Restaurant kitchens and home kitchens are both designed for the work of putting food on a plate — but resemblances end there. Restaurant kitchens bristle with the industrial and the oversized: bowls you could bathe a toddler in, medieval vats of hot oil, flat-top griddles with the square footage of a very nice Manhattan kitchen.
Pro chefs cook on a larger scale, with tools that don't always translate to home cooking, especially for a beginner cook who just needs to know the difference between sauté and braise.
But there is one extremely chef-y show-off tool that I deeply believe every cook, of every ability level, should own — and you're gonna love it!
from Apartment Therapy | Saving the world, one room at a time http://bit.ly/2t2ALSw
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