SC - Apple peeler
Seton1355 at aol.com
Seton1355 at aol.com
Sun Nov 21 19:16:29 PST 1999
Greetings My Lord Adamantius,
This very gaget is now being discussed on another list I am on. I herewith
pass along some comments about the apple peeler (that I have not yet
deleted.) You can see for yourself how others like this gaget.
Respectfully.
Phillipa Seton
****************************
>>>I think I have every gadget any of you have mentioned! I have your apple
>machine, David, and use it all the time as apple crisp is a big favorite at
>my house.
>>>Dear Vivi,
This is a machine, hand powered, that has an hand-cranked spindle on a
screw with a spike on the end. You mount the apple on the spike, crank it
in, and it pushes the apple through a whole with a round blade on the
inside which cores it and a round blade on the outside edge which spirals
it into one continuous slice. There is also a spring mounted razor of sorts
that peels the apple as it passes. And it is fast! Perfect for brown betty,
apple crisp or just a fancy presentation (lemon juice keeps it from browning).
The only time it doesn't work is when the apple is mushy. A nice firm apple
is a beautiful thing, and that it should taste good , like a Mac . . . this
is heaven!
>>>Hello David Shalom
This apple peeler if it is the metal one than it is very good for all kind
of apple.
Now a tip use this apple peeler for medium size POTATOES. It will peel and
core
and give a spiral kind of potatoe. put the spirals around a roast or a
chicken and the cores too spice with onion soup mix and you have an
elegant dish
Moshe
> Hullo, the list!
>
> In connection with the high-volume food-production orgy many Americans
> will be engaging in the week to come, I was wondering if anyone has used
> those devices that supposedly peel and core (and maybe slice; I forget)
> an apple. It's a crank-operated thing you clamp to a tabletop, I think,
> and you impale the apple along the core on a spike of some sort, after
> which you turn the crank and the peel is removed along principles
> similar to a carpenter's lathe.
>
> Now I'm pretty quick with a knife, but I'm being offered this gizmo
> essentially as a gift. Is it worth the money of the donor and does it
> actually save time and labor?
>
> Adamantius
> --
> Phil & Susan Troy
>
> troy at asan.com
>
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>
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