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A katsuobushi kezuriki, with its blade cover removed and the collection drawer ajar. A katsuobushi kezuriki (鰹節削り器; かつおぶしけずりき) is a traditional Japanese kitchen utensil, similar to a wood plane or mandoline.
In some cultures, such as Ethiopian and Indian, hands alone are used or bread takes the place of non-edible utensils.In others, such as Japanese and Chinese, where bowls of food are more often raised to the mouth, little modification from the basic pair of chopsticks and a spoon has taken place.
Sifter, Strainer: Slotted spoon: Skimmer: Used to remove solids such as fats or unwanted debris from the surface of a cooking liquid. Spider: Sieve, spoon sieve, spoon skimmer, basket skimmer: For removing hot food from a liquid or skimming foam off when making broths A wide shallow wire-mesh basket with a long handle Spoon rest: dublé
Kezuriki – Japanese version, used to shave katsuobushi, dried blocks of skipjack tuna. Meat slicer – a tool used to slice meats and other deli products. Microplane – used for the grating of various food items. Microtome – the laboratory-grade equivalent, for much finer slicing thicknesses. Oroshigane – graters used in Japanese cooking.
Oyster knife, chain mail glove, bánh mi bread, fry thermometer, spider strainer: September 15, 2019 () 1504: 1508 "Raw Ambition" Steak tartare and poke — September 15, 2019 () 1506: 1509 "Date Tripper" Dates — September 22, 2019 () 1510: 1510 "Wild Yeast Risin'" Sourdough: Waffle iron: September 22, 2019 () 1512: 1511
The colander in the form of a pasta strainer was adopted as the religious headgear of the satirical religion Pastafarianism, which worships the Flying Spaghetti Monster. [4] Colanders may be used during solar eclipses to project multiple small low-resolution images of a partial eclipse onto a flat surface for safe viewing. [5] [6]
Cezve – a pot designed specifically to make Turkish coffee; Dallah – a traditional Arabic coffee pot used for centuries to brew and serve Qahwa (gahwa), an Arabic coffee or Gulf coffee made through a multi-step ritual, and Khaleeji, a spicy, bitter coffee traditionally served during feasts like Eid al-Fitr.
The TUNA system was pioneered by Stuart Denzil Edwards. The device was the main product for a startup company called Vidamed. Vidamed was founded in 1992 by Edwards along with Ron G. Lax, Hugh Sharky and Ingemar Lundquist, in Menlo Park, California, before building an international global corporation headed up by Lyle F. Brotherton.