T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1518.1 | | BONOVX::BARRY | | Fri Nov 18 1988 14:32 | 11 |
| Maybe you need that new salad gun (I can't remember what its called)
that has been advertised lately. It's on sale at all the stores
now. It's basicly like a little gun; you put whole veggies (i wonder
how it works on other foods?) in one end and they come out chopped
on the other. Just hold it over the salad bowl and chopped veggies
fly right into the bowl!!! Well, something like that... Anyway,
I thought it looked interesting!
Check it out! May be just what you were looking for!
Lesa
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1518.2 | Better you should use a knife... | HOONOO::PESENTI | JP | Mon Nov 21 1988 07:31 | 28 |
| > So, basically, what is a good small (compact) food processor
> that can handle cheese grating, vegetable dicing, chopping and
> slicing, pepperoni or other small meat slicing jobs, nut chopping,
> bread crumb making, and so on?
One of the problems with small and medium sized food processors is that the
feed tubes limit what you can put in. You and up doing a lot of preparatory
chopping. So, as far as slicing goes, you end up with nice slices of small
things, like 1/4 pepperoni, etc. For dicing, NO machine does it without
intervention. You have to slice or julienne then stand up the slices and
slice again. A real chore. The small machines can do a pretty good job of
grating, mincing, and chopping, though.
In addition to my big machine, I use:
A box grater for small amounts of cheese, etc.
A GOOD knife for small amounts of slicing, julienning, dicing and
chopping
One clever gadget that makes mincing small amounts easy, is a spring loaded
chopping blade. This device is sold at most kitchen gadget stores. It has an
open bottomed tube that you put over the victim, and a knob on top. You press
down repeatedly on the knob, and very sharp blades come down and do the
cutting. This is great for nuts, and things that tend to jump around the
counter when they are cut up.
- JP
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1518.3 | | USMFG::PJEFFRIES | the best is better | Mon Nov 21 1988 11:14 | 10 |
|
Unfortunately, he small processers are not made for things like
slicing peperoni or grating hard cheeses. They aren't powerful
enough. I have a Kitchen aid processer, it was about half the cost
of Cusinart for the same capacity. I find it cleans very easily
and quickly. I just spent 5 days baking and I did every thing from
chopping nuts to actually mixing and blending. It was used at least
3 to 5 times a day, sometimes twice on one recipe for different
processees.
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1518.4 | two extremes [suit no one?] | LYMPH::RYDER | | Tue Nov 22 1988 20:07 | 12 |
| The B&D described at the end of note 892.6 might be a reasonable choice
for a single person. I use it for small jobs like grating hard Cheddar
for two omelets or chopping the ingredients for stuffed mushrooms. I
bought it originally for [frequent] chopping of onions and jalapenos.
It is not a work horse like my processor, a Cuisinart DLC-7 S.P. The
Cuisinart is a giant in comparison. The B&D is wimpy. And the
B&D has no attachments such as slicing disks; it can only chop;
it has no provision for feeding in material while it is running.
However, you mentioned slicing pepperoni. That is a mean task ---
akin to slicing oak logs. The DLC-7 sounds like it will self destruct
when I slice pepperoni for pizza. I won't even try the B&D.
|
1518.5 | suggestions for full-size processor? | FSHQA1::CGIUNTA | | Mon Nov 28 1988 10:05 | 18 |
| I'm also looking for a food processor. I borrowed a small one from
a friend and found that I had to do several batches of things because
the capacity was so limited. I considered this to be a major negative,
and have since changed my focus to large food processors.
I've looked at the Cuisinart DLC10, but it is $129 at Lechmere,
and then the package of the cutting blades (and I would need a few
of those) was another $90. Seems excessive to me. I also looked
at the Braun which is only $90 and comes with several slicing blades
and the whisk attachment. My question is why is the Cuisinart so
expensive? The blades did look like they were more heavy-duty,
but I'm not sure that justifies the additional cost. Does anyone
have the one made by Braun? Any other input on food processors and
what I should look for besides capacity, ease of cleaning, and extra
slicing blades that I might need?
Thanks,
Cathy
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1518.6 | $90 for blades?? | USMFG::PJEFFRIES | the best is better | Mon Nov 28 1988 10:46 | 4 |
|
My Kitchen aid cost me $89. at Lechmere and comes with one slicing
blade, one shreading blade, a steel knife blade and a plastic knife
blade. I find that these will do just about any task called for.
|
1518.7 | Have you ever priced the Cuisinart pancake griddle? | HOONOO::PESENTI | JP | Tue Nov 29 1988 07:33 | 15 |
| Why is Cuisinart so expensive?
Because it's Cuisinart!
But seriously, look at the fine details, like feed tube size, horsepower,
blade varieties, capacity, and so on. At the time I bought my Cuisinart, I
had 2 musts: a large feed tube, and a detachable stem on the blade. Cuisinart
was the ONLY one that satisfied these conditions at that time. Then, about 5
years later, my machine was hit by lightning and something fused. They paid
for shipping, repaired it for free, and tossed in an ECO to the shaft to
prevent the blades from riding up, and gave me new steel and plastic knives to
boot!
- JP
|
1518.8 | A Cuisinart covert! | AKOV12::DUGDALE | | Fri Dec 02 1988 12:17 | 15 |
| I owned and used extensively a Hamilton Beech econo food processor,
but I finally convinced myself that I get enough use out of a food
processor that it was okay to blow the bucks and upgrade to a
Cuisinart. What a difference! The Cuisinart handles things my
Hamilton Beach never would have managed. It produces beautiful
whole slices of things that just wouldn't go down the feed tube
before. And it has lots of small, thoughtful details -- for instance,
the small feedtube pusher has a small hole in the bottom. You use
it make mayonaise and salad dressing. You simply pour the oil into
the pusher and IT does the painstaking dribble for you. Perfectly.
I love my Cuisinart. And if you use a food processor as much as
I do, you will never regret the extra $$$$'s up front.
Susan
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1518.9 | .GE. heavy duty works just fine | SKITZD::WILDE | Ask yourself..am I a happy cow? | Thu Jan 05 1989 15:08 | 7 |
| I have a G.E. heavy duty food processor and it came with blades to do anything
I want - chop, shred, mix, etc. I have absolutely no complaints and it
cost me approx. 95.00.
When it comes to mixers, I opt for kitchen aide, but G.E. makes a fine
food processor.
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