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Vintage suction cup kitchen slicer
Vintage suction cup kitchen slicer













vintage suction cup kitchen slicer
  1. VINTAGE SUCTION CUP KITCHEN SLICER MANUAL
  2. VINTAGE SUCTION CUP KITCHEN SLICER MAC
vintage suction cup kitchen slicer vintage suction cup kitchen slicer

Use your shoulder (or residual limb) to press the handle of a wooden spoon into the rag while you use your functional hand to unscrew or screw in the handle. I did this by tightly stuffing a rag into the cavity. The hardest part is attaching and detaching the attachments from the handle, because you need to stabilize the attachment while screwing on the handle. If you can get someone to help you attach the base to the main body, you can leave those two pieces attached permanently since the body won’t really be getting dirty (except the spout, which you can spot-clean). I found assembly and disassembly of this grater to be tedious, but there are a couple workarounds to mitigate that monotony. I like to place a Tupperware or resealable Pyrex near the spout and grate some extra directly into a receptacle, so I don’t have to reassemble if I need some cheese later on. Simply pop whatever it is you want to slice or grate into the top and turn the handle. It comes with three attachments: coarse shredding blade, fine shredding blade, and slicing blade. The suction cup base makes the G.CHEN Rotary Cheese Grater great for single-handed use. This rotary cheese grater is available in blue and red swatches. G.CHEN Rotary Cheese Grater: affordable, small, and efficient Below, you’ll find the results of my product testing.

VINTAGE SUCTION CUP KITCHEN SLICER MANUAL

Many manual graters are physically impossible to use with one hand-unless you find the right ones and combine them with the correct accessories (when needed). Sometimes it just isn’t reasonable to pull out a 25-pound mixer to grate some fresh parmesan for your pasta. KitchenAid mixers and food processors are heavy devices that require lots of assembly and disassembly. Sure, you can often use the grater attachment on your KitchenAid mixer or food processor if you happen to have one of the two, but I’ve never found that to be the most practical option. Let’s start with grating, because this is easily the biggest cheese-related obstacle I’ve encountered as an amputee. As an above-elbow amputee, I took it upon myself to grate and slice more cheese than I thought possible in an effort to unveil the best products and tips for your one-handed cheese prep needs. But cheese should be blissful, not inaccessible, when it comes to serving, slicing, or preparing it. Having use of only one hand can make many tasks seem daunting. And you shouldn’t be forced into eating the boxed stuff because you’ve got use of just one hand-unless you want to (not judging if that’s you, because I could go for a box of Kraft unicorn macaroni and cheese any day).

VINTAGE SUCTION CUP KITCHEN SLICER MAC

Why bother altering something as perfect as cheese with a tool as harsh as a grater? You’ve got to put something in your mac and cheese! But if you’re stuck with a grater that requires two hands when you’ve only got one, then you’ll be left with naked noodles, which aren’t nearly as fun.















Vintage suction cup kitchen slicer