Kitchen Tools February 01 2018

1. Pineapple Peel and Core Cutter




This Handheld Cylindrical Pineapple cutter with Circular blade is specially designed to peel, core and slice pineapples in 3' diameter rings made of Premium quality stainless steel.


Pineapple peeler will peel, core, and slice a fresh pineapple in less than 1 minute, It removes perfectly formed rings. The shell remains intact ideal for those who want to use for serving fried rice dishes, drink bowl, desserts, fruit salads etc.



2. The Sushi Bazooka





The Sushi Bazooka is the all in one sushi maker  that allows you to make bountiful amounts of sushi both quickly and easily. All you have to do is add your favorite ingredients to the loading tray and BOOM the sushi roll gun allows you to make perfect sushi rolls every time using your own custom choice of ingredients in mere seconds. The Sushi Bazooka  is BPA-free and dishwasher safe.



3. Salad Spinner




A salad spinner, also known as a salad tosser, is a kitchen tool used to wash and remove excess water from salad greens. It uses centrifugal force to separate the water from the leaves, enabling salad dressing to stick to the leaves without dilution.
Salad spinners are usually made from plastic and include an outer bowl with an inner removable colander or strainer basket. A cover, which fits around the outside bowl, contains a spinning mechanism that when initiated causes the inside strainer to rotate rapidly. The water is driven though the slits in the basket into the outer bowl. There are a number of different mechanisms used to operate the device, including crank handles, push buttons and pull-cords. The salad spinner is generally easy to use, though its large and rigid shape has been criticized by food editor Leanne Kitchen and Herald-Journal reporter Mary Hunt. A salad spinner is often considered bulky and difficult to store.
Although devices used to wash, dry and spin salad have long been in existence, including one from the 19th century, the modern mechanism-operated spinner originated in the early 1970s. Two patents by French designers, Jean Mantelet and Gilberte Fouineteau, were particularly influential in the early development of the product's design. In 1974, The Mouli Manufacturing Co. introduced a crank-operated salad spinner to the American market; other companies were not far behind with their own patented variations. The product sold favorably and demand was high, with stores struggling to keep it in stock. Despite the product's popularity, however, it was not entirely without criticism; some were skeptical about the necessity of "another gourmet gadget".

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