dan video!! For the cheese slicer, I agree with that being a lot of plastic. I have a handheld little tool that has an adjustable metal string on it and it works wonders!

  • @4Kcomix
    @4Kcomix 2 года назад +16

    Maybe he should take a peak at the instructions for each device before he uses them. If you give an American football to someone who’s never seen one before, and they try to use it for soccer, then of course they’ll say it’s a terrible design.

    • @ohyeamanishere
      @ohyeamanishere 2 года назад +1

      That’s the point of this though when testing the experience of these designs. To not use directions. The designs of products are based being able to use it without thinking. Think about it this way, not everyone will be reading the directions of the product they buy. They might just know it cuts things, so they know the intended purpose, but achieving it the correct way as intended is what he is exploiting.
      Have you heard of Norman doors? Basically doors that are confusing to use. Doors shouldn’t be confusing to use and don’t need directions. That’s the same thinking with product design. The design of the product should be able to show it’s easy of use without the directions.

    • @4Kcomix
      @4Kcomix 2 года назад +5

      @@ohyeamanishere I think we’ll have to agree to disagree because I believe products should be judged by how they succeed at doing what they were designed to do, not how they succeed at doing what the user wants them to be used. Don’t blame the square peg for not fitting in the circular hole.

    • @ohyeamanishere
      @ohyeamanishere 2 года назад

      I’m just saying that’s the thoughts behind product design in general. The product itself should be able to explain the way it’s used without directions. The cheese things was frustrating to watch because I’m sure you and I knew he had to put the cheese against the back plate to help. But I’m sure there are people who will not understand that and use it the same way he did.
      Have you ever helped an older relative set up a tv and wonder why they didn’t get it because to you it seems so self explanatory. Not everyone has that innate ability to know how it works right off the bat and will just wing it.
      As for your soccer/football explanation, there will be people who will say it is a terrible design for football. But there will be those who understand without having any prior knowledge of the sport at all that the ball isn’t intended for one sport and not the other.

    • @4Kcomix
      @4Kcomix 2 года назад +2

      @@ohyeamanishere I wasn’t referring to the cheese slicer, I was referring to the industrial dicer. As others have commented, when used correctly (by putting in slices or halves of vegetables - not including potatoes), it works wonderfully! However, when you put a whole vegetable or a potato in it, it won’t do any good because that wasn’t how it was designed to be used. The issue wasn’t the product, the issue was the user.

    • @figmaferdinand
      @figmaferdinand 2 года назад +2

      @@ohyeamanishere You are forgetting that it is an industrial slicer.. If it were a normal kitchen tool; yes, it should be intuitive, but the way he doesn´t even question if it maybe is dull or used wrong is so sad to watch. He just assumes that the tool has a bad design.. why?

  • @sweetlorikeet
    @sweetlorikeet 2 года назад +19

    I'm wondering if there was something wrong with that particular Industrial Chopper, similar gadgets usually work at least somewhat well

  • @J5ON
    @J5ON 2 года назад +83

    this guy is so entertaining to watch

    • @FRESHNESSSSSS
      @FRESHNESSSSSS 2 года назад +3

      He has literally has the skills of someone in their 60s and the temperament of someone in their 20s

    • @rjptrucking4598
      @rjptrucking4598 2 года назад

      Only because of his stupidity

    • @notabrit3025
      @notabrit3025 2 года назад +1

      @@FRESHNESSSSSS and the brain of a 10yr old

  • @Gravity71
    @Gravity71 2 года назад +38

    Dan: alright, how much is this house
    “It’s $350K”
    Dan: alright * buys *
    Dan: *time for the left handed oil test*

  • @Kuikkamies
    @Kuikkamies 2 года назад +49

    Even without reading the manual for the cheese slicer, it is clear the cheese must be at the back of the device against the plate to prevent it from moving backwards.

    • @snowe..
      @snowe.. 2 года назад

      that wouldn't do anything, physics don't just change because the cheese touches the back plate, the back plate is still attached to the bottom tray, any force against the back plate (which you are suggesting should stop the tray from moving) will result in the tray moving as well.

  • @kyleestes7621
    @kyleestes7621 2 года назад +18

    The second tool is used for dicing. You put sheets of peppers, zucchini, etc. on it and then press down to get squares. Love this person though! Great videos!

    • @peter-peterpumpkineater4982
      @peter-peterpumpkineater4982 2 года назад +1

      It's not only dicing. It's just a really bad half baked revamp of a vintage chip maker.

    • @anthonychojvang
      @anthonychojvang 2 года назад +6

      Yea he was kinda using it the wrong way. There are different grate sizes to push the vegetables through and when I worked in fast food, we cut the vegetables into smaller pieces before using the dicer.

    • @Xaphe23
      @Xaphe23 2 года назад +3

      @@peter-peterpumpkineater4982 the item is literally called a vegetable dicer. Sure you could use it for non intended purposes, but it's for dicing and it's the best tool to do that job.

    • @raherql
      @raherql 2 года назад

      Thinner veggies or harder slams, both work wonders for the prep cook.

  • @SerenityM16
    @SerenityM16 2 года назад +5

    I legit lost it when I saw the herb chopper have a function to flip the blades for storage, too many things don’t think about getting it out of where you are storing it and the potential dangers there!!

  • @richardp5920
    @richardp5920 2 года назад +21

    It’s possible that industrial chopper was defective, and the blades weren’t sharpened, but even that certainly highlights the problems you’d have down the road after extend use, and the blades get dull.

    • @Unkownbannana
      @Unkownbannana 2 года назад +2

      He was using it wrong. The blades were upside-down.If your cutting onions you cut it into 2 or 4 pieces and slam it down one piece at a time. Source- I dice several containers worth every shift

  • @eldibs
    @eldibs 2 года назад +28

    We actually had one of those industrial choppers in a kitchen I used to work in. I think maybe the blades on that one weren't sharp enough, because ours diced onions and peppers like they were hot butter. Never tried it with potatoes, but it was a godsend when we got it.

    • @notabrit3025
      @notabrit3025 2 года назад +6

      they were probabily upside down due to safety when shipping, crew just too dumb to turn it around

    • @meganjones9406
      @meganjones9406 2 года назад +1

      You have to get special ones for potatoes that lay horizontally. The kind we use at five guys, and it's still a task bc the potatoes are so dense. But average cutting time for 50lbs of Potatoes is 5 mins so it's still pretty effective just takes you using your whole body weight literally lol

    • @eldibs
      @eldibs 2 года назад +3

      @@meganjones9406 OH yeah, it definitely still takes some effort, but being able to chop up a ton of veggies on the fly in the middle of a rush? Totally worth it.

  • @madcat3c
    @madcat3c 2 года назад +4

    I work in a restaurant and use the second chopper every day to chop onions, green peppers and tomatoes and it works great. To use it you cut the item in half, put it in with the cut facing down and chop, very easy to use. Plus it has blades that could theoretically be put in upside down which could also make it not work properly.

    • @DatCookJohn
      @DatCookJohn Год назад

      Hes not doing it right i am line cook and have the same thing industrial chopper .. He Needs cut the stuff small piece haha . 🤣 waste of my time watching this

  • @ItsKrispo
    @ItsKrispo 2 года назад +5

    The intro was gold 🤣

  • @GrayMoonstone
    @GrayMoonstone 2 года назад +18

    For the industrial chopper the blade may be upside down, or there is too much being put in it. Used to use one all the time while I worked at a taco place for red onions. We'd quarter them first before trying to chop them...

  • @kirohaas3193
    @kirohaas3193 2 года назад +8

    Instead of that cheese guillotine, you should just get a traditional Norwegian cheese slicer/cheese shaver. It could be translated either way, and technically you do 'shave' off a thin slice.

    • @GoogelyeyesSaysHej
      @GoogelyeyesSaysHej 2 года назад

      I don’t get why people would ever use a knife when oshyvlar exist

  • @badgimp4577
    @badgimp4577 Год назад +14

    the lunar lander thing has a wall mount sister with a lever to push the food threw the blade and it works awesome. 10 out of 10.

  • @bepsibeverage4231
    @bepsibeverage4231 2 года назад +8

    I believe his redesign for the industrial chopper has a pretty bad flaw because that plunger doesn't go straight down it moves along a curve and having that near the end would have the object being pushed sideways into the blades, I would suggest a pivot point between the arm and the plunger with a linkage along the hinge so it stays in line with the blades .

    • @mesky21
      @mesky21 2 года назад +3

      Redesign is not required industrial chopper works great. Was using it at a pizza joint for a few years. The flaw is not reading the manual and got that blade upside down

    • @bepsibeverage4231
      @bepsibeverage4231 2 года назад

      @@mesky21 Im well aware of that but im talking in terms of his redesign only

    • @JindraAG
      @JindraAG 2 года назад

      I've seen ones in kitchen's with a lever like that. Its a bit more complex than his redesign but it works. Still the issue of why did it fail so hard.

  • @ellingtonlilly
    @ellingtonlilly 2 года назад +4

    With the salad chopper changes you basically suggested it become a rounded kitchen axe. I guess history kind of one that design already.
    I always love to see these videos, you’re a joy to watch.

  • @beepboop7090
    @beepboop7090 2 года назад +4

    He is the best part of this channel! I can watch him all day!

    • @Colorfultography
      @Colorfultography 2 года назад

      Lets be real he should be the only part of this channel lolol jk…unless?

  • @jsrfuture5137
    @jsrfuture5137 2 года назад +9

    Some inventions that I would love to see Dan review are either some of his own designs, sushi gadgets, or possibly some tea inventions(If there are any).

  • @lindseychilds9474
    @lindseychilds9474 2 года назад +42

    The second gadget triggered me so bad I couldn't keep watching. I've used those same type of choppers in several restaurants and they worked great, so great in fact I had wanted to get one for my house but I wasn't sure how'd I store it when not using it. Definitely user error on his part.

    • @YasEmisDaBus
      @YasEmisDaBus 2 года назад +2

      what appears to have happened is an assembly error, they accidentally put the blades in upside down, sharp side down

    • @notabrit3025
      @notabrit3025 2 года назад

      @@YasEmisDaBus Probabily for safe shipping. Mans too dumb to check tho

  • @maglen69
    @maglen69 2 года назад +4

    What's crazy is when I worked at multiple restaurants we had something like the Vevor device and we used it ALL THE TIME to quickly chop stuff.

  • @ktraschko6553
    @ktraschko6553 Месяц назад

    Gotta love how Dan’s redesign of the first salad chopper is just an ulu. Indigenous knowledge and ingenuity FTW! 🙌

  • @rosasaurus925
    @rosasaurus925 2 года назад +52

    It’s making me so sad that at least three of these products were used incorrectly in some way- seems like they didn’t get a fair trial because of user error!

    • @user-yo4gt1wn5s
      @user-yo4gt1wn5s 2 года назад +32

      I feel like a part of designing anything involves eliminating user error, so your product must be as intuitive as possible

    • @RabbitsInBlack
      @RabbitsInBlack 2 года назад

      Because the Expert is a moron and they are making this video for entertainment purposes.

    • @danitho
      @danitho 2 года назад +23

      @@user-yo4gt1wn5s I think that too. If your product is too easy to use incorrectly then that's a design flaw.

    • @Gauron.
      @Gauron. 2 года назад +4

      @@user-yo4gt1wn5s Yeah, it doesnt matter much how great your product is if someone can use it wrong simply because of missing instructions and such....wait a minute, is it possible that he didnt get instruction or they were improper when he tested?

    • @markb6978
      @markb6978 2 года назад +1

      @@user-yo4gt1wn5s Fair enough to dock a few points for a device not being intuitive, but you can’t properly test something if you’re using it incorrectly.

  • @ItsCerealWarrior
    @ItsCerealWarrior 2 года назад +26

    At least two of these deserve a re-review used correctly. Come on guys

  • @shelby6745
    @shelby6745 2 года назад +3

    A new video from Dan Mimosa always brightens the day

  • @priyashreiya1080
    @priyashreiya1080 2 года назад +2

    😫 Me - when Dan's video starts to buffer 5:43
    Never ever discontinue this series. He is teaching me Physics more than my actual teacher does. I love Dan a lot ❤️

  • @theogotcurlyhair4762
    @theogotcurlyhair4762 2 года назад +16

    Man isn’t using the chease thing right you have to make the back of the white moving piece touch the back of the cheese

    • @kenbrown2808
      @kenbrown2808 2 года назад +1

      so you have to pick the block of cheese up off the moving tray and move the cheese instead of moving the tray? if that's the case, why bother?

    • @theogotcurlyhair4762
      @theogotcurlyhair4762 2 года назад +1

      My brother I believe you have to put the cheese in the box and push it all the back to the end of the box then spin the wheel until the cheese is In line to be cut then this should remove the moving and therefore you won’t have to keep you hand on the wheel

    • @mesky21
      @mesky21 2 года назад

      Basically all equipment was use without instruction/not for intended purpose or assemble incorrectly hahaha I would say take it all with a grain of salt

    • @kenbrown2808
      @kenbrown2808 2 года назад

      @@theogotcurlyhair4762 how does moving the tray all the way to the back and then forward again make the mechanism need to be held in place any less?

    • @theogotcurlyhair4762
      @theogotcurlyhair4762 2 года назад

      @@kenbrown2808 the back off the white moving tray has to touch the back of the cheese

  • @zoran123456
    @zoran123456 2 года назад +11

    I cant help but to think you may be using industrial chopper … wrong? But I don’t know what would be the correct way of using it. Maybe with a hammer?
    Edit: ruclips.net/video/pcTQUwtQIKw/видео.html, oh it seems it is not meant for the potatoes, but for very tiny pieces of vegetables.

    • @16v15
      @16v15 2 года назад +6

      It would seem either the blades are installed upside down, or it's complete junk chineezium copy. Used very similar tools for decades in restaurants - they all worked flawlessly. Potatoes, tomatoes, used it on all.

  • @birb_overdose650
    @birb_overdose650 4 месяца назад

    I like to listen to these review as it helps me fall asleep. I’m not saying it’s boring or anything but just comforting to fall asleep to.

  • @gabrielrivard3332
    @gabrielrivard3332 2 года назад +2

    The way he redesigned the salad chopper turned it into a similar shape to a traditional Ulu knife

  • @vermaishanvi037
    @vermaishanvi037 2 года назад +3

    Dan apologizing to the poor Tomato is a mood honestly

  • @justmeh3000
    @justmeh3000 2 года назад +4

    I’m always surprised that many people do not know that a “Kaasschaaf” exists. It’s a cheese slicer we use in the Netherlands for Gouda cheese, to either get an extremely thin slice or a thick one, depending how much pressure or angle you put on it. Also if you’re not careful it might destroy your knuckles, so super fun.

    • @wbfaulk
      @wbfaulk 10 месяцев назад

      I'm always surprised how many Dutch people think that that style of cheesecutter is unknown elsewhere. We know about it just fine. Virtually anywhere you could buy a decent kitchen knife will have those available. We just don't have a definite term for it.

    • @justmeh3000
      @justmeh3000 10 месяцев назад

      @@wbfaulk it’s not a knife 🙃.

    • @wbfaulk
      @wbfaulk 10 месяцев назад

      @@justmeh3000 No, but you can buy them in the US at almost any place that would also have kitchen knives.

  • @JadwinManuel
    @JadwinManuel Год назад

    this is my favorite series on youtube. I LOVE IT

  • @timm7524
    @timm7524 3 месяца назад

    Ok. NGL, I've been binging these videos. Just too wholesome and interesting and Dan is a delight. 😊

  • @Oli_and_Oli
    @Oli_and_Oli 2 года назад +5

    I work in a pizza place, I use the industrial vegetable chopper practically every single day I work, it definitely has its flaws and dangers I will say that. We mainly use it for much easier things than a potato I'll say that, but the way we use it we slice the veggies first into much thinner strips so the blades pass through and we get diced cubes of veggies rather than long rectangles. I definitely don't recommend it for making French fries 😅

  • @TheTinkerersWife
    @TheTinkerersWife 2 года назад +19

    Interesting ypu had such a hard time with the commercial style food chopper. Reviews on Amazon are 4.5 stars as are others. I've a friend who has one, I'm not sure of the brand, and uses hers during canning season and makes fries with it all the time.

    • @fearofchicke
      @fearofchicke 2 года назад +2

      I wonder if the one he was using was defective.
      I’ve used one of those with no issue even on whole and halved potato’s like demonstrated.
      It’s like the blades are flipped around on this one.

  • @reconnert4498
    @reconnert4498 Год назад +1

    I used the industrial chopper all the time in one of the kitchens I worked in, it's more for easy dicing. You put a slice of tomato or onion in there and it dices it

  • @samim6809
    @samim6809 2 года назад

    Lunar lander 🍅 cracked me up. PERFECT!🤣🤣

  • @annegasko7719
    @annegasko7719 2 года назад +8

    I'd love to see the oily left hand test done as a comparison to doing the traditional method with an oily left hand as well. I understand that it can highlight some design flaws, but I think doing it that way would help demonstrate the difficulties that people with motor function issues have, and why such gadgets might be necessary. For example the cheese chopper - while it might not be better than using a knife in theory, for some people using a knife to get consistent slices safely is a super difficult thing. I just think it would be nice to consider the needs that the machines might be filling, as well as discuss how they could be better designed.

  • @christopherconnolly5791
    @christopherconnolly5791 2 года назад +10

    I mean, there's no way he thinks you are supposed to just push a whole onion through right? Like those choppers have been used for decades and people figure it out. Cut that tomato or onion in half and it'll fly right through with one or two good hits.

    • @LilDinoGuy
      @LilDinoGuy 2 года назад

      Right. They're used all the time in restaurants for food prep and you're supposed to put thick slices of vegetables on them, not whole ones, and then you do have to use some force to push down the handle.

  • @noahxcuse
    @noahxcuse 2 года назад

    That opening dad joke was absolute GOLD. 🤣🪙

  • @jocelynbaker6718
    @jocelynbaker6718 2 года назад +1

    Dan basically just redesigning the first gadget into an ulu was pretty cool

  • @verbotensskeleton8421
    @verbotensskeleton8421 2 года назад +3

    He is the best person on this channel

  • @Treyk901
    @Treyk901 2 года назад +3

    I’m pretty sure the second one you tested had the blade installed upside down.

  • @danformosa4210
    @danformosa4210 2 года назад +1

    For a quick dicer chopping-force test I would try this. Get a kitchen scale, a potato or tomato, a relatively sharp knife and a small cutting board. Put the cutting board on the scale and set the weight to zero. (We're trying a whole vegetable because that's what the photos show on Amazon - search for "industrial chopper, look for the non-levered versions). Cut off a small piece of the potato or tomato to create a flat, more stable bottom surface. (And wear gloves as a precaution). Hold the knife horizontally and press it directly down into the vegetable, without slicing (meaning, without sliding the blade). Read the scale at its maximum. Multiply by 15 (the number of blades in the medium-size dicer grid) - or by at least 10 if you assume that not all the blades would be in contact. Note: This test won't account for the fact that the cut pieces will also be compressed as they start being pushed through the grid.

  • @danielleking262
    @danielleking262 Год назад

    The industrial chopper had me rolling the entire time!!!! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @lolarayyy
    @lolarayyy 2 года назад +4

    The industrial chopper was something I used a bunch at an old restaurant job and it def works, even if you have to be a bit forceful with it.
    I will say for us though we pre sliced the veg so we could get small diced veg as opposed to thin French fry-esque slices, can't imagine just slamming that down on a whole tomato

  • @lannamartin5223
    @lannamartin5223 2 года назад +4

    I love Dan and I love watching him age throughout the series. He's still just as sharp and clever and his wrinkles just hide more ingenious designs!

  • @alexclark4792
    @alexclark4792 4 месяца назад

    6:16 it's for slices to make diced. Oil the bars before use, saves on knife sharpening. Works great for diced tomatoes.

  • @pwimaster-joe6061
    @pwimaster-joe6061 Год назад

    I could be sober watching this and have an amazing time. I could also have a few drinks and watch these videos and still have an amazing tome watching them. Love the guy who does the testing!

  • @TheCharkan
    @TheCharkan 2 года назад +3

    I just love this videos and Dan... He is freaking amazing, i want to adopt it as my own grandpa... Hope that the universe grant him a lot more years with good health.

  • @thebreakfastmegapowers3525
    @thebreakfastmegapowers3525 2 года назад +5

    alot of people seem concerned the second gadget was defective but I have a simple solution for why it didn't work.
    the blade tray was probably put in upside down and was chopping dull side up.
    I worked with kids who never learned which side goes up and I could imagine the crew putting it together before use didn't notice or it came upside down.

  • @DemonSliime
    @DemonSliime 11 месяцев назад +1

    Yeah, I used that exact industrial chopper for like six years and it works perfectly everytime. It makes french fries. I weigh 135 pounds and it doesn’t even take much force to get a large russet potato through it.

    • @qrowing
      @qrowing 10 месяцев назад

      I'm sayin'. 135lb dude here too. Never had any issues using this exact same chopper in multiple restaurants. You just gotta make sure that sucker is all the way at the top.

  • @austinbrandson6594
    @austinbrandson6594 Год назад

    I work in a restaurant and when prepping food we actually use basically that exact industrial vegetable chopper but only for soft things like avocados, occasionally on carrots but nothing very thick or dense

  • @Jampants37
    @Jampants37 2 года назад +4

    My first job was as a frycook and they had one of those industrial choppers sitting on a shelf. I tried to use it on an onion and had the same experience.

  • @gerardmcquade
    @gerardmcquade 2 года назад +3

    i watched another channel called freakin reviews and he done a video on the cheese slicer recently he didnt like it either neither did the cheese expert he took it to

  • @TheMrRoboto
    @TheMrRoboto 2 года назад

    The big dicer is used on slice food, in kitchens we would slice tomatoes with a slicer and then run them through that unit to dice them evenly and fast for making Pico de Gallo, also put onion slices through it

  • @ubaisaad286
    @ubaisaad286 2 года назад

    5:42 the smile when smashing the tomato 😂

  • @dadilala
    @dadilala 2 года назад +5

    I think the Vevor device is meant to be a dicer. I think the vegetable is meant to be cut into slices, and then you place the slices on the device to dice your vegetables faster. Probably not useful for home use, it's likely more useful for someone who runs a shop that sells sandwiches or salads etc.

  • @firechimp1
    @firechimp1 2 года назад +118

    It has been annoying me lately how Dan doesn't use the products in their intended purpose. For the Industrial Press, he didn't try using smaller pieces which it needed. For the Cheese Chop, he didn't rest the cheese at the back of the contraption. And for the Lettuce Chop, he didn't cut the lettuce to size at the start causing it to be awkward to work with and not cut through.

    • @ChargeQM
      @ChargeQM 2 года назад +19

      Absolutely this. Did he get any paper instructions or anything?

    • @TheDeathLove
      @TheDeathLove 2 года назад +25

      so you are telling me humans have to compromise for the tools and not the other way around? especially when something that can just be done easily without the tools?

    • @ohyeamanishere
      @ohyeamanishere 2 года назад +41

      That’s the thing though, not everyone would read the directions with a lot of different products. The industrial press just looks as easy as just placing the food item on the blades and squashing it with the press.
      Products are usually designed around not having to really think about what you have to do to use it. You kind of have the innate ability to understand the product and how to use it without instructions. Have you heard of Norman doors? Basically any door that is confusing to use. Doors should not be designed in a way that you have to think about how to use them. Same goes for products and how they are designed. We shouldn’t have to think too hard on how to use them.

    • @tecslicer
      @tecslicer 2 года назад +11

      Yeah, I have no idea what he was doing. Maybe there was something wrong with the unit. Maybe he just throws away the instructions and guesses at how they work? That's not how Tools work, and certainly not how a showcase should be made. It doesn't matter how well designed the tool, if you are trying to hammer a nail, but you keep using an iPhone, you are going to think the iPhone is the worst hammer ever!

    • @windows95leon
      @windows95leon 2 года назад +14

      This series used to be good but they ran out if interesting things so they manufacture drama pretend bad products by misusing them.

  • @IDoABitOfTrollin
    @IDoABitOfTrollin 2 года назад +1

    We had one of those industrial choppers at Jimmy Johns but it was MUCH sharper than that and actually worked wonders for prep

  • @lunacy3
    @lunacy3 Год назад

    Love that Dan actually commented and corrected people in the comments 😌

  • @DrBrunoRecipes
    @DrBrunoRecipes 2 года назад +3

    Excellent 👌🏻 Greetings from Scotland 😊 Have a wonderful day everyone 🌻

  • @stevenfair3992
    @stevenfair3992 2 года назад +4

    As someone who works in the service industry, it’s so painful to see the industrial chopper being misused so horribly.

  • @foxiesque3352
    @foxiesque3352 2 года назад

    I had a horrible few days, Watching him smash veggies with that 2nd product gave me a laugh I really needed.

  • @bekkimcgrath
    @bekkimcgrath Год назад

    You gotta love Dan's approach to these videos

  • @rooster2268
    @rooster2268 2 года назад +4

    You used the second chopper wrong

    • @verbotensskeleton8421
      @verbotensskeleton8421 2 года назад

      how

    • @derekpotter528
      @derekpotter528 2 года назад

      that;s what I said

    • @MCCENTx2
      @MCCENTx2 2 года назад

      The blades must have been upside down or something

    • @skywalker6119
      @skywalker6119 2 года назад

      @@MCCENTx2 The brand name is right-side up on the chopping part.

    • @MCCENTx2
      @MCCENTx2 2 года назад

      @@skywalker6119 It still could have been assembled wrong

  • @Aperson156
    @Aperson156 2 года назад +12

    Episodes like this make it clear his expertise is home goods, not industrial goods. Nothing wrong with that, just needs to be put into consideration considering videos like this can be detrimental to the sales of a product.

    • @tiahnarodriguez3809
      @tiahnarodriguez3809 2 года назад +1

      Yes and no. I doubt people who buy industrial goods are taking advice from this channel. That’s a different market with different needs, and as you’ve said this segment is geared towards people who use home goods, so they wouldn’t normally buy the industrial goods anyway.

    • @mesky21
      @mesky21 2 года назад

      @@tiahnarodriguez3809 explain the cheese and lettuce device being use incorrectly as well

  • @Hibbity_Hobbity
    @Hibbity_Hobbity Год назад +2

    For the lettuce cutter, I think it would be cool to have a “lid” that goes over the top that can also be a salad bowl

  • @crimsoncaliber8270
    @crimsoncaliber8270 Год назад

    @5:44 Best tomato sauce maker I have ever seen! Actually, it was quite comical watching you have fun. Thank you for all the videos and recommendations... and those that lack