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Silicone whisks

Reply from: limey
Date: 08 Apr 2007, 19:45
Silicone whisks

Sorry if this has come up before. Has anyone used silicone whisks and
found they don't do a very good job? I was going to buy a set but one
reviewer said they drag on the bottom of the saucepan and don't whisk
the stuff in the corners.

Dora
limey113@yahoo . com


Reply from: Dee Dee
Date: 08 Apr 2007, 23:19
Re: Silicone whisks

On Apr 8, 1:45 pm, "limey" <limey...@yahoo . com > wrote:
> Sorry if this has come up before. Has anyone used silicone whisks and
> found they don't do a very good job? I was going to buy a set but one
> reviewer said they drag on the bottom of the saucepan and don't whisk
> the stuff in the corners.
>
> Dora
> limey...@yahoo . com

Dora, I bought the tools for use of the non-stick calphalon pans when
I bought them. One of the tools was a whisk, which I assume is what
you are referring to. They were black. I did not like the piano-whisk
at all; the strings were too large. I agree that they don't whisk
stuff in the corners. I just found it inadequate for about any job I
was doing.
Dee


Reply from: pltrgyst
Date: 08 Apr 2007, 23:21
Re: Silicone whisks

On Sun, 08 Apr 2007 17:45:56 GMT, "limey" <limey113@yahoo . com > wrote:

>.... Has anyone used silicone whisks and
>found they don't do a very good job? I was going to buy a set but one
>reviewer said they drag on the bottom of the saucepan...

They don't drag on my non-stick pans, and why would one use a silicone whisk on
anything else?

>... and don't whisk the stuff in the corners.

That is purely a function of the type of whisk. Use the right whisk and there's
no problem. Use a spherical whisk into a corner of smaller radius and there's a
problem.

-- Larry

Reply from: limey
Date: 09 Apr 2007, 01:15
Re: Silicone whisks

pltrgyst wrote:

limey wrote:
>> ... and don't whisk the stuff in the corners.
>
> That is purely a function of the type of whisk. Use the right whisk
> and there's no problem. Use a spherical whisk into a corner of
> smaller radius and there's a problem.
>
> -- Larry

It's a set of three spherical whisks of varying sizes, so I'll save my
money.
Thanks.

Dora


Reply from: pltrgyst
Date: 09 Apr 2007, 03:11
Re: Silicone whisks

On Sun, 08 Apr 2007 23:15:04 GMT, "limey" <limey113@yahoo . com > wrote:

>limey wrote:
>>> ... and don't whisk the stuff in the corners.
>>
>> That is purely a function of the type of whisk. Use the right whisk
>> and there's no problem. Use a spherical whisk into a corner of
>> smaller radius and there's a problem.
>>
>> -- Larry
>
>It's a set of three spherical whisks of varying sizes, so I'll save my
>money.

If that's your primary concern, you should be able to get a synthetic flat whisk
for five or six dollars from Oxo or othermakers. They get right into the
corners. That's what I use for making scrambled eggs.

-- Larry

Reply from: Emma Thackery
Date: 09 Apr 2007, 07:29
Re: Silicone whisks

In article <oT9Sh.6188$Rg2.5514@trndny02>, "limey" <limey113@yahoo . com >
wrote:

> Sorry if this has come up before. Has anyone used silicone whisks and
> found they don't do a very good job? I was going to buy a set but one
> reviewer said they drag on the bottom of the saucepan and don't whisk
> the stuff in the corners.

Mine is metal coated with silicon. The weight and balance are
excellent. I use it only in a non-stick pan and it works very well. In
contrast, I first used a synthetic (plastic of some sort) whisk and
found it to be very ineffective. The material was just all wrong for a
whisk.

Emma

Reply from: Matthew L. Martin
Date: 10 Apr 2007, 02:01
Re: Silicone whisks

Emma Thackery wrote:
> In article <oT9Sh.6188$Rg2.5514@trndny02>, "limey" <limey113@yahoo . com >
> wrote:
>
>> Sorry if this has come up before. Has anyone used silicone whisks and
>> found they don't do a very good job? I was going to buy a set but one
>> reviewer said they drag on the bottom of the saucepan and don't whisk
>> the stuff in the corners.
>
> Mine is metal coated with silicon. The weight and balance are
> excellent. I use it only in a non-stick pan and it works very well. In
> contrast, I first used a synthetic (plastic of some sort) whisk and
> found it to be very ineffective. The material was just all wrong for a
> whisk.

I use a nylon whisk for non-stick and mixing my sourdough starter. I
can't imagine the need for silicone.

Matthew

--
I'm a consultant. If you want an opinion I'll sell you one.
Which one do you want?




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