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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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Anyone use one of these?
http://www.cooking-center.com/c/Chee...B000CBRYAG.htm There are many rotary cheese graters but I'm thinking the Italians should be making one that works well on their cheeses. Most of the others are made in China. |
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In article > ,
"Edwin Pawlowski" > wrote: > Anyone use one of these? > > http://www.cooking-center.com/c/Chee...ter_B000CBRYAG > .htm > > There are many rotary cheese graters but I'm thinking the Italians should be > making one that works well on their cheeses. Most of the others are made in > China. How handy is your Kitchen Aid mixer, Ed? The shredder-grater attachment worked great on cheese, as I recall. Was great for grating chocolate for melting, too. http://www.shopkitchenaid.com/produc...A&HDR=attachme nts or http://tinyurl.com/25frgg -- -Barb, Mother Superior, HOSSSPoJ Notes about our meals in Tuscany have been posted to http://www.jamlady.eboard.com; 10-16-2007 |
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On Sun, 21 Oct 2007 16:38:56 GMT, "Edwin Pawlowski" >
wrote: >Anyone use one of these? > >http://www.cooking-center.com/c/Chee...B000CBRYAG.htm > >There are many rotary cheese graters but I'm thinking the Italians should be >making one that works well on their cheeses. Most of the others are made in >China. > Try this place http://www.kasbahouse.com/grindersandgraters.asp it costs less. Personally, I'd use one of the others if I wanted a rotary grater. -- See return address to reply by email remove the smiley face first |
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sf wrote on Sun, 21 Oct 2007 11:02:01 -0700:
??>> Anyone use one of these? ??>> ??>> http://www.cooking-center.com/c/Chee...B000CBRYAG.htm ??>> ??>> There are many rotary cheese graters but I'm thinking the ??>> Italians should be making one that works well on their ??>> cheeses. Most of the others are made in China. ??>> s> Try this place http://www.kasbahouse.com/grindersandgraters.asp it s> costs less. Personally, I'd use one of the others if I s> wanted a rotary grater. It is also a really impressive sale: $2 on an $80 item! James Silverton Potomac, Maryland E-mail, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not |
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On Sun, 21 Oct 2007 18:24:05 GMT, "James Silverton"
> wrote: > s> Try this place >http://www.kasbahouse.com/grindersandgraters.asp it > s> costs less. Personally, I'd use one of the others if I > s> wanted a rotary grater. > >It is also a really impressive sale: $2 on an $80 item! I have no idea what you're talking about. The grater that matched his was Price: $17.95 Sale Price: $14.00 Savings: $3.95 -- See return address to reply by email remove the smiley face first |
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Edwin Pawlowski wrote:
> > There are many rotary cheese graters but I'm thinking the > Italians should be making one that works well on their cheeses. > Most of the others are made in China. And here I was thinking you were going to talk about one of these: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Girolle I saw one demonstrated on a cooking show. It looked interesting, but I haven't got much use for such a specialized tool. If I gave lots of parties and wanted a fancy presentation, that would be another story. |
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![]() "Melba's Jammin'" > wrote in message news:barbschaller- > > How handy is your Kitchen Aid mixer, Ed? The shredder-grater > attachment worked great on cheese, as I recall. Was great for grating > chocolate for melting, too. > http://www.shopkitchenaid.com/produc...A&HDR=attachme > nts > > or > > http://tinyurl.com/25frgg Yes, but it is hard passing the mixer around at the table ![]() We have the attachment and it is great for doing a large batch, but not for individual servings. One thought though, is to just leave it set up with the grater all the time. Not a big deal to brush it out after a sue. |
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sf wrote on Sun, 21 Oct 2007 11:38:04 -0700:
s>>> Try this place ??>> http://www.kasbahouse.com/grindersandgraters.asp it s>>> costs less. Personally, I'd use one of the others if I s>>> wanted a rotary grater. ??>> ??>> It is also a really impressive sale: $2 on an $80 item! s> I have no idea what you're talking about. s> The grater that matched his was s> Price: $17.95 s> Sale Price: $14.00 s> Savings: $3.95 So! A slow reader aren't you? :-) Item ca431, lower left first screen! James Silverton Potomac, Maryland E-mail, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not |
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![]() <sf> wrote in message ... > On Sun, 21 Oct 2007 16:38:56 GMT, "Edwin Pawlowski" > > wrote: > >>Anyone use one of these? >> >>http://www.cooking-center.com/c/Chee...B000CBRYAG.htm >> >>There are many rotary cheese graters but I'm thinking the Italians should >>be >>making one that works well on their cheeses. Most of the others are made >>in >>China. >> > Try this place http://www.kasbahouse.com/grindersandgraters.asp it > costs less. Personally, I'd use one of the others if I wanted a > rotary grater. Thanks, that is a good link with a variety of models. The Poco near the top looks like a sturdy one, but it is out of stock. I think I'll check it out though |
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On Sun, 21 Oct 2007 20:22:04 GMT, "Edwin Pawlowski" >
wrote: > ><sf> wrote in message ... >> On Sun, 21 Oct 2007 16:38:56 GMT, "Edwin Pawlowski" > >> wrote: >> >>>Anyone use one of these? >>> >>>http://www.cooking-center.com/c/Chee...B000CBRYAG.htm >>> >>>There are many rotary cheese graters but I'm thinking the Italians should >>>be >>>making one that works well on their cheeses. Most of the others are made >>>in >>>China. >>> >> Try this place http://www.kasbahouse.com/grindersandgraters.asp it >> costs less. Personally, I'd use one of the others if I wanted a >> rotary grater. > >Thanks, that is a good link with a variety of models. The Poco near the top >looks like a sturdy one, but it is out of stock. I think I'll check it out >though > You're welcome. -- See return address to reply by email remove the smiley face first |
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On Sun, 21 Oct 2007 19:40:20 GMT, "James Silverton"
> wrote: > sf wrote on Sun, 21 Oct 2007 11:38:04 -0700: > > s>>> Try this place > ??>> http://www.kasbahouse.com/grindersandgraters.asp it > s>>> costs less. Personally, I'd use one of the others if I > s>>> wanted a rotary grater. > ??>> > ??>> It is also a really impressive sale: $2 on an $80 item! > > s> I have no idea what you're talking about. > s> The grater that matched his was > > s> Price: $17.95 > s> Sale Price: $14.00 > s> Savings: $3.95 > >So! > >A slow reader aren't you? :-) Item ca431, lower left first >screen! > OK. Scripts are turned off, so I'm not seeing what you must be seeing. -- See return address to reply by email remove the smiley face first |
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On Sun, 21 Oct 2007 19:18:34 GMT, "Edwin Pawlowski" >
wrote: >We have the attachment and it is great for doing a large batch, but not for >individual servings. One thought though, is to just leave it set up with the >grater all the time. Not a big deal to brush it out after a sue. Why don't you just grate some and put it in a bowl to serve? That way you won't have to buy another gadget. -- See return address to reply by email remove the smiley face first |
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On Sun, 21 Oct 2007 15:58:22 -0500, Sqwertz >
wrote: >On Sun, 21 Oct 2007 13:33:40 -0700, sf wrote: > >> OK. Scripts are turned off, so I'm not seeing what you must be >> seeing. > >There is no such item at that link. > Thank you. -- See return address to reply by email remove the smiley face first |
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In article >,
"Edwin Pawlowski" > wrote: > "Melba's Jammin'" > wrote in message > news:barbschaller- > > > > How handy is your Kitchen Aid mixer, Ed? The shredder-grater > > attachment worked great on cheese, as I recall. Was great for grating > > chocolate for melting, too. > > http://www.shopkitchenaid.com/produc...A&HDR=attachme > > nts > > > > or > > > > http://tinyurl.com/25frgg > > Yes, but it is hard passing the mixer around at the table ![]() Well, there's that. > > We have the attachment and it is great for doing a large batch, but not for > individual servings. One thought though, is to just leave it set up with the > grater all the time. Not a big deal to brush it out after a sue. Ah. Grating for the individual never crossed my mind. Whoops. -- -Barb, Mother Superior, HOSSSPoJ Notes about our meals in Tuscany have been posted to http://www.jamlady.eboard.com; 10-16-2007 |
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Edwin Pawlowski wrote:
> One thought though, is to just leave it set up with the > grater all the time. Not a big deal to brush it out after a sue. Now don't be hasty, Ed. Count to ten before you do anything. It's probably not necessary to sue. |
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Edwin Pawlowski wrote:
> We have the attachment and it is great for doing a large batch, but > not for individual servings. One thought though, is to just leave it > set up with the grater all the time. Not a big deal to brush it out > after a sue. A sue? |
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![]() "Ophelia" > wrote > Edwin Pawlowski wrote: >> We have the attachment and it is great for doing a large batch, but >> not for individual servings. One thought though, is to just leave it >> set up with the grater all the time. Not a big deal to brush it out >> after a sue. > > A sue? I think he means use. I could be wrong. nancy |
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Nancy Young wrote:
> "Ophelia" > wrote > >> Edwin Pawlowski wrote: >>> We have the attachment and it is great for doing a large batch, but >>> not for individual servings. One thought though, is to just leave it >>> set up with the grater all the time. Not a big deal to brush it out >>> after a sue. >> >> A sue? > > I think he means use. I could be wrong. Ok thanks ![]() |
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![]() "Ophelia" > wrote in message ... > Nancy Young wrote: >> "Ophelia" > wrote >> >>> Edwin Pawlowski wrote: >>>> We have the attachment and it is great for doing a large batch, but >>>> not for individual servings. One thought though, is to just leave it >>>> set up with the grater all the time. Not a big deal to brush it out >>>> after a sue. >>> >>> A sue? >> >> I think he means use. I could be wrong. > > Ok thanks ![]() Yes, who knew you can use the same letters to make different words. |
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