Displaying posts tagged with

“Professional Kitchen”

May
22
2010

Pacojet – The Chefs’ Choice For Making Gourmet Ice Cream, Sorbet, Gelato, And More

Pacojet – The Chefs’ Choice For Making Gourmet Ice Cream, Sorbet, Gelato, And More

Pacojet is a revolutionary countertop machine that is essential to every culinary professional kitchen. It whips up frozen dessert creations quickly, and without much fuss. This is a dream machine for chefs who strive for top quality with minimum effort. It has become an essential food preparation device for chefs nation and world wide.

Pacojet is best known for its “Pacotizing” process: mixing and pureeing deeply frozen food directly in its frozen state, producing a fine consistency intended to maximize flavors. Using Pacojet as a sorbet, ice cream, or gelato machine is best when using fresh and natural ingredients.

Pacojet isn’t just for making frozen desserts. It is a versatile, creative, and labor saving tool that also makes savory sauces, pâtés, and anything you can imagine.

The 3 step Pacojet process couldn’t be easier. Step one: fill the beaker with your ingredients. Step two: freeze filled beakers to -20 degrees celsius (-4 degrees Fahrenheit) for 24 hours in a regular freezer to ensure that the contents are frozen to the core. If you have a shock or blast freezer, this only takes 4 hours. Step three: Pacotize the contents, using the pacotizing blade with the machine. Enter the desired portions, and the Pacojet does the rest. The results will astound you!

Whatever the application, whether it’s appetizers, concentrates for soups and sauces, or your favorite ice cream or gelato recipes, the Pacojet process is always the same. Beakers can be prepared in advance or during slow periods, stored deep frozen until needed, and require no thawing either prior to or during processing. Because of the constant frozen state, there is no need for additives, preservatives, or flavor enhancers. Partially used beakers can be put back into the freezer, which means nothing is ever wasted.

No kitchen is too big or too small for Pacojet. It’s compact countertop design fits well in any space. The needs of larger kitchens can be accommodated simply adding more Pacojet beakers for higher production rates. Many chefs are known to rely on multiple Pacojet machines in their work spaces. Pacojet requires no special installation and uses a standard socket.

Another benefit of Pacojet is that it will cut time, labor, and ingredients costs, thus increasing the profitability of any restaurant. Cleaning the Pacojet is also a simple and time saving endeavor. It’s even easier than the 3 step Pacojet process.

This high performance machine encourages the culinary expert to experiment with innovative ideas for food textures, flavors, aromas, and taste for frozen desserts and savory dishes.

Pacoject is made in Switzerland and is the most innovative food preparation appliance to appear on the market in ten years. It was developed in collaboration with renowned chefs from around the world.  Pacojet provides a simple and reliable method for the fresh production of a large variety of frozen desserts. It is a cost effective and labor saving tool that top chefs have been known to take with them everywhere they go.

May
16
2010

How to Chose the Right Knife for Your Kitchen

How to Chose the Right Knife for Your Kitchen

The right kitchen knife for the job will shorten your prep time, a lot. It will allow you to work faster and smarter. It will also help you prepare higher quality ingredients and be a joy to use. So what makes a good knife? The key factors include: size, shape, quality and sharpness. 

Size

Use a knife that is too small and you will work harder than you need to. Use a knife that is too big and you lose precision and control, and you’ll work harder than you need to. Generally, you will find that a larger knife is better for chopping, dicing, mincing, and slicing. A smaller knife will be better suited to cutting, peeling and decorating small fruits. A medium sized knife if useful for slicing medium sized fruits and cuts of meat.

A good basic knife set will contain a chef’s knife, also called a cook’s knife. While pros often recommend longer knives, 8 inches is a good home size. 7 inches might be all that a shorter cook will want. Some cooks are using the Japanese style santoku knife as a substitute for the European style chef’s knife. A chef’s knife is the most used blade in a professional kitchen and can be used for most food prep. A knife this large is often intimidating to the home cook but a bit of practice will demonstrate that it makes the job of chopping go much faster. 

Where a chef’s knife isn’t appropriate is for fine work like peeling. That’s where a paring knife comes in. Paring knives come in a range of sizes from 2-5 inches but the most common size is 3-3 1/2 inches. Many home cooks use paring knives to chop with, but that’s not what they are designed for. A paring knife is best used when the item being cut is held in the hand. If a cutting board is used then a larger and heavier knife will do the job with less effort.

A bread knife should be long enough to cut a loaf. For breads baked in pans or long, narrow loaves, 8 inches is adequate. For round loaves, a 9 inch or longer knife will be better.

Middle sized knives from 5-6 inches in length are good for general work and are often the home cook’s tool of choice. Generally these knives are good for slicing or boning. A larger chef’s knife will make much faster work of chopping. Knives in the middle size range are often called utility or sandwich knives, though some cooks prefer the thicker blade of a short chef’s or santoku knife.

A good working minimum set of knives will include a chef’s knife, a paring knife, a mid-sized utility knife or two and a bread knife. When preparing poultry, it’s nice to have a knife dedicated to that task that won’t contaminate the rest of the meal. The vast majority of prep work can be easily accomplished with these knives and a set of poultry shears. It’s generally best to start with a higher quality small set of knives and add specialty knives as needed than to buy a huge set and never use some of the knives. Some cooks prefer the nice look of a matching set of knives. Some prefer to buy the knife the they like best for each particular task.

If you work with whole chickens or poultry then a 5-6 inch boning knife is a good addition. A 6-7 inch fillet knife will make short work of de-boning or filleting fish. A 2-2 1/2 inch stiff paring knife helps with garnishes. While a good chef’s knife will do to carve meat or poultry, a carving knife that isn’t used for food prep will be sharp and ready for carving at the table. 8-9 inches is a good general purpose size. A 10 inch knife is better for prime rib and can double as a cake slicer, cutting the entire width of the cake in one motion.

Shape

Knives that have curved blades are the most versatile. Chopping benefits from a wider blade, at least at the end closest to the handle, or heel. Straight edged knives work well for slicing things like bread and roast beef. The traditional turkey carving knife will be fairly straight. 

The overall shape of a knife includes both blade and handle shapes. The blade shape will influence cutting or chopping speed. The shape of the handle will influence comfort and balance. The latter are very subjective. What feels good for one cook will be misery for another. Before buying it’s always best to actually hold a knife take it through the appropriate chopping and cutting motions.. For some cooks perfect balance is vital. Others don’t care as long as the knife holds an edge.

Quality

Better quality knives hold their edge longer and are generally more durable. It used to be that only forged blades held high quality but that’s no longer the case. While low quality knives are all stamped, now days many quality knives are cut or stamped from sheet steel. Forschner knives rated by Cooks Illustrated as a best buy and a popular in many quality restaurants offer the same edge holding ability as the much more expensive German brands at less than a quarter the cost, and bust the myth of only forged blades being sharp and durable. Some very expensive Japanese knives are not forged and may be the best knives available.

Quality Japanese knives typically offer a harder steel than comparably priced German ones. The trade off is that while the edge can stay sharper longer, the knife is more difficult to sharpen when it does become dull. Professional chefs fall on both sides of the Japanese vs. German steel question. 

Regardless of what knife you end up choosing, what top brands offer that less expensive ones don’t is a beautiful tool. A less expensive knife may be 95% or more as usable as a a high priced one. It won’t be as finely balanced. It won’t offer that ineffable sense of quality. Nor will it impress your friends. Aesthetics vs. value is fortunately a choice that won’t give you a bad knife.

Sharpness

A sharp, quality knife is a joy to use. However, the sharper an edge is the more delicate it is. Sharpness comes from the blade being extremely thin. If you buy an extremely sharp expensive knife and want its edge to last you will need to take care of it. At the very least that means not cleaning it in the dishwasher, cutting on a hard surface or storing the knife unprotected in a drawer. It also means learning to touch up the knife on a steel or ceramic hone. 

Any quality knife should come from the factory with a sharp enough edge, though sharp is a relative term. A 0+ Japanese knife may come with a scary sharp edge, while German one will have a “merely” working sharp one. The tradeoff is one of durability as well as in ease of cutting. An extremely sharp knife edge is fragile and requires both respect and care. A well maintained knife will hold a working edge for quite a while, though when it finally gets too dull you might want to consider using a professional knife sharpening service to restore the edge.

 

Nov
17
2009

Worlds Best Knife Sharpener

nySharp is The World’s Best Knife Sharpener AnySharp uses new, patented knife sharpener technology. AnySharp is superior to any knife sharpening steel or stone, and is unlike any knife sharpener you have ever used before. sharpens any knife with diamond precision perfect for expensive professional knives (i. e. Global) even sharpens serrated blades such as bread knives sharpen lawn mower blades without removing them sharpens scissors too totally safe to use – hands are always away from the blade, unlike many other sharpeners PowerGrip suction cup attaches without any tools small and light for easy storage Sharpen any Knife – even serrated blades! AnySharp is the world’s best knife sharpener. It uses the same basic technology as chantry knife sharpeners (a type of high-end professional kitchen knife sharpener). Unlike an electric knife sharpener, Anysharp uses no grinding mechanisms. Gentle as a porcelain knife sharpener (often referred to as a ceramic knife sharpener), AnySharp can be used by even a novice. It is truly a global sharpener with professional results for any cook or chef. The AnySharp is suitable for a wide array of knives any standard kitchen knife any hardened steel professional kitchen knife (like Global, Sabatier) hunting knife (including serrated hunting knives) serrated knife or toothed knives (like a bread knife, steak knife) Swiss Army Knives (use it for multiple tools on a swiss army knife Maintains Perfect Sharpening Angle Maybe you’re thinking that it’s not so important.   A sharpening angle doesn’t really matter as long as you can make it sharp.   Allow me to answer freely.   Don’t think that way.   Take those thoughts right out of your head right now.   The sharpening angle is monumentally important.   Even were you to achieve sharpness with an incorrect angle, you’ll be sharpening again before you know it.   It just won’t last.   Compare the angles of different types of knives to each other.   Inspect their angles carefully and think of how each is meant to be used.   You’ll see it plainly.   It really does matter.

http://www. anysharp. com