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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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On Aug 6, 2:33*pm, hahabogus > wrote:
> John Kane > wrote in news:8d8d2aa8-9fea-40c0-90f3- > : > > > > > > > On Aug 5, 11:29*pm, Terry Pulliam Burd > wrote: > >> I was prepping some tomatoes by slicing them in half and removing the > >> seeds using my favorite tomato de-seeding tool: a grapefruit spoon. It > >> does a great job of a couple of kitchen chores such as de-seeding > >> tomatoes and hulling strawberries. I'm sure there are a variety of > >> kitchen tools that weren't designed for the jobs they get used for in > >> addition to the jobs they *are* used for - not to mention a variety of > >> tools that weren't designed to get anywhere near a kitchen, but can be > >> found in kitchens nonetheless! *[Blame Alan a/k/a hahabogus for this > >> one.] > > > I've found my wok is very handy for removing the snow from the > > balcony. *And the chinese cleaver is any for chopping up small trees > > for fires and also for chopping vines down. > > > John Kane Kingston ON Canada > > Funny you mention it...I was just considering using my medium swiss > cleaver on a log for the smoker. As my hatchet has gone astray. I'v never tried Western-style cleaver but I don't see why it would not work. There's not that much difference between a Western-style cleaver and a hatchet. I used the Chinese cleaver to cut up wood but I don't think it has enough weight for splitting wood but if you think a hatchet will work maybe my cleaver would too. I tend to think of six - 10 inch pieces of Maple for splitting. John Kane Kingston ON Canada |
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