keesan
|
|
Small Appliances in the Kitchen
|
Nov 10 18:25 UTC 2001 |
What small electrical appliances (with moving parts or heaters) do you
frequently use when cooking? How often do you use them, to cook what, and
what should other people know before acquiring or using them?
For purposes of this discussion, do not count freezers, refrigerators, stoves,
or microwave ovens. Do count things like toasters, blenders, coffee makers,
spice grinders, bread machines, food processors, ice cream makers, Vitamixes,
electric pressure cookers and frying pans and woks and slow cookers and
grilles (and I am sure I left out a few). Which of these are now
computerized?
|
keesan
|
|
response 1 of 66:
|
Nov 10 18:36 UTC 2001 |
Item 61 overlaps this but also includes non-electric gadgets. I found mention
there of things I had never heard along with electric juicer, fryer, can
opener, waffle iron, kettle, knife. We have tried most of the above and
decided it is easier to use a stove or the non-electric version. Popcorn
maker gets used regularly, the electric pressure cooker maybe once a year in
hot weather (plugged in outside), electric frying pan if I want to bother
digging it out (holds temperature steady), electric wok ditto. Easier to use
a frying pan on the stove. Electric hot plate in hot weather. Do the
electric versions of things sometimes do a better job than the mechanical
ones?
|
scott
|
|
response 2 of 66:
|
Nov 10 19:42 UTC 2001 |
The bread machine gets used 2-3 times a week. I think that's about it for
regular use. I've also got a toaster, a blender (more used in the summer),
a coffee grinder (used for grinding dried hot peppers from the garden), and
a miniature food processor. The most used gadget is a Bodum coffee press,
which I use for tea.
|