| Turning Vegetable Slicer
The turning vegetable slicer can be described as a “rotating mandoline.”
It is a tool that looks like a lathe. On the fixed end is a short
holding shaft and one fixed knife blade and one toothed blade. On
the moveable end, which rides on a track, is a crank that turns another
short holding shaft. Aligning a veggie between the holding shafts
and turning the crank results in a spiral cut of the veggie—curly strands
of cucumber, potato, sweet potato, daikon, radish, carrot, jícama,
cabbage, onion and the like—as the veggie is cranked and pushed through
the blades. The result is a double cut veggie, sliced and shredded.
The Japanese came up with this machine to produce spaghetti-like strands
of veggies for use as decorative garnish, delicate steamed veggies and
fine textured raw vegetable side dishes. Here at home, the machine is used
for all of the above, for carrots to add to coleslaw, and to make “potato
mats.”
Here's how to make potato mats:
· Peel a potato and hold in cold water
to prevent discoloration
· Dry off the potato and crank it through
the slicer using the medium tooth blade
· Place the potato strands on paper
toweling and dry again
· Shape and press the strands into
a mat and sauté in butter or EVOO until nicely brown
· Place the sauté pan in the
oven and bake the potato mat until done
Serve the mats as a nicely textured breakfast side of potatoes or put
eggs on top. For lunch, if made small and thin, the mats can be “stacked”
with layers of seasoned and dressed roasted or grilled veggies. Like—mat/roasted
red peppers/mat/grilled mushrooms/mat/zucchini/mat/egg plant—you get the
idea. Of course, the whole stack collapses when attacked with a fork.
Great fun for lunch or as an appetizer if made smaller.
There are two vegetable slicer machines available. The “green
machine” (shown above) imported from Japan by Benriner Co Ltd, and the
“Le Rouet” from Bron-Couke. The Benriner (photo above) and the Le
Rouet are available in some specialty kitchenware shops. The Benriner
sells for $60 to $100, depending on where you find it. The Le Rouet
goes for an astronomical $190. I bought the Benriner while at cooking
school and use it now and then on potatoes when we make breakfast for overnight
guests. I have also made the “vegetable stack,” a school recipe, as a special
lunch dish.
Frankly, this is a specialist's tool. Nice to have when you want
to show off or are in the mood to “go fancy.”
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