The Best Fruit Prep Gadgets | Gear Heads

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  • čas přidán 17. 06. 2024
  • Get the most out of your fresh, seasonal produce with the best tools for fruit prep that save you time and money. Lisa and Hannah have the full rundown on which gadgets are worth purchasing.
    Hannah's Favorites:
    - Norpro Tomato Core It: bit.ly/44ZAH7n
    - Oxo Good Grips Pineapple Slicer: bit.ly/454Lb5n
    -Chefn Stem Gem: bit.ly/3R4NFLm
    Lisa's Favorites:
    - Progressie Prepworks Collapsible Mini Colander: bit.ly/3V0k6eX
    - Oxo Good Grips 3-in-1 Avocado Slicer: bit.ly/4bEO53c
    - Trudeau 3-in-1 Avocado Cutter: bit.ly/4bWM3vg
    - Oxo Good Grips Apple Divider: bit.ly/3KjuhGC
    - Norpro Ez Fruit Wedger: bit.ly/4bEyTTL
    - VKP Brands Johnny Apple Peeler: bit.ly/3wX5IfE
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Komentáře • 221

  • @stevenchristophersen7673
    @stevenchristophersen7673 Před 2 lety +82

    Would you cover the correct way to "wash" fruits and veggies? Should I bother with vinegar, salt, and/or vegetable/fruit sprays?

    • @violetg7315
      @violetg7315 Před rokem +6

      I believe wash the fruits under running water and soft brush for a few minutes should be good.

    • @leapintothewild
      @leapintothewild Před rokem

      Do a little googling on using baking soda -- what it removes is disgusting when you think it could've been going in your mouth. I add a 1/4 cup to a large bowl of room temp water, throw in the fruit or veg and let sit a few minutes, then rinse. Easy, peasy and cheap!

    • @Jen7867
      @Jen7867 Před rokem +5

      I'd love to see an actual experiment on this, too!! 👍
      Depending on the item, I either rinse it throughly with water (leafy greens, rice, lentils) or wash it with soap, water, and a nylon bristle brush.

    • @Isabella66Gracen
      @Isabella66Gracen Před rokem +11

      I know from experience that a little white vinegar in the water has really prolonged the freshness if strawberries for me. It eliminates mold spores that cause them to spoil faster. That's the only fruit I have tried this with.

    • @porcorosso4330
      @porcorosso4330 Před rokem +5

      I have seen a video on this topic by some other channel.
      basically, just adding anything is better than plain water.
      then the question becomes what is the main thing you want to remove.
      at the end of the day, I just concluded I will use salt water since it is easy for me to get salt.
      that said, like some others have mentioned vinegar might be good for keeping things fresh and browning.

  • @4kassis
    @4kassis Před 2 lety +33

    I use the thingy that you call a tomato corer for my strawberries. Works fine!

  • @leapintothewild
    @leapintothewild Před rokem +17

    My mom's had that red spiral peeler in heavy use for several decades, and only had to change the blade once because she dropped it and got nicked. It even peels the old-fashioned dense, grainy pears for sticky preserves! Just an amazing, sturdy tool.

    • @AdamBechtol
      @AdamBechtol Před 10 měsíci +2

      Reminds me how my aunt had one as well.

  • @SprGrlRVG
    @SprGrlRVG Před rokem +4

    I usually agree with Lisa but not about the avacado tool. I really love mine. Maybe it's because I'm not confident with a chef's knife. But with my Oxo tool, I can slice up that avacado in like 2 seconds and I don't worry about cutting myself.

  • @phranerphamily
    @phranerphamily Před 2 lety +6

    I recently was helping my mother with some strawberries and she pulled out that little huller. She told me I picked up this weird little tool and it works really good. She was right you're also right it's the greatest little tool!

  • @imuneik
    @imuneik Před 2 lety +20

    I ALWAYS appreciate the tool videos from ATK. It has saved me time and money over the years by showing me tools that actually work and are worth the value that’s the best thing ever!!! Thank you!!! 🥰

  • @hearttoheart4me
    @hearttoheart4me Před 2 lety +26

    Tomato corer for strawberries also, fine mesh strainer good for rinsing everything. Using a couple tools for multiple uses. Save space and money especially in a small space.

    • @QueenOfTheNorth65
      @QueenOfTheNorth65 Před 2 lety

      Fine mesh strainer rusts and doesn’t collapse.

    • @daveklein2826
      @daveklein2826 Před 2 lety

      Tomato cider is way to large for strawberry.... Your idea is a FAIL

    • @bostonrailfan2427
      @bostonrailfan2427 Před rokem

      or just use what you already have: a knife

  • @pajamasam5461
    @pajamasam5461 Před rokem +10

    For the avocadoes, after you slice it in half, you can cut it up before using a spoon to remove it from the peel. It makes it so much easier, and you get perfect slices too. You can also cubed it like that very easily.

    • @davidbgreensmith
      @davidbgreensmith Před 10 měsíci +2

      If you take the half with the pit and press gently on the skin side, the pit will fall straight out of a ripe avocado.

  • @janehall2720
    @janehall2720 Před rokem +9

    And for the next installment, the cherry pitter. If you need to clean alot of cherries 🍒, that is the way to go. I have one that you hit the spring-loaded plunger, it pushes the pit into a cup and the fruit into a bowl. So much better and faster than a hair pin.

    • @mjremy2605
      @mjremy2605 Před rokem

      Please give us the link! I need this for a cherry pie.

  • @butoolhasnain4164
    @butoolhasnain4164 Před 2 lety +30

    I'm surprised you didn't include cherry pitter. That's something a knife can't do, or at least not as cleanly or fast.

    • @kimberlyford587
      @kimberlyford587 Před rokem +5

      yes i have one and love it! i see people using a straw// too funny-- i stick w/ my pitter!

    • @hanadr
      @hanadr Před rokem +4

      Spitting out cherry pits is such a nostalgic rush of summers as a kid.
      Although I imagine it would not be appreciated as a method for making cherry pies.

    • @candyknutson4539
      @candyknutson4539 Před rokem +6

      I have an OXO cherry pitter and I like it. We have a Bing and a Rainier cherry tree, so it comes in handy.

    • @hanadr
      @hanadr Před rokem +5

      @@candyknutson4539 oooh that must be so lovely to have so many cherries!!!

    • @edenferriss768
      @edenferriss768 Před rokem +5

      We use it for olives and dates too. I love that thing.

  • @yettaoshea8869
    @yettaoshea8869 Před 2 lety +9

    Strawberry hulling: there is another tool it’s been around for longer than I’ve been alive. My grandmother had one, my mom, and me. It’s like a fat pair of tweezers and you just push it down on either side of the leaves/ stem, pinch and pull. One of my favorite tools for hulling is a plain old plastic drinking straw. Push the straw up thru the bottom of the strawberry and out comes pith.

    • @joker6solitaire
      @joker6solitaire Před 4 hodinami

      That's a brilliant hack! I have metal straws, so I'll give it a try with them, too.

  • @cassandragonzalez5660
    @cassandragonzalez5660 Před rokem +1

    you guys are just GREAT. Love these videos

  • @jackielinde7568
    @jackielinde7568 Před 2 lety +8

    Never heard of the "Poke the avocado seed" bit to get it out. I've always seen and done the chopping thing with a knife or sandwich spreader, especially back in the early 90's when I used to work in a sandwich shop. TBH, I preferred the sandwich spreader over a knife for Avocados. Less chance of cutting yourself.

  • @debrawashington5222
    @debrawashington5222 Před 10 měsíci

    I love this!! Always informative and fun!

  • @ratlips4363
    @ratlips4363 Před 2 lety +11

    I bought the pineapple corer years ago when they first came out. What a great tool. No waster, save the juice, and the hull. I also have the apple corer/peeler/slicer that I have given as gifts. As for the avocado, I'm from the old school, a knife and a spoon....great video, thanks

    • @vickiegray690
      @vickiegray690 Před 2 lety +1

      Dear Rat Lips love your screen name by the way. I’m with you about the best way to handle Avocado. No extra gadget needed.

  • @eringoldsmith2677
    @eringoldsmith2677 Před 2 lety +17

    I have been hulling tons of strawberries this season. I found using a table spoon gets the job done quickly and much more effectively than a paring knife. Even better… use a grapefruit spoon. My favorite tool for a pineapple is a boning knife- thin and flexible and will cut right along the edge of the eyes with little waste. Love both Apple tools- I may need to upgrade this fall!

    • @ryang7604
      @ryang7604 Před 2 lety +4

      The real advice is in the comments!! Thank you for this 😊

    • @maryannford7665
      @maryannford7665 Před 2 lety +3

      Brilliant idea with the boning knife!!! I’m going to try your spoon and strawberry trick. 🌸😀

    • @joycej9415
      @joycej9415 Před rokem +1

      Yes I use a grapefruit spoon that way too!

  • @timgorman2437
    @timgorman2437 Před 2 lety +6

    I have the NorPro tomato corer, and I use that on strawberries too. It’s not perfect, but it does a decent job and does not waste as much of the strawberry as a knife.

  • @Vorador666
    @Vorador666 Před 2 lety +2

    Daamnnn that's some really good review, gonna order some of these now

  • @generybarczyk6993
    @generybarczyk6993 Před 2 lety +5

    Most berries that I encounter at the grocery store are in plastic containers already slotted to drain liquids, ergo, a colander.

    • @daveklein2826
      @daveklein2826 Před 2 lety

      Ergo NOT

    • @generybarczyk6993
      @generybarczyk6993 Před 2 lety

      @@daveklein2826 Assuming NOT is an e-shout of the word _not,_ and if I am to understand that as a denial of my logic, then I am left in awe of the ability of one person to be so cosmically misapprehensive of the obvious in such a brief yet obscure manner. In other words, _IS SO!_

    • @daveklein2826
      @daveklein2826 Před 2 lety

      @@generybarczyk6993 NOT

    • @generybarczyk6993
      @generybarczyk6993 Před 2 lety

      @@daveklein2826 IS SO!

  • @SheilaR.08
    @SheilaR.08 Před rokem +4

    I absolutely love the strawberry huller! I bought one on a whim a few years ago and it works like a charm. I like how cleanly it removes the core, and it's so quick. I'm not generally a gadget person, but I'm hooked on this one. On my third, since it keeps getting "borrowed."

  • @noracharles80
    @noracharles80 Před 2 lety

    Lisa, thank you. Great job!

  • @jojosmith1097
    @jojosmith1097 Před 2 lety +1

    Amazon sold out of the mini colander so I went over to Walmart... Love you guys and your gadgets. Gearheads rock :)

  • @harrystokes1412
    @harrystokes1412 Před 2 lety +3

    Tomatoes and Avocados are Frutables. So much fun to invent words. Just solved my questions about pineapple and apple coring and peeling. Think You.

  • @deanmar9002
    @deanmar9002 Před 2 lety

    I have the Norpro tomato corer and I use it to hull strawberries and it works great for that.

  • @johnSmith-lx9nw
    @johnSmith-lx9nw Před rokem +2

    Some of the best parts of these videos are the people walking by and looking in the door in the background

  • @erniesteele3164
    @erniesteele3164 Před 2 lety +4

    Lucy bought the strawberry huller years ago when it first came out... I thought she was nuts, BUT it works extremely well as advertised and we would recommend it to anyone... Also, I've never used anything but a knife and a serving spoon on avocados... Simple and effective and doesn't need a gadget to do it.... Use a grapefruit spoon for tomatoes... On another note, we've been considering the apple corer/section for years and are now convinced to get one... Thanks for the great video.

    • @mjremy2605
      @mjremy2605 Před rokem

      I agree about avocados, use a knife and spoon. But for the tomato you do need the corer. The spoon? No. The corer is incredible and fast. Zip, zippity zip zip! Speed. No waste.

  • @simonsavelyev7399
    @simonsavelyev7399 Před 2 lety +1

    That apple spiralizer looks so fuuuun!

  • @glendaharding4884
    @glendaharding4884 Před 2 lety

    So informative!!

  • @vickiegray690
    @vickiegray690 Před 2 lety +3

    I want one of the NorPro thin hand slicers and the rotation type for preparing apples. I have loved the pineapple 🍍 corer since I first laid eyes on it.
    My favorite kitchen tool if you discount knives and good cutting boards is my 🍈 🍉 baller. I like to bake pies and find that it will scoop the seeds right out of apples 🍏 and small pears. I also use it to hull my strawberries 🍓. I know I’m missing some uses but don’t separate me and my melon baller. Thanks ladies.

  • @roderickfemm8799
    @roderickfemm8799 Před 2 lety +3

    When I was a kid we had strawberry hullers like a pair of large flattened metal tweezers, you pressed in on two sides of the hull, squeezed the huller together and twisted out the hull. When you allowed the huller to open, the hull would then fall into your garbage pile. There are a couple still around on that general idea, but you really can't beat those old hullers when you've been doing u-pick and you have three flats of beautiful soft ripe strawberries to prepare for freezing.

    • @leapintothewild
      @leapintothewild Před rokem

      I still see those in Amish markets -- they're great!

    • @susanmolnar9606
      @susanmolnar9606 Před rokem

      I still have a few of those hullers. My mother back in the day had several and taught us to use them as strawberry hullers. Never failed me!

  • @PolySammo
    @PolySammo Před 10 měsíci

    I love my pineapple peeler corer honey glow pineapples are in our stores right now and we bought two of them this week and the prep was so easy and quick and worth every penny

  • @bcook7956
    @bcook7956 Před rokem +1

    I use a grapefruit spoon for my strawberries. I love my apple peeler/slicer. Im thinking the collapsible strainer would be great for travel- we often stop by roadside stands, and this would give us a way to clean our treats.

  • @cherylb2727
    @cherylb2727 Před rokem +1

    I use a teaspoon to hull strawberries ! My Grandma and Mom taught me this one. But, I do like the one you are using.

    • @bcook7956
      @bcook7956 Před rokem +1

      I use a grapefruit spoon. Works great.

  • @SrJohnnyCat
    @SrJohnnyCat Před 2 lety

    I have the pineapple corer. Best buy ever!

  • @MinhNguyen-mo5fp
    @MinhNguyen-mo5fp Před rokem

    Thank you 😊

  • @mhanshaw165
    @mhanshaw165 Před 2 lety +3

    FYI you can use the tomato corer on the strawberries also. I have one and I use it for both.

    • @daveklein2826
      @daveklein2826 Před 2 lety

      And you waste to much

    • @mjremy2605
      @mjremy2605 Před rokem

      No, it does not work as well. It is too big and mashes up small berries. This tool looks very right.

  • @kitjune9333
    @kitjune9333 Před rokem +3

    Bought a strawberry huller a while ago which looks exactly like that Chef'N stem gem huller, except it's made by OXO and cost $2.99. Best of all, it can be taken apart for cleaning. Maybe OXO stopped making it but I'm very glad I bought such a useful "unicorn product" on a whim and paid so little for it. Thanks ATK.

  • @karenwagner6880
    @karenwagner6880 Před rokem +1

    Disagree on the Oxo avocado tool! It takes a little practice, but we use a lot of avocados so we got good at it fairly quickly. We find it much easier and less wasteful - I can go through half a dozen avocados in minutes. Key is not to be tentative - hold the avocado half in the palm of your hand so you can get in there and scoop down to the peel. I even take mine when traveling if I anticipate making using avocados. Love this thing!

  • @candywong4697
    @candywong4697 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for your sharing and I from Hongkong

  • @margaretforsythe4035
    @margaretforsythe4035 Před 10 dny

    I've been using the strawberry stem gadget for years (at least 15) and find it also works for removing the eyes in potatoes and miscellaneous bad spots in anything. Not 'one use' at all. And yes, I still have the same one.

  • @udalimb384
    @udalimb384 Před 2 lety +5

    Single purpose tools take up a lot of real estate. Perhaps you could do a capsule fruit/veg prep. Similar to capsule kitchen. Follow up thought....would any of these items make it to an expanded capsule plus kitchen? Hmmm.

  • @marcysikes
    @marcysikes Před rokem

    I have a corer that I thought was a strawberry corer. Now you tell me it is for tomatoes! Works great for strawberries.

  • @marygersetich8709
    @marygersetich8709 Před 5 měsíci

    The Norpro slicer looks amazing.
    My experience with Apple corer peeler slicer gadgets is that they only work on perfectly sized apples.

  • @1111MeditationPortal
    @1111MeditationPortal Před 2 lety

    Useful gadgets. :)

  • @stepawayful
    @stepawayful Před rokem

    Oxo makes a strawberry huller that looks like tweezers. You put the tips into the top of the strawberry, pinch and pull. 🍓

  • @Olive_O_Sudden
    @Olive_O_Sudden Před rokem +2

    I have NEVER before seen nor heard of anyone using the knife point to remove an avocado pit.😧🥑

  • @karmjitmann3324
    @karmjitmann3324 Před 2 lety

    Great 👍🏼

  • @nancylauka6239
    @nancylauka6239 Před 11 měsíci

    I use a beak nosed paring knife for my avocados. It works perfectly.

  • @allythearts5439
    @allythearts5439 Před 9 měsíci

    That apple cutter is a nice one
    Apple pie 🥧😊

  • @64782048
    @64782048 Před 2 lety +2

    ROFL. Thank you for the great video. I was joking with my wife that there isn't a strawberry picker. And of course ATK never disappoints me hahahaha

  • @hanadr
    @hanadr Před rokem

    I got a little scared about the avocado tools but my trust was quickly restored!

  • @gnewman18
    @gnewman18 Před 2 lety

    A spoon works really well as a strawberry huller

  • @mmb4427
    @mmb4427 Před 2 lety +2

    You can push a metal drinking straw (or even a plastic one sometimes) through the center of the strawberry and it will remove the core nicely!

  • @eat_things
    @eat_things Před 2 lety +5

    Pinch the avocado seed using your thumb and index finger by going around the top of the knife. It will slide off the blade safely.
    Don't drag the knife with the avocado seeds or use something else to get it off - like your finger across the blade here! What if your thumb slips below the blade and you slice yourself.
    (not my trick - something I saw in an old Alton Brown video. I can't believe that's not what is taught everywhere. There is no better way)

    • @kiarrasayshi
      @kiarrasayshi Před rokem

      I always was just taught to smack the handle if the knife onto the trash can, but just typing that out I realize how gross that sounds... The blade doesn't get anywhere near the garbage, but still. I can see how that wouldn't be widely recommended. But it works great!

  • @user-vn3tl6up2y
    @user-vn3tl6up2y Před 2 lety +5

    Love your videos! But what about a cherry pitter?!?
    Which would you recommend?

  • @maxmeh2342
    @maxmeh2342 Před rokem +1

    OXO makes a strawberry huller. I have one of their older models, which is almost identical to the one you demo'ed, but I think they discontinued it. Their current model looks pretty good too.

  • @lenalyles2712
    @lenalyles2712 Před 2 lety

    My pineapple corer is just as good and not as expensive. A grapefruit knife works great for tomatoes. I have collapsible colanders from small to large and are great as steamer.

  • @alexanderjamieson7971

    OxO has a strawberry huller. I bought one for my wife a couple years ago

  • @walterbarr9709
    @walterbarr9709 Před rokem

    I'm getting the pineapple thing straight up but my favourite was the stem gem. How cool is that? Thank you

  • @jrdube
    @jrdube Před 2 lety

    I use that same tomato corer for strawberries. I don't like "one use" gadgets. Never thought of the apple gadget for taters...thanks

  • @collettecaya9507
    @collettecaya9507 Před 2 lety +3

    For the apple tools you need perfectly shaped apples. They don't work on lopsided apples.

    • @leapintothewild
      @leapintothewild Před rokem

      Yes - and they don't work on the large apples I prefer like Honeycrisp and Fuji, especially when you have a local orchard with giant fruit!

  • @brat46
    @brat46 Před 2 lety

    Where was this video BEFORE I canned strawberry jam??? LOL. I do have a 30+ yr old clamp on crank apple peeler. When canning apples I remove the handle and add a drill to it. It made going thru several bushels of apples so easy.

  • @hollisburkes9553
    @hollisburkes9553 Před rokem +1

    Hey, gearheads! I just think of them as tomatoes 🍅! Probably I lean towards vegetable. BTW will you review kitchen composters? Thanx for the great vids!

  • @keetrandling4530
    @keetrandling4530 Před měsícem +1

    Hannah,
    How in the world is it taking you several "stabs" to core a tomato with a knife? You insert the tip of a paring knife at an angle, and turn the tomato around, producing a cone-shaped core removed cleanly and quickly.

  • @thefingerofgod69
    @thefingerofgod69 Před rokem

    For apples I cut them in half and use a melon baller to get the core out and the two ends (the top and the bottom).

  • @robertsterner2145
    @robertsterner2145 Před 2 lety +1

    I was totally ready to complain about the strawberry huller and say "just learn how to use your paring knife," but this video converted me. I also put the apple corer in my Amazon cart. OTOH, I'm sorry but even if I have to deal with a bunch of tomatoes, it seems like it's no faster to core them with my paring knife than with a special tool (aka "just learns how to use your paring knife").

  • @Robroy333
    @Robroy333 Před rokem

    You can also remove the Avocado seed by pushing with your thumb on the back side of it. :)~ (Like you would a hard boiled egg to make Deviled Eggs)

  • @rninrvr
    @rninrvr Před 2 lety +1

    OK, bought the Oxo pineapple corer and slicer and found that my method of hand processing a pineapple is faster and gives me better and larger chunks without waste of juice that comes from that tool boring down through the pineapple. Further, the elephant in the room, getting the core out of the tool once you are done.

  • @stevenseverance3692
    @stevenseverance3692 Před rokem

    Thanks for the Information on what's available for "Helping one out in the Kitchen". Food 🥑🥝 preparation can be tiresome but alas these new "Gadgets"will definitely 😁 help me out "immensely.
    Sincerely Yours 🤠 Mr Severance,
    "The Cake 😋 🍰🎂🥳🎉🎈 Man",
    "World 🌎🌍 Cruiser"&"Succulent 🪴 Collector", and "Teacup's & Saucer's Set's and Teapot 🫖 Collector".

  • @Lukebott12
    @Lukebott12 Před 2 lety

    Test the zyliss peeler

  • @redeemedrivka
    @redeemedrivka Před rokem

    haha I bought that thing for strawberries not knowing it's really a tomato corer!

  • @K_Lee
    @K_Lee Před rokem

    I’d like to know if there are any good tools or techniques for cutting mangos. I always mangle them trying to cut around the pit.

  • @jelatinosa
    @jelatinosa Před rokem

    Those avocado tools are strictly for haas avocados. In the Caribbean we have so many types of avocado in so different shapes and sizes that a one size fits all tool, like that oxo one, would not work for most avocados. Plus, many of our varieties have thin, easy to peel, green skin and free stone pits that are easy to remove too.
    They also have a variety of textured flesh for different uses, not just for guac. We eat a slice with our food in PR, or we use it as a butter substitute on our fresh baked bread, depending on the variety of avocado.

  • @davethebarber62920
    @davethebarber62920 Před rokem

    I've always just twisted the stem off strawberries with my thumb and forefinger. My hands get stained a little but no big deal.

  • @RocRizzo
    @RocRizzo Před rokem

    Attach your drill to the spiral cutter, and whip through those apples at light speed!

  • @atlenebartolino8923
    @atlenebartolino8923 Před 2 měsíci

    Hi. Love your gadget videos. All of them. I would like you to let the names of the products to be on the screen a lot longer. I'm trying to take note of the name and price. I have to stop the video to copy or go back some frames to write it down Always on the look for birthday/Christmas etc. presents as well as things for myself. Thanks so much. You guys are great.

  • @pigvalve9885
    @pigvalve9885 Před 2 lety +2

    if the avocado is anywhere near ripe if you quarter it and the outside just peals off no spoon needed and you get the most out of the avocado

  • @kens962
    @kens962 Před 10 měsíci

    2:52 if you have time, cut the thick skin off and use the Oxo wide peeler (purple). Minimal waste and cut eyes off diagonally.

  • @thatonedog819
    @thatonedog819 Před rokem

    Our house have had the issue with plastic apple slicers seperating from the blade with use. Obviously that's a major safety problem that makes me nervous to use. Have you guys had that problem with these?

  • @violetg7315
    @violetg7315 Před rokem

    For me, the pineapple slicer maybe easy to use. However, it wastes tons of flash. I prefer my traditional method. I know it takes time and effort. But, you get and enjoy all the yummy pineapple.

  • @laurenbeckerle7977
    @laurenbeckerle7977 Před rokem

    The only avocado gadget I like is the avo saver. Works well. No plastic wrap waste.

  • @DoughboyGod
    @DoughboyGod Před 2 lety

    ❤️‍🔥❤️‍🔥❤️‍🔥❤️‍🔥❤️‍🔥❤️‍🔥❤️‍🔥❤️‍🔥

  • @dubya13207
    @dubya13207 Před 2 lety

    I use my strawberry huller for tomatoes too...saves on the gadgets
    Also, Lisa's avocado seed extrication method was dangerous! Instead, knock the knife in as close to the blade as possible, then use your fingers to pinch it off the blade from the back. The "try to slide it off the bowl and fumble with your hand if that doesn't work" is bound to hurt someone...

    • @Nocturne22
      @Nocturne22 Před 2 lety

      Pinching the blade seems way more dangerous. If the avocado is soft enough, I honestly just dig it out with a spoon. If it mangles the flesh a little, who cares: I'm mashing it up anyways.

    • @dubya13207
      @dubya13207 Před 2 lety

      @@Nocturne22, it's hard to illustrate in this medium, but when I say "from the back", I mean the back of the blade. you don't grab the sharp bit at all. just two fingers holding the blade by the spine, next to the pit but putting most of the pressure on the blade itself...pit slips right off. if you get the pit at the heel of the blade (close to the handle), you can do it right in your blade hand too

  • @cskotnicki
    @cskotnicki Před rokem +1

    I still want to know who put that stand mixer on the top shelf.

    • @lisamcmanus6656
      @lisamcmanus6656 Před rokem +1

      Our producer, who's over six feet tall, and pretty strong, saw it as a reasonable spot. Works for him!! For me, that's too high. That's a great example of why we always have people of different heights and hand sizes and handedness and skill levels test products during our reviews, to be sure they suit a wide variety of people.

    • @cskotnicki
      @cskotnicki Před rokem

      @@lisamcmanus6656 well, he's still nuts for putting it up there. 😁 My wife and I love watching your videos. Me being familiar, and her an actual chef for over 20 years, can relate to what you have in your content....And we still learn. Thank you.

  • @sunflowerbaby1853
    @sunflowerbaby1853 Před 2 lety +4

    Who cores a tomato?
    I eat the whole thing.

  • @willhandy4518
    @willhandy4518 Před rokem

    With the avocado 🥑 seed simply push it out…apply a small amount of pressure from just behind it from the outside, and it pops out… no knives necessary

  • @dio52
    @dio52 Před 2 lety +4

    The problem with most of these is that they're not worth having unless you use a LOT of the foods they're designed for. Most of them are just a bit too large or a bit too unusually shaped to fit nicely in a drawer or cabinet. The tomato corer and strawberry huller are compact enough to just be kept along with measuring spoons and whatnot, but for the infrequent need I'd have for the rest, it's easier to just get a knife and board.

  • @XzTS-Roostro
    @XzTS-Roostro Před 2 lety

    My sisters and I have an Oxo apple corer that only removes the core without slicing. Someones we just want to remove the core and keep the rest of the apple whole.

  • @TheJeanean
    @TheJeanean Před rokem

    Do those “food purifiers” actually do anything?

  • @sherrizanoli1398
    @sherrizanoli1398 Před 2 lety +1

    You will appreciate the tomatoes cover when you are looking at 2 bushels.

  • @emtle1103
    @emtle1103 Před rokem

    Wondering if ATK tested the OXO strawberry tool. It’s a different design than the one shown. Can someone who used/owns the OXO please share your opinion.

    • @stepawayful
      @stepawayful Před rokem

      I just bought one and it arrived yesterday! It works like tweezers and is fast. Not life changing, but it does leave a nice clean triangular shape to of the strawberry.

  • @MoGhotbi
    @MoGhotbi Před rokem +1

    In 1893 SCOTUS ruled in Nix vs Hedden that the tomato was a vegetable, not a fruit and should be regulated as such. Glad they were making scientific decisions even back then. What a great track record.

  • @robertmccoy9901
    @robertmccoy9901 Před 2 lety

    Mini-colander 4-pack now at 23.65

  • @dr.westwood
    @dr.westwood Před 2 lety

    I love the pineapple corer but wish they made a blade spacing for thicker slices for chunking pineapple. The strawberry huller is a waste of money. That super cheap tomato corer works just as well for strawberries. Save those apple peels. You can use a small portion of them in making apple butter or apple sauce. You can also use them to make homemade apple cider vinegar.

  • @maryannford7665
    @maryannford7665 Před 2 lety

    I prep my apples by cutting them in half, then using my melon baller to remove the core/seeds from each half. I’m want the strawberry huller. I don’t use my Oxo apple cutter. You have to have the right size apple to use it, too big and it doesn’t work.

    • @itzel1735
      @itzel1735 Před 2 lety

      ✔️Apples have gotten bigger. Cherries have gotten bigger too. My old timey cherry pitter is too small for today’s super sized cherry pits.

  • @porcorosso4330
    @porcorosso4330 Před rokem

    I have never thought of the avocado as a vegetable....

  • @jesstheone231
    @jesstheone231 Před rokem

    HoLD StiLL!! I can't see the cool little gadget at all. I feel like I'm watching an intense tennis match, or like I'm a cat trying to catch a laser. Most Gadget people are guilty of this, usually only while demonstrating the gadgets that i am interested in. That said, 2 enthusiastic thumbs UP! to every coring tool. When and IF I can remember that i have one AND find it in a reasonable time, they make fruit like tomatoes, strawberries, pineapples, mangos, cherries, melons, fuh-uun! Uh&_hmm!

  • @leapintothewild
    @leapintothewild Před rokem +1

    hahaha Did Hannah really say she "wrassles" with her pineapple? Where are you from, girl? :-)

  • @rebeccanater
    @rebeccanater Před rokem

    My friend has a phd in plant biology and said vegetables dont actually exist. Everything we call a vegetable is just a different part of a plant, potatoes are roots, lettuce is leaves, eggplant is the fruit etc.

  • @Scott-tq7ko
    @Scott-tq7ko Před měsícem

    I suppose with the pineapple corer it's a matter of how much waste are you OK with. To leave the eyes, you have to leave all the flesh between them, so you're basically leaving 1/4"-1/2" of pineapple flesh attached to the skin.
    And since pineapple aren't uniform in diameter, wouldn't this be made for an average (or smaller) pineapple, and so waste even more flesh with ones that have larger diameter?