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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  #1 (permalink)   Report Post  
Damsel
 
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Default Which Food Processor?

I have two food processors. One that is quite small - it's an attachment
to the Oster Kitchen Center. It's rarely adequate for the task at hand. I
have a thrift-shop one that has a larger bowl, but is a royal pain in the
butt to use.

Can anyone recommend a good food processor that's easy to use and to clean?

Thanks,
Carol
  #2 (permalink)   Report Post  
Goomba38
 
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Damsel wrote:

> Can anyone recommend a good food processor that's easy to use and to clean?
>
> Thanks,
> Carol


I love my Cuisinart Pro Custom 11"

Goomba
  #3 (permalink)   Report Post  
Wayne Boatwright
 
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On Fri 08 Jul 2005 03:59:51a, Goomba38 wrote in rec.food.cooking:

> Damsel wrote:
>
>> Can anyone recommend a good food processor that's easy to use and to
>> clean?
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Carol

>
> I love my Cuisinart Pro Custom 11"
>
> Goomba
>


Hamilton Beach

--
Wayne Boatwright *¿*
____________________________________________

Give me a smart idiot over a stupid genius any day.
Sam Goldwyn, 1882-1974


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jmcquown
 
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Wayne Boatwright wrote:
> On Fri 08 Jul 2005 03:59:51a, Goomba38 wrote in rec.food.cooking:
>
>> Damsel wrote:
>>
>>> Can anyone recommend a good food processor that's easy to use and to
>>> clean?
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>> Carol

>>
>> I love my Cuisinart Pro Custom 11"
>>
>> Goomba
>>

>
> Hamilton Beach


That's what I have and it works just fine. But pretty much the only time I
use it is when I want to evenly slice 2 cups of yellow (summer crookneck)
squash to make my squash casserole.

Jill


  #5 (permalink)   Report Post  
Wayne Boatwright
 
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On Fri 08 Jul 2005 05:26:09a, jmcquown wrote in rec.food.cooking:

> Wayne Boatwright wrote:
>> On Fri 08 Jul 2005 03:59:51a, Goomba38 wrote in rec.food.cooking:
>>
>>> Damsel wrote:
>>>
>>>> Can anyone recommend a good food processor that's easy to use and to
>>>> clean?
>>>>
>>>> Thanks,
>>>> Carol
>>>
>>> I love my Cuisinart Pro Custom 11"
>>>
>>> Goomba
>>>

>>
>> Hamilton Beach

>
> That's what I have and it works just fine. But pretty much the only
> time I use it is when I want to evenly slice 2 cups of yellow (summer
> crookneck) squash to make my squash casserole.
>
> Jill


I have yet to slice anything in mine, but it kneads pizza and bread dough
just fine.

FWIW, I had a Cuisinart Pro 14 which needed the bowl, lid, and flat lid
replaced. Total cost for those parts was more than the entire HB unit.

--
Wayne Boatwright *¿*
____________________________________________

Give me a smart idiot over a stupid genius any day.
Sam Goldwyn, 1882-1974


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  #6 (permalink)   Report Post  
Sheldon
 
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jmcquown wrote:
> > > Hamilton Beach

>
> That's what I have and it works just fine. But pretty much the only time I
> use it is when I want to evenly slice 2 cups of yellow (summer crookneck)
> squash to make my squash casserole.


Ya still gotta rinse, and slice the ends off with a knife... so while
you already have the knife in your hand may as well donate a full 18
seconds more of your precious time to slice 2 cups worth... and then
not need to *waste* five minutes fiddling with and cleaning up a whole
machine (that really doesn't slice cleanly/evenly anyway, more like
tearing and not compensating for food tipping in the chute). And how
evenly does one need to slice squash rounds to bake in casseroles
anyway... is +/- .015" good enough, plenty good enough... and one would
need to have a severe mental disorder not to be capable of slicing
squash by hand to +/- .015" (I'm being extremely generous)... most
normal folks can easily do +/- .005" with their eyes closed
(literally)... the trick to acurate repetion is to not think about it,
don't even look, just do it. But ya shouldn't put a sharp instrument
in the hands of the mentally ill anyway... so only if one is physically
disabled does a food processor make any sense in a home kitchen.
People have food processors for the same reason they hang 30+ pots from
their ceiling, a lame attempt to convince folks they can cook.

Sheldon

  #7 (permalink)   Report Post  
Sheldon
 
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DUH'Wayne Boatwright wrote:
> On Fri 08 Jul 2005 05:26:09a, jmcquown wrote in rec.food.cooking:
> >> On Fri 08 Jul 2005 03:59:51a, Goomba38 wrote in rec.food.cooking:
> >>
> >>> Damsel wrote:
> >>>
> >>>> Can anyone recommend a good food processor that's easy to use and to
> >>>> clean?
> >>>>
> >>>> Thanks,
> >>>> Carol
> >>>
> >>> I love my Cuisinart Pro Custom 11"
> >>>
> >>> Goomba
> >>>
> >>
> >> Hamilton Beach

> >
> > That's what I have and it works just fine. But pretty much the only
> > time I use it is when I want to evenly slice 2 cups of yellow (summer
> > crookneck) squash to make my squash casserole.
> >
> > Jill

>
> I have yet to slice anything in mine, but it kneads pizza and bread dough
> just fine.


If it can be kneaded in a food processor it ain't pizza dough, just not
a possibility.

I don't know why anyone needs any machine to knead 1-2 pounds of dough
anyway... not unless they have severely arthritic hands or other
disabling handicap.... like Duh'wayne, CHRONIC LYING!

Sheldon

  #8 (permalink)   Report Post  
Monsur Fromage du Pollet
 
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Damsel wrote on 08 Jul 2005 in rec.food.cooking

> I have two food processors. One that is quite small - it's an
> attachment to the Oster Kitchen Center. It's rarely adequate for
> the task at hand. I have a thrift-shop one that has a larger
> bowl, but is a royal pain in the butt to use.
>
> Can anyone recommend a good food processor that's easy to use and
> to clean?
>
> Thanks,
> Carol
>


Well My KA sure is easy to use...but has crannies and ridges which
collect bits of food so it isn't very easy to clean. So unless you wash
it right after use it is a pain.

--
It's not a question of where he grips it!
It's a simple question of weight ratios!

A five ounce bird could not carry a one pound coconut.

Are you suggesting coconuts migrate?
  #9 (permalink)   Report Post  
Dog3
 
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Damsel > wrote in
:

> I have two food processors. One that is quite small - it's an
> attachment to the Oster Kitchen Center. It's rarely adequate for the
> task at hand. I have a thrift-shop one that has a larger bowl, but is
> a royal pain in the butt to use.
>
> Can anyone recommend a good food processor that's easy to use and to
> clean?
>
> Thanks,
> Carol


My old Cuisinart is easy to use and easy to clean. I don't use it that
often as I prefer my knife and the immersible hand blender. I don't have a
lot of attachments for the Cuisinart but there are some recipes that I
really need to use it for.

Michael
  #10 (permalink)   Report Post  
jmcquown
 
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Sheldon wrote:
> jmcquown wrote:
>>>> Hamilton Beach

>>
>> That's what I have and it works just fine. But pretty much the only
>> time I use it is when I want to evenly slice 2 cups of yellow
>> (summer crookneck) squash to make my squash casserole.

>
> Ya still gotta rinse, and slice the ends off with a knife... so while
> you already have the knife in your hand may as well donate a full 18
> seconds more of your precious time to slice 2 cups worth...


Yeah, and I did say I rarely use it, didn't I? I use my blender more
frequently for sauces, purees, etc. than I ever do my FP.

Jill (love you too, dear, now go scritch a pussy)

and then
> not need to *waste* five minutes fiddling with and cleaning up a whole
> machine (that really doesn't slice cleanly/evenly anyway, more like
> tearing and not compensating for food tipping in the chute). And how
> evenly does one need to slice squash rounds to bake in casseroles
> anyway... is +/- .015" good enough, plenty good enough... and one
> would
> need to have a severe mental disorder not to be capable of slicing
> squash by hand to +/- .015" (I'm being extremely generous)... most
> normal folks can easily do +/- .005" with their eyes closed
> (literally)... the trick to acurate repetion is to not think about it,
> don't even look, just do it. But ya shouldn't put a sharp instrument
> in the hands of the mentally ill anyway... so only if one is
> physically disabled does a food processor make any sense in a home
> kitchen.
> People have food processors for the same reason they hang 30+ pots
> from their ceiling, a lame attempt to convince folks they can cook.
>
> Sheldon





  #11 (permalink)   Report Post  
sf
 
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Default

On 8 Jul 2005 06:56:18 -0700, Sheldon wrote:

>
> If it can be kneaded in a food processor it ain't pizza dough, just not
> a possibility.
>
> I don't know why anyone needs any machine to knead 1-2 pounds of dough
> anyway... not unless they have severely arthritic hands or other
> disabling handicap.... like Duh'wayne, CHRONIC LYING!


Oh, stop it. That's how I do my pizza dough too. Frankly, I don't
think there is any compelling reason to do it any other way. Using
the cuisanart is fast... a matter of seconds, not minutes to knead and
there is no change in texture or flavor.
  #12 (permalink)   Report Post  
Dimitri
 
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"Damsel" > wrote in message
...
>I have two food processors. One that is quite small - it's an attachment
> to the Oster Kitchen Center. It's rarely adequate for the task at hand. I
> have a thrift-shop one that has a larger bowl, but is a royal pain in the
> butt to use.
>
> Can anyone recommend a good food processor that's easy to use and to clean?
>
> Thanks,
> Carol


FWIW

I have a Cuisinart that is for all intents and purposes is built like a tank.
The main part of the unit is quite heavy and I believe that's good. The
vacation home we rent has a "old", very old Cuisinart "robot" that is also built
like a tank - that thing has to be 15 years old - used by vacationers - and it
still performs perfectly.

Oh yes and the bowls fit nicely in the top of the dishwasher.

Dimitri


  #13 (permalink)   Report Post  
notbob
 
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On 2005-07-08, Dimitri > wrote:

> vacation home we rent has a "old", very old Cuisinart "robot" that is also built
> like a tank - that thing has to be 15 years old - used by vacationers - and it
> still performs perfectly.


Yep... them original Cuisinart F/P's had a serious motor in 'em and a
lifetime warranty to back 'em up. I've had mine for at least 20 years
and it's still as good as the day I bought it. 'Course I suspect the
fact that I only use it an average of twice a year is also a factor.


nb
  #14 (permalink)   Report Post  
Dimitri
 
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"notbob" > wrote in message
...
> On 2005-07-08, Dimitri > wrote:
>
>> vacation home we rent has a "old", very old Cuisinart "robot" that is also
>> built
>> like a tank - that thing has to be 15 years old - used by vacationers - and
>> it
>> still performs perfectly.

>
> Yep... them original Cuisinart F/P's had a serious motor in 'em and a
> lifetime warranty to back 'em up. I've had mine for at least 20 years
> and it's still as good as the day I bought it. 'Course I suspect the
> fact that I only use it an average of twice a year is also a factor.
>
>
> nb


IIRC the base is a blue-green.

Dimitri


  #15 (permalink)   Report Post  
tammym
 
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"Damsel" > wrote in message
...
> I have two food processors. One that is quite small - it's an attachment
> to the Oster Kitchen Center. It's rarely adequate for the task at hand.

I
> have a thrift-shop one that has a larger bowl, but is a royal pain in the
> butt to use.
>
> Can anyone recommend a good food processor that's easy to use and to

clean?

I have a Cuisinart which was a gift, I didn't pick it out. It is not easy
to clean, but will be when Jack (Kay's husband) files away the so-called
safety mechanism for me (which he also did for Kay.) Unless I have to chop
a boatload of onions or something, though, I just use my chef's knife for
chopping tasks. I rarely use the Cuisinart except for the few times I need
it for pureeing, and even then, I am more likely to use my 'stick' blender.
So basically, the Cuisinart just take up counterspace. Must be time for a
garage sale ;-)

Aside from the chef's knife, I also love my Benriner for slicing which I
keep on a hook right above my chopping board. My mother also gave me a
mandoline which is capable of thicker slices than the Benriner but is bigger
and more cumbersome to deal with than the Benriner.

HTH, Carol,
TammyM
Sacramento, California




  #16 (permalink)   Report Post  
Hal Laurent
 
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Default


"tammym" > wrote in message
...

> I have a Cuisinart which was a gift, I didn't pick it out. It is not easy
> to clean, but will be when Jack (Kay's husband) files away the so-called
> safety mechanism for me (which he also did for Kay.)


I'd love to hear details on doing this. The safety mechanism on my
semi-ancient Cuisinart is a real pain-in-the-butt.

Hal Laurent
Baltimore


  #17 (permalink)   Report Post  
notbob
 
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On 2005-07-08, Hal Laurent > wrote:

> I'd love to hear details on doing this. The safety mechanism on my
> semi-ancient Cuisinart is a real pain-in-the-butt.


My sure fire approach is to take a fire hose to it about 0.8 nano
seconds after use.

nb
  #18 (permalink)   Report Post  
Hal Laurent
 
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Default


"notbob" > wrote in message
...
> On 2005-07-08, Hal Laurent > wrote:
>
>> I'd love to hear details on doing this. The safety mechanism on my
>> semi-ancient Cuisinart is a real pain-in-the-butt.

>
> My sure fire approach is to take a fire hose to it about 0.8 nano
> seconds after use.


Well that's all well and good, but I'd like to still be able to use the
thing afterwards. :-)

Hal Laurent
Baltimore


  #19 (permalink)   Report Post  
AL
 
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Default

I like my Kitchenaid 760. I throw everything (except the base) into the
dishwasher when I'm done.

"Damsel" > wrote in message
...
>I have two food processors. One that is quite small - it's an attachment
> to the Oster Kitchen Center. It's rarely adequate for the task at hand.
> I
> have a thrift-shop one that has a larger bowl, but is a royal pain in the
> butt to use.
>
> Can anyone recommend a good food processor that's easy to use and to
> clean?
>
> Thanks,
> Carol



  #20 (permalink)   Report Post  
kalanamak
 
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Goomba38 wrote:
> Damsel wrote:
>
>> Can anyone recommend a good food processor that's easy to use and to
>> clean?
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Carol

>
>
> I love my Cuisinart Pro Custom 11"
>
> Goomba

Mine exactly. I have done unspeakable things to it and it has never
failed me.
blacksalt


  #21 (permalink)   Report Post  
Julian Vrieslander
 
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In article >,
Goomba38 > wrote:

> I love my Cuisinart Pro Custom 11"


We have one of those. I use it only rarely. The main reason is that
the time it saves (compared with using hand tools to chop/mix/puree/etc
the food) is often less than the time I have to spend cleaning all the
parts afterwards.

I could swear that there are French engineers who stayed up late at
night brainstorming where they could add little ribs, nooks, crannies,
and holes that would trap bits of food. You can't completely
disassemble the feed tube parts. If you put it in the dishwasher and
the temp is too hot, you might warp the plastic.

Bad design.

--
Julian Vrieslander
  #22 (permalink)   Report Post  
Damsel
 
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Default

Julian Vrieslander > said:

> In article >,
> Goomba38 > wrote:
>
> > I love my Cuisinart Pro Custom 11"


I've been eyeing them up on eBay. There are some good deals available.

> We have one of those. I use it only rarely. The main reason is that
> the time it saves (compared with using hand tools to chop/mix/puree/etc
> the food) is often less than the time I have to spend cleaning all the
> parts afterwards.


When Crash found out that food processors can "knead" pizza dough (recipe
below), an FP became a sure thing for my birthday. <EG> Does anyone have
experience shredding cabbage for cole slaw in one of these babies? I've
always shredded mine by hand, but I don't get consistent results.

> I could swear that there are French engineers who stayed up late at
> night brainstorming where they could add little ribs, nooks, crannies,
> and holes that would trap bits of food. You can't completely
> disassemble the feed tube parts. If you put it in the dishwasher and
> the temp is too hot, you might warp the plastic.


I don't have a dishwasher. Will I be needing bottle brushes, etc., for
cleaning the parts? I guess you have to clean it the very second you get
done "processing" your foods.

> Bad design.


That sucks.

Thanks for the info, Julian.
Carol

* Exported from MasterCook *

Pizza Crust - Deep Dish

Recipe By amsel in dis Dress
Serving Size : 0 Preparation Time :0:00
Categories : main dishes yeast breads


Amount Measure Ingredient -- Preparation Method
-------- ------------ --------------------------------
2 packets rapid rise dry yeast
2 cups warm water
1/2 cup vegetable oil
4 tablespoons olive oil
2 tablespoons sugar
5 1/2 cups flour
cornmeal -- as needed

In the bowl of a stand mixer, dissolve the yeast in the water. Add the
vegetable oil, olive oil, sugar, and half of the flour. Beat for 10
minutes. Attach the dough hook and mix in the remaining flour. Knead for
several minutes with the mixer.

Remove dough and place in a very large metal bowl and allow to rise until
double in bulk. Punch down and allow to rise again. Punch down a second
time and divide dough into thirds. Freeze two pieces for later use.

Oil bottom and sides of deep-dish pizza pan. Sprinkle with corn meal.
Place one-third of dough in the pan and push it out to the edges using
fingers. Dough should be about 1/8-inch thick throughout the pan.

Add desired toppings. Bake at a 475F until the top is bubbly and the crust
a light golden brown, about 35 to 40 minutes.

Cuisine:
"Italian"
Source:
"adapted from a Frugal Gourmet recipe"
Yield:
"3 crusts"


- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
  #25 (permalink)   Report Post  
Goomba38
 
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Julian Vrieslander wrote:

> In article >,
> Goomba38 > wrote:
>
>
>>I love my Cuisinart Pro Custom 11"

>
>
> We have one of those. I use it only rarely. The main reason is that
> the time it saves (compared with using hand tools to chop/mix/puree/etc
> the food) is often less than the time I have to spend cleaning all the
> parts afterwards.
>
> I could swear that there are French engineers who stayed up late at
> night brainstorming where they could add little ribs, nooks, crannies,
> and holes that would trap bits of food. You can't completely
> disassemble the feed tube parts. If you put it in the dishwasher and
> the temp is too hot, you might warp the plastic.
>
> Bad design.
>

I am a fast one with a good knife, but I admit that sometimes a food
processor is *really* very handy for things.
I don't know what problems you have cleaning it-mine goes straight into
the dishwasher (top shelf) and washes up fine!
Goomba


  #26 (permalink)   Report Post  
Goomba38
 
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Damsel wrote:


> I don't have a dishwasher. Will I be needing bottle brushes, etc., for
> cleaning the parts? I guess you have to clean it the very second you get
> done "processing" your foods.


I wash mine by hand when the dishwasher is getting full. It's a snap to
wash and I've never had trouble doing it quickly and efficiently by
hand. Why people have problems, I can't imagine??
GOomba
  #28 (permalink)   Report Post  
Sheryl Rosen
 
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Melba's Jammin' at wrote on 7/10/05 8:48 AM:

> In article >,
>
wrote:
>> I don't have a dishwasher. Will I be needing bottle brushes, etc., for
>> cleaning the parts? I guess you have to clean it the very second you get
>> done "processing" your foods.

>
> I rinse the parts as I'm done using them and sometimes put them into the
> dishwasher and sometimes do not. I don't think you need anything
> special for cleaning. JMO.


I'm with Barb on this one.
I have never had difficulty cleaning my Cuisinart.
When I'm finished using it, I just plop it into a dishpan with soapy water.

I'm not a "clean-as-I-go" person, though I usually will tackle the "prep"
dishes before dinner and then the dinner dishes after the meal. I suppose
it doesn't really need the 10-20 minute soak, but it surely doesn't hurt--by
the time I'm ready to wipe those prep utensils/bowls, etc down with a sponge
and rinse them, they are pretty much clean. The soak has gotten into all the
"nooks and crannies".

I merely wipe the FP bowl down with a non-scrubbing sponge, give it a good
rinse under hot running water and let it air dry.

Once, after grating potatoes for latkes, I let it sit until after the meal.
That did require a soak, because the starch had fused onto the plastic walls
of the bowl. No biggie. I set it down in the sink to soak once all the
dishes were done. I let it sit for about an hour in hot soapy water and it
cleaned up beautifully with no effort whatsoever.

I guess if you're one of those obsessve/compulsive people who can't bear the
idea of having something soak in the sink for a little while, you might need
to invest in some sort of specialized cleaning equipment for your FP bowl.
But then again, someone who was obsessively and or compulsively clean
wouldn't let the thing sit for 10 minutes so the starch would stick to the
side, right?

Cleaning a FP bowl is no more or less an effort than cleaning anything else.
I really don't see the big deal people make of it. I'd rather wash an extra
bowl than futz with a knife, when there's a lot of prep work to do.

I have knife skills but I find the prep work boring and monotonous. For me,
the joy of cooking is not in the chopping and other prep work, it's in the
creation. Some people really enjoy the prep-work, they find it relaxing.
More power to them and they might feel a food-processor removes the fun out
of cooking. That's not the case for me and so I use my FP all the time. To
each their own.

And I have a Cuisinart because at the time I got it, (maybe 8-9 years ago) I
could afford it so I figured, "why not?". Before that, I had a small Black
and Decker and I have to say, I was pleased with its performance, it just
was small and I had outgrown the size. If I had to buy one now, I'd
probably go to Target or Walmart and get either Black and Decker or Hamilton
Beach. After spending over $100 on the Cuisinart, I wouldn't expect to
have to buy another FP the rest of my life. If I bought a $40 Ham.Beach, I'd
expect it to last me 10-15 years. Still not bad. Also, i think there are
probably more attachments for the Cuisinart than the Hamilton Beach....but
frankly, except for the fine shredding blade I bought specifically for
potato pancakes, the basic blades do pretty much whatever I need.

Which reminds me--I have a julienne blade that I don't even know how I wound
up with--for the 14 cup Cuisinart FP. (I have the 11 cup). It doesn't fit
my machine at all. If someone has a 14 cup machine and they want this
blade, email me. It's brand new.
No charge--but maybe we could trade something.

Let me know.

  #33 (permalink)   Report Post  
Damsel
 
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"Peter Aitken" > said:

> I like the coarse grating disk for cole slaw. Also great for making latkes.


Mmmmm! Potato pancakes! I'm getting excited about this food processor.
LOL!

Carol
  #34 (permalink)   Report Post  
Damsel
 
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Sheryl Rosen > said:

> I guess if you're one of those obsessve/compulsive people who can't bear the
> idea of having something soak in the sink for a little while, you might need
> to invest in some sort of specialized cleaning equipment for your FP bowl.


ROFLMAO!!!!!!!!!!!!!

<gasping for breath>

I can't even FIND my sink! It's full of dirty dishes.

OMG ... I'll be okay. Just breathe, Carol.

Thanks, Sheryl. I'm looking at the 11 cup, also. Damn, I think I just
talked myself into washing dishes. Not to worry. I've gotta catch up on
the rest of the posts first. ;-)

Carol
  #35 (permalink)   Report Post  
Terry Pulliam Burd
 
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On Sun, 10 Jul 2005 00:55:25 -0500, Damsel >
wrote:

<snip>

>When Crash found out that food processors can "knead" pizza dough (recipe
>below), an FP became a sure thing for my birthday. <EG> Does anyone have
>experience shredding cabbage for cole slaw in one of these babies? I've
>always shredded mine by hand, but I don't get consistent results.


<snip>

Carol, if no one has weighed in about the KitchenAir Professional,
lemme tell ya: It has two work bowls, plus a small prep bowl and all
sorts of disks, blades and other accessories. Does a wonderful job on
everything. My only complaint would be cleaning the top. It has a
slight ridge inside the outter ridge that makes it hard to clean, say,
grated cheese and such. Otherwise, I swear it's powerful enough to
turn rocks into gravel.

Terry "Squeaks" Pulliam Burd
AAC(F)BV66.0748.CA

"If the soup had been as hot as the claret, if the claret had been as
old as the bird, and if the bird's breasts had been as full as the
waitress's, it would have been a very good dinner."

-- Duncan Hines

To reply, replace "spaminator" with "cox"


  #36 (permalink)   Report Post  
Sheldon
 
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Goomba38 wrote:
> Julian Vrieslander wrote:
>
> > In article >,
> > Goomba38 > wrote:
> >
> >
> >>I love my Cuisinart Pro Custom 11"

> >
> >
> > We have one of those. I use it only rarely. The main reason is that
> > the time it saves (compared with using hand tools to chop/mix/puree/etc
> > the food) is often less than the time I have to spend cleaning all the
> > parts afterwards.
> >
> > I could swear that there are French engineers who stayed up late at
> > night brainstorming where they could add little ribs, nooks, crannies,
> > and holes that would trap bits of food. You can't completely
> > disassemble the feed tube parts. If you put it in the dishwasher and
> > the temp is too hot, you might warp the plastic.
> >
> > Bad design.
> >

> I am a fast one with a good knife, but I admit that sometimes a food
> processor is *really* very handy for things.
> I don't know what problems you have cleaning it-mine goes straight into
> the dishwasher (top shelf) and washes up fine!


Yeah, but... than it's out of commission until you run the dishwasher.
I honestly can't think of anything a food processor can slice quicker
and with less effort than I can with a knife... and with a knife I can
slice far more neatly and uniformly.. food processors are fine I
suppose for those who are satified with their veggies all hacked up
like they were passed through the insinkerator.

When I try out a new high priced restaurant I expect the cooks to know
how to use a knife (and properly), if I notice they use a food
processor to hack up the veggies for salads, soups, stews, etc. it will
be my last visit.. I'm not about to pay top dollar for food looks like
it's already been eaten.

In fact when I walk through a restaurant to be seated I check out what
others are eating... if I see food processor crapola I make my
apologies and depart before ever reaching my table... I'd far rather
stop off for Chinese take out instead, at least they don't use an
infernal machine to masticate the vegetables and the prices are
resonable. I'll be damned if I'm gonna pay big bucks for dinner and
the food is reminescent of opening a can of Veg-All.

Sheldon

  #37 (permalink)   Report Post  
Louis Cohen
 
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Damsel wrote:
> I have two food processors. One that is quite small - it's an attachment
> to the Oster Kitchen Center. It's rarely adequate for the task at hand. I
> have a thrift-shop one that has a larger bowl, but is a royal pain in the
> butt to use.
>
> Can anyone recommend a good food processor that's easy to use and to clean?
>
> Thanks,
> Carol

I have heard two chefs say that you don't need a food processor - use a
chef's knife for chopping and a blender for purees. And a mixer for
dough.

--

================================================== =============
Regards

Louis Cohen

"Yes, yes, I will desalinate you, you grande morue!"

Émile Zola, Assommoir 1877
  #38 (permalink)   Report Post  
Sheldon
 
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Louis Cohen wrote:
> Damsel wrote:
> > I have two food processors. One that is quite small - it's an attachment
> > to the Oster Kitchen Center. It's rarely adequate for the task at hand. I
> > have a thrift-shop one that has a larger bowl, but is a royal pain in the
> > butt to use.
> >
> > Can anyone recommend a good food processor that's easy to use and to clean?

>
> I have heard two chefs say that you don't need a food processor - use a
> chef's knife for chopping and a blender for purees. And a mixer for
> dough.


Only two chefs... just about every chef will say the same... and any
that don't ain't really chefs. Before foodtv hardly anyone used a food
processor, but sponsors have been known to push a lot of totally
unnecessary dreck on the pinheads who are mostly what're addicted to
foodtv.

If you're a large commissary operation, like a hospital, prison,
military food service, than a food processor is necessary, but a true
commercial machine, not those toys-r-us ones yoose guys are refering
to... but no home cook or small restaurant needs a food processor...
for relatively small quantities those things are more trouble than
they're worth, and the kinds yoose are speaking of really don't work
very well, about on par with the electric knife. Home cooks who use
food processors really can't use a knife very well, there is no other
explanation, none... okay, maybe a lot of yoose are handicapped.

Sheldon

  #39 (permalink)   Report Post  
Debra Fritz
 
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On Sun, 10 Jul 2005 16:10:32 -0700, Terry Pulliam Burd
> wrote:

>
>Carol, if no one has weighed in about the KitchenAir Professional,
>lemme tell ya: It has two work bowls, plus a small prep bowl and all
>sorts of disks, blades and other accessories. Does a wonderful job on
>everything. My only complaint would be cleaning the top. It has a
>slight ridge inside the outter ridge that makes it hard to clean, say,
>grated cheese and such. Otherwise, I swear it's powerful enough to
>turn rocks into gravel.
>


I've got the 12 Cup KitchenAid. 3 work bowls, 6 or 7 different blades
and an egg whipper gizmo. The thing really can turn rocks into gravel!

I used it today to make almond paste, and it had the job done in about
60 seconds.

Cleaning the top is easier if you use a baby bottle brush. Takes about
30 seconds with hot, soapy water and comes perfectly clean.

Debra
  #40 (permalink)   Report Post  
Damsel
 
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"Sheldon" > said:

> Home cooks who use
> food processors really can't use a knife very well, there is no other
> explanation, none... okay, maybe a lot of yoose are handicapped.


I am not good with a knife. There. I said it.

A food processor can do a better job at some things than I can do on my
own. Why not take advantage of the technology that's available?
Especially it it'll cut down on the wear and tear to my shoulder, elbow and
wrist. It's a bitch when your warrantee runs out. <G>

Carol
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