View allAll Photos Tagged KitchenTools
Making of traditional home-made italian pasta.
Image is © Antonio D'Albore and cannot be used or displayed without permission.
You can find a large number of full-resolution photos under a Creative Commons license on my official website: nenadstojkovicart.com/albums
Very easy to use, you can set it from 1-60 min and it's quite accurate. Ringing is also quite loud so you'll hear it if you are in the room next to the kitchen. Looks nice.
Get more details from my blog.
I got a microplane in my stocking for Christmas. Most people don't know what a microplane is. And when they see it, it looks like a torture device. I begged for mine. After watching my dad in the kitchen, and countless Food Network chefs, I learned that sometimes, everyday utensils just don't cut it. You need specific tools for specific jobs. And now, grating parmesan cheese without one just isn't the same. Thus, I chose this photo because it made me think about all the techniques, tools, and ingredients that I had no idea existed until I actively started learning about cooking.
For more on this and finding food photography props on a budget, check out Eyes Bigger Than My Stomach
Cold Bain Marie with Under Counter Refrigerator: Suitable design for storage of vegetable, toppings and frozen food made of body inner GI and outer S.S. with front door S.S. with 3" puff insulation and Kirloskar kit with a temperature controller, with suitable GN container with a cooling system.
For more Details, visit: www.parthequipments.com/product/refrigeration_equipments.php
This is a fantastic tool for the kitchen. You can use this to sprinkle powdered sugar on pancakes and anything else you desire.
In one of the most beautiful houses of Themar town!
A kind of private museum (or store-room).
Full memories and history - and of so much interest for visitors!
NOTE: These 11 photos in my "photostream" are numbered sequentially to create a story titled "In The Beginning", which can be viewed in my "Album" of the same name.
You can also view these photos sequentially here, by clicking the "Next" Arrow on the left side of each page,
or individually, or however you like...
This is a work-in-progress, to become a slideshow... All comments welcome... Thank you.