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Cheese cutter: Designed to cut soft, sticky cheeses (moist and oily). The cutting edge of cheese cutters are typically a fine gauge stainless steel or aluminium wire. Cheese knife: Used to cut cheese. Cheese slicer: Used to cut semi-hard and hard cheeses. It produces thin, even slices. Cheesecloth: To assist in the formation of cheese
Using pre-shredded cheese. We get it—shredded cheese is convenient. I turned 46 this year, and I’m finally beginning to understand why folks make compromises in the kitchen.
Once you cut out the mold, Sheth recommends putting the “newly trimmed cheese in a clean container and store in the fridge (40°F or colder)." Properly storing and wrapping up newly bought ...
The Microplane wood rasp, a sleek stainless steel surform rasp first marketed as a woodworking tool and known generically as a microplane, recently became popular as a kitchen utensil for, among other uses, grating cheese (see Zester). An early mention of using a Microplane "rasp-like grater" in the kitchen was a cookbook published in 1999. [22]
Cheese cutters are designed to cut soft, sticky cheeses (moist and oily), and accordingly do not have a large sharp-edged blade; compare to a cheese knife with holes in the blade. The cutting edge of cheese cutters are typically a fine gauge stainless steel or aluminium wire (a "cheesewire") stretched across a supporting frame.
The first type of skeleton knife is a small kitchen knife that typically has three large holes on its blade used for cutting fruit or cheese. The purpose of these holes is to reduce the surface area of the blade so that sticky foods do not cling to it. Most skeleton knives are used for cutting very soft foods.
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