View allAll Photos Tagged kitchenaid
With the brother (oorrrrrrr pon school!), churning the vanilla ice cream mixture into the kitchenaid ice cream attachment.
While pouring out the vanilla mixture we found orange lumps coming out.
Brother: wah lau! lumps! shit
Me: damn...how come?
B: maybe overcook
M: so jialat? *brother prods thru the mixture to find a whole batch of apricots inside
B: huh apricots? must be mummy add in last night wan,
M: wah lau so much summore! aiyah shouldn't sleep so early last night (we knocked out at 10pm...early, mother early considering she sleeps at 2am plus)
B: you know last night she very funny, cannot divide 600ml by 2.
proceeds to dump the rest of the apricot lumps in, didn't taste too bad, more tropical than i wanted it to be, later we're gonna do a plain one.
this is gonna be one of those mornings that i'll miss when school starts. mehhhhhh
This was a quick Christmas gift I created from my favorite Nicey Jane stash fabrics, paired with some cool polka dots from Paula Prass's Summer Soiree line.
If anyone would like a custom-made cover, just convo me.
KitchenAid is one of the most popular brands at Karl's because it offers beautiful style and great features all at a good price. Stop by any Karl's to see a large selection of Kitchen Aid dishwashers, refrigerators, ovens, and other home appliances.
Kitchen Aid Veggie Sheet Maker
Now that I'm trying to cut carbs I thought Veggie Wraps instead of wraps made of rice would be better. This machine does a terrific job with any solid fruit or vegetable. Today I'm making Zucchini Rolls stuffed with some cooked veggies and ground Turkey. I'll make a peanut sauce to serve along side...better get started!
My old mixer broke down last week and provided me with the perfect opportunity to finally indulge myself with this beauty!!
Luckily the hubby didn't take too much convincing because my last mixer cost about $200 and lasted less than 2 years!
It's so pretty and shiny and so solid! I'm in love!
Kettle - choc mud
Toaster - victoria sponge and icing was marshmallow fondant with added jelly, tasted like those shrimps sweets I loved as a kid!
Barrett House Ranch
Jamul, California
Hal Simpson (the founder of Simpson's nursery) retired and in the 1960s bought the Barrett House Ranch in Jamul with its 185 acres. He was bored so he used 25 of those acres to establish a simple nursery: self-drive and no phone on the premises. It worked.
Source: www.ericandersonsworld.com/story.php?id=fgw5v
Mr. Simpson passed away in 1987 and the house has been vacant ever since.
Hal’s granddaughter and her husband recently boarded up the house to try to prevent further vandalism.
I own a KitchenAid stand mixer that I usually use for making homemade bread, but for these photos, I'm going to not use it since most people won't be able to have one. They're great, though.
We purchased the meat grinder attachment to our Kitchen Aid stand mixer so we could make our own sausage. Our local grocery store gave us some hog casings for free and we decided to give it a shot.
Took 1lb of boneless skinless chicken breast, ground it up, mixed with brandy soaked figs, shallots, sage, fennel, salt and pepper. Stuffed the sausage and grilled it up!
Quite tasty. will definitely be making our own sausage...
Rather impressive for $10... made by Hobart. And "slightly higher in Canada". But hey, made in the US of A.
My 33 year old Kitchenaid Mixer Got Wonder Womanized today. I bought this decal set some time ago, but today was the first time I've had it out since I got them. Pretty Cool. She will soon be making my famous cheesecake, for someone's birthday.
My wife was mixing up some dough to make gingerbread houses and her mixer stopped working. No problem! Craftsman to the rescue!
After I boiled the noodles, I topped them with a little butter (Dr. Anderson - if you read this: it was alittle tiny bit of butter, almost of no account. To other - I used a hefty swab); then I topped it with grated Parmesan cheese.
PS: I made this bowl inmy pottery class.
I am planning on moving this weekend and spent some of this evening getting some packing done. I don't have a ton of stuff to move, but I always forget just how many books I own and how much space they take up. I've filled 3 boxes with just two shelves of books already! Only 4 more shelves to go. Plus clothes and miscellaneous other junk.
Whoa! I've never seen an orange sink before..
Seen at an estate sale.
Palos Heights, Illinois
Cook County. USA
Not only was this sitting on my steps today but also the accessory package for fruits, veggies and sausage grinding. Scott Benson is the greatest birthday present provider ever.
Had a minor freakout this week because what will hopefully be a cool mention coming up needed a high-res picture of me in the kitchen. And I didn't have one. I mean, I don't know how this happened, we have 150 photos of me (usually holding a glass of wine), 4,000 pictures of ingredients getting chopped and whisked but none with both elements in one picture. Likely because I hate having my picture taken. Alex saved that day, however, because he was working from home today and -- shockingly! -- I was baking a cake. Something I always do with lipgloss on.
I am really going to miss this kitchen. This was 5 p.m., no flash or lights on.
[Updated: Alex said he used flash. But I swear, he didn't need it for anything but illuminating my face, since the light would be top-down from the skylight.]
All the time with the buttercream. I still have two unused piping bags full. What to do with them?
[Project Wedding Cake episodes: An Introduction, Mango Curd, The Cake is Baked, Swiss Buttercream and Ta-da!]
When I visited the chefs in the kitchen of Bak'd Restaurant in Mesa, Arizona, I saw this very old large commercial stand mixer. I had just acquired my first KitchenAid stand mixer and had read that the "Hobart" commercial mixer, introduced in the early 1900's, was the precursor to the KitchenAid mixers for the home, and here was one right in front of me. It's style and shape sure did resemble the KitchenAid stand mixer I had just acquired. Further research revealed that the this mixer is a Model A-200 Hobart commercial grade mixer, which was introduced in 1933 and is still in use today (you can buy a refurbished used one on eBay for about $1,300 when I checked).
More information on the history of the Hobart and KitchenAid mixers:
Like many home appliances, the standing mixer has industrial antecedents. In the 1908, engineer Herbert Johnson was observing a baker mixing bread dough with a metal spoon; soon he was toying with a mechanical counterpart. By 1915, his 80-quart Hobart mixer was standard equipment on all U.S. Navy vessels, as well as in many commercial bakeries.
World War I intervened before Hobart could jump into the residential market, but by 1918, company executives were testing models in their homes. "I don't care what you call it," legend has one of the executives' spouses espousing, "all I know is it's the best kitchen aid I've ever had."
The name stuck. The first 5-quart countertop KitchenAid mixers were not cheap:$189.50, or about $2,000 in 2002 dollars. Weighing in at 65 pounds, they weren't convenient, either. But that all changed in 1936, when pioneering industrial designer Egmont Ahrens trimmed the mixer down and chopped the price to $55. The iconic Streamline shape has changed so little that Ahrens' bullet silhouette is patented.
In the early years, retailers were slow to take on the KitchenAid mixer. To counter their reluctance, Hobart established a direct sales force made up primarily of women who went door to door offering demonstrations of the new food preparation tool. With the creation of citrus juicer and food grinder attachments in 1919, KitchenAid mixers were on the road to becoming the versatile "food preparation tools", as they were subsequently styled. Today's KitchenAid stand mixers can be converted to anything from a pasta maker to a sausage stuffer or grain mill with the addition of optional attachments.
The mixer's mechanics remain virtually unaltered, too. An attachment made in 1919 -- the pea shucker, for instance -- will fit on today's model. Tens of millions of KitchenAid mixers have been manufactured at the same Greenville, Ohio, factory that produced the first one in 1919.