http://www.democraticunderground.com/115716817Oh my.
I haven't been hanging around Skins's island as much as I used to, and decided to get up-to-date on the primitives' antics today.
hedgehog (28,891 posts) Wed Nov 14, 2012, 01:16 PM
What is the best gift for the new cooks and bakers on your list?
I'm thinking in the range of $30 +/-
cbayer (113,794 posts) Wed Nov 14, 2012, 01:38 PM
1. A good chef's knife if they don't have one.
It's the most basic and important tool in my kitchen (in that price range).
^^^Actually, a chef's knife is probably the
only knife the cbayer primitive has, given her cramped living quarters.
Glassunion (4,124 posts) Wed Nov 14, 2012, 07:10 PM
7. I second that
A good Chet's knife goes a long way.
Do not fall for the name brand cutlery. The steel is very hard and difficult to sharpen. They do hold their edge for a long time, but they are difficult to maintain.
Also do not fall for the big box store knife sets like Faberware, etc... The metal is too soft. They dull very quickly. Not to mention they rust and pit instantly.
You should google "restaurant supply" and can find good cutlery there. A nice Victorinox 10" Chef Knife is incredible. It can be picked up for about $28, and I'd choose it over any $200 Henkels or Wüsthof any day of the week. They sharpen in a flash, hold their edge and live forever
cbayer (113,794 posts) Wed Nov 14, 2012, 07:22 PM
8. Agree. I just bought Victorinox knives from a restaurant supply store in West LA and I am extremely happy with them.
It has completely changed my approach when I cook and I am taking very, very good of them.
I bought 4 - a chef's, 8 in carver, paring and an angled bread knife. Also a stone and some oil.
Could not be more pleased, but the chef's knife is by far my favorite and the one I use daily.
^^^Hmmmm. One wonders what the cbayer primitive had to toss off the side of the boat, to make room for all those new knives.
Glassunion (4,124 posts) Wed Nov 14, 2012, 07:37 PM
9. I have a block of Henkels that I'm working on getting rid of.
I never use them.
^^^franksolich has a whole lot of knives, wooden handles, the steel extending to the bottom of the handles, made in Sheffield, England, where the best knives in the world have been made since, oh, the last thousand or so years.
Wonderful knives, great knives, but as I don't want to get them dirty, I usually just use a couple of plastic-handled long knives some "demonstrator" at Wal-Mart insisted I take. I don't care much for freebies or samples, but these work okay.
noamnety (18,043 posts) Wed Nov 14, 2012, 02:01 PM
2. A stick blender is handy.
I love mine!
^^^An industrial-strength and super-sized blender is better.
HappyMe (7,179 posts) Wed Nov 14, 2012, 02:04 PM
3. A subscription to FoodNetwork magazine - $18. Set of good quality measuring spoons and cups, nice kitchen towels and oven mitts.
no_hypocrisy (24,614 posts) Wed Nov 14, 2012, 02:06 PM
4. An array of herbs and spices.
Say you could get 10 varieties at $3 each like basil, oregano, onion powder, garlic powder, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, ground cloves, paprika, majorum, etc.
^^^When franksolich moved out here to the middle of nowhere more than seven years ago, the cupboards were amply stocked with those little metal cannisters--Schilling & Schilling--of herbs and spices.
The house had been unoccupied for 19 years by the time I got here.
Most of of the cannisters were unopened, and from the time before UPCs (universal price codes) and zip codes, and had old-fashioned grocery-store price tags, 15 cents, 19 cents, 29 cents, and so on, nothing higher than 59 cents.
The ancient woman--she lived to be 102 years old--who lived here before franksolich had been quite a baker and cook.
The cannisters that were unopened, and hence not penetrated by varmits, visible and invisible, I kept, and am still using to this day with no problems. I imagine some of these herbs and spices are older than franksolich, but like franksolich, they're still as good as if they'd been bought yesterday.
Warpy (65,586 posts) Wed Nov 14, 2012, 02:17 PM
5. Silpat baking sheets
Ice cream scoops of various sizes for drop cookies, muffins, pancake batter, and even ice cream.
A really good v****e peeler. I have one with a rotating head, Good Grips, and I love that thing. Get a good wood or bamboo cutting board to go with it.
A pepper mill. Freshly ground pepper can be a real revelation.
I'd tend to avoid a $30 chef's knife unless it's one of the cheap MACs. However, you can get a decent bread knife for that.
A seed mill for grinding whole spices.
A small rice cooker.
A Danish dough whisk.
^^^needs no identification.
pinto (95,809 posts) Wed Nov 14, 2012, 03:48 PM
6. I'll second a good chef's knife. Plus the latest 'Joy of Cooking'.
A good knife is essential. It's the one tool I *really* take good care of in the kitchen. And a good one will last a long, long time.
The other is a classic start on all things cooking.
If you have to choose one or the other price wise, I'd go for the knife.
^^^nadin's Nemesis.
Stinky The Clown (48,409 posts) Wed Nov 14, 2012, 09:51 PM
10. The very best chef's knife you can buy with that $30.
Others have said this already. I am echoing their sentiments.
In your kitchen, you use your sink and counters, your refrigerator, and your stove. Every time you cook. The only other tool about which that can be said is a good knife.
^^^The sparkling old dude, in case one doesn't know.
Warpy (65,586 posts) Wed Nov 14, 2012, 10:37 PM
11. I disagree
If you're going to treat someone to a chef's knife, take their hands with you. The best knife in the world is going to sit in a drawer if it doesn't feel right in a cook's hands.
^^^You know, I wish Mrs. Alfred Packer, the hippywife primitive, were still around, to advise and counsel the primitives on knives, as hippyhubby Wild Bill is an expert on knives, even though he buys them used, at surplus-property auctions at the county coroner's, usually cadaver carvers.
hippyhubby Wild Bill knows knives.
gkhouston (19,674 posts) Thu Nov 15, 2012, 07:53 PM
12. A good electronic scale.
^^^It seems to me just a plain ordinary bathroom scale would be more appropriate for most primitives, a special one that measures up to 600 pounds or something.
mtnester (7,946 posts) Fri Nov 16, 2012, 04:55 PM
13. Aside from all of the above suggestions, a set of plunger style measuring cups are worth their weight in gold...once you take the "plunge" you will never want to use other cups for wet ingredients like mayo, lard, oils, etc. But them as a gift, get a second set for yourself from "santa"