Cooking utensils: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
imported>Howard C. Berkowitz No edit summary |
imported>Caesar Schinas m (Robot: Changing template: TOC-right) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{subpages}} | {{subpages}} | ||
{{TOC | {{TOC|right}} | ||
'''Cooking utensils''' cover an extremely wide range of implements, used in environments from personal cooking to large commercial food production. | '''Cooking utensils''' cover an extremely wide range of implements, used in environments from personal cooking to large commercial food production. | ||
Latest revision as of 05:32, 31 May 2009
Cooking utensils cover an extremely wide range of implements, used in environments from personal cooking to large commercial food production.
Cookware and bakeware
Cookware and bakeware are the containers in which food is placed for cooking operations involving the application of heat. There are a very wide range of such utensils, which vary with the intended cooking method, the nature of the food being prepared and materials with which it could react, etc.
Cutting implements
Broadly, this encompasses not just pure cutting as is done with cooking knives, but mechanical devices such as food processors and blenders at the small kitchen level, up to large industrial buffalo choppers and meat grinders.
Manipulative implements
One can think of this class as including:
- Things that turn pieces of food: spatulas, kitchen tongs, etc.
- Things that lift volumes of foods: ladles, cooking spoons
- Things that mix or form food, or separate parts of the cooking output: whisks, potato ricers, meat tenderizers, potato mashers, colanders