Reviewing PRO Kitchen Gadgets Vol.2 | Sorted Food

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 1 лип 2024
  • Today we are reviewing some Professional Kitchen Gadgets! What will our normals think?!
    Battle Royale with Cheese LIVE:
    All info HERE: www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/sorted...
    Join us for a Live Streamed Night of Epic Stupidity, Cooking and Rivalry!
    Saturday April 13th - 5pm (UK time)
    Time to CANCEL your boring dinners!
    It's easier than you think to cook up banging recipes... Click here to try Sidekick FREE for 30 days: bit.ly/3tfFgsR
    The awesome benefits of the Sidekick app:
    - Unlock your kitchen confidence to discover awesome new ingredients and dishes
    - Reduce the stress of deciding what to cook EVERY day
    - Grocery shopping made simple, with an automatically-generated list
    - Cook more sustainably & reduce your food waste
  • Навчання та стиль

КОМЕНТАРІ • 904

  • @ButyoucancallmeKat
    @ButyoucancallmeKat 3 місяці тому +215

    I cannot believe that Kush managed to trick you guys into buying him a over two grand sous vide machine just by saying it was “for a Kitchen Gadgets video”

  • @clippedwings225
    @clippedwings225 3 місяці тому +572

    18:20 the science is pretty simple! I can explain. At sea level, water boils at 100 celsius, but when you put water (or something with water) in a vacuum chamber, the decreased atmospheric pressure means that the boiling point of water is basically room temperature, causing the water to boil. However, evaporation requires thermal energy, and since you aren't heating it up, it insteads draws that thermal energy from the heat already existing within the food- cooling it down.
    Incidentally this is how refrigerators and air conditioners work, by using different pressures to manipulate the boiling point of a refrigerant, in order to move heat. A refrigerator doesn't "make" cold, it just moves the heat inside the fridge, to the outside, which is why parts of a fridge feel warm on the outside.

    • @kjyost
      @kjyost 3 місяці тому +7

      Exactly what I was here to say: Boiling takes energy, in this case from the liquid, and it can't stop boiling due to the low pressure! 😀

    • @ross-carlson
      @ross-carlson 3 місяці тому +4

      Very well explained.

    • @Crushnaut
      @Crushnaut 3 місяці тому +8

      Another wya to think about it is to remember that temperature is a statistical property of a bulk substance. That is, temperature is a measurement of the average kinetic energy of the molecules making up a substance. Kinetic energy being the energy in a system due to motion. Higher velocity means higher energy. Not all the molecules in a substance are moving at the same speed, but at macro level all we can measure is their average which is what we call temperature. That kinetic energy in the molecules of the system is what we call heat.
      When you lower the pressure, that particles that previously couldn't escape the system, ie go from a liquid to a gas, now can, however, the only particles that can escape are the fastest ones. If only the fastest particles are escaping the slower ones are staying behind then the average velocity of those staying behind is lower thus the average kinetic energy of particles in the system is lower, which we measure macroscopically, as a drop in temperature.
      This is why sweating cools you down. It is how air conditioners and other heat pumps work. It is why evaporation of water drives weather systems.
      This is before we even get into discussing latent heat and why it takes extra energy to take one molecule of water at 100C to one molecule of steam at 100C. That extra energy required is latent heat and is also key to this whole process working and what you describe at energy being taken away.

    • @maromania7
      @maromania7 3 місяці тому +7

      That was the first thing they drilled into my head when learning appliance repair. "The refrigerator doesn't create cold, it removes heat. That is a subtle but major difference and it's at the core of figuring out most repairs."

    • @emmasmom60
      @emmasmom60 3 місяці тому +1

      cool

  • @THENAMEISQUICKMAN
    @THENAMEISQUICKMAN 3 місяці тому +206

    Mike and Baz may make fun of him for it, but gosh is Ben right - I'm so tired of "smart" gadgets at this point that something you just break out and use is downright a selling point for me nowadays. If I see something I like the look of but I see something along the lines of "requires a smartphone app", I'm instantly less enthusiastic. I don't want a bunch of apps on my phone just to operate my kitchen!

    • @Raina111111
      @Raina111111 3 місяці тому +16

      Like, I'm fine with apps intended as additions to help. It's great to have an app with recipes and times for a sous vide machine or whatever. But if I NEED internet and an app to use my item otherwise it's just a giant, expensive paper weight, we have a problem.

    • @angrypotato_fz
      @angrypotato_fz 2 місяці тому +4

      Agreed! To be honest I'm not interested in any device that relies on an app.

    • @SpitfiretheCat16
      @SpitfiretheCat16 2 місяці тому

      For me it comes down to "Does this app provide a noticeable difference in how convenient or intuitive the product is to use?" If whatever I'm gadgeting would be harder to figure out or take more effort to use without the app, then I'll be happy with a functioning app. If the product would be easier or more convenient to use with just some manual buttons or something, then to hell with the app.

    • @Shomona93
      @Shomona93 2 місяці тому +2

      My washing machine has an app. I don’t know why it needs my email address just to stick a load on.
      Plus when the app is outdated, many of these things are designed to fail soon after.
      I’m firmly on Ben’s side here.

    • @hannahk1306
      @hannahk1306 2 місяці тому +2

      The main problem with a device being reliant on an app is that if the company goes bust or decides to stop supporting that app or there's an update that means it's no longer compatible with your device, then it's useless. I want something that I can use until it stops working or I no longer have a need for it (in which case I can pass it onto someone else).

  • @Shibeanful
    @Shibeanful 3 місяці тому +121

    Can you bring back bloopers? They were always so fun.
    Good luck with cleaning that machine lol 😅

    • @CamStLouis
      @CamStLouis 9 днів тому +1

      The whole show is basically bloopers though lol

  • @valliarlette6596
    @valliarlette6596 3 місяці тому +303

    Ooooo! Sausage stuffer. I loved using that at cooking school. I was 52. The 18 year olds had a different outlook on the fun.

    • @SortedFood
      @SortedFood  3 місяці тому +39

      LOL 🤣

    • @MarcFromNijmegen
      @MarcFromNijmegen 3 місяці тому +12

      If you want to rekindle your love of making sausages check out the Scott Rea project here on youtube. He has some fantastic recipes for all sorts of sausages and great skill filming it.

    • @turbochargedfilms
      @turbochargedfilms 3 місяці тому +4

      @@MarcFromNijmegen or Ordinary Sausage

    • @SheepdogSmokey
      @SheepdogSmokey 3 місяці тому

      @@SortedFoodWe also need Benuendo Bingo 2.0! It's been too long without one of them having to do something due to giggling.

    • @zacablaster
      @zacablaster 3 місяці тому +2

      @@turbochargedfilms Mr. Sausage x Sored Food when

  • @emmagroot5300
    @emmagroot5300 3 місяці тому +363

    Love the Moulin. I've got an old fashioned one at home, inherited from my grandma for making apple sauce, using cooked apple, without the need to peel or remove the core! It works the same as this moulin and I still use it to this day, to make large batches of apple sauce, to preserve the apples from our own tree.

    • @markgaudry7549
      @markgaudry7549 3 місяці тому +54

      Me too, but in the States we call it a food mill. I also heard it called a Foley food mill some where, I think.

    • @SortedFood
      @SortedFood  3 місяці тому +38

      That is awesome!

    • @B_Bodziak
      @B_Bodziak 3 місяці тому +14

      I just suggested my daughter put it on her baby registry. It's great for making baby food!

    • @B_Bodziak
      @B_Bodziak 3 місяці тому

      ​@@markgaudry7549 I'm from England and have lived in the US for 30+ years, I've never heard either name.

    • @user-neo71665
      @user-neo71665 3 місяці тому +12

      @@markgaudry7549 Arkansas here and my granny had one and we called it a mill growing up. Grew up on a farm so we can all kinds of things.
      Does a quick job on fruits you want to use to make wine with.

  • @CTice94
    @CTice94 3 місяці тому +647

    It cools it down because of the gas law equation! PV=nRT, so the machine decreases the Pressure and the Volume so Temperature will decrease. N and R are moles (n) and R is the gas constant so that will not be impacted by the machine. This is when my PhD and love of cooking combine haha

    • @Serenity_Dee
      @Serenity_Dee 3 місяці тому +35

      I was hoping someone would come in with the science!

    • @NerdyMusicChef
      @NerdyMusicChef 3 місяці тому +34

      So the opposite of a pressure cooker I suppose?

    • @SortedFood
      @SortedFood  3 місяці тому +100

      SCIENCE 🤯

    • @CTice94
      @CTice94 3 місяці тому +35

      @@NerdyMusicChefessentially because the Volume of a pressure cooker is constant due to the container size so increasing the temp will increase the pressure

    • @christinecash9562
      @christinecash9562 3 місяці тому +15

      Because the volume is fixed an increase in pressure increases the temperature and (as in this case) a decrease in pressure in a fixed volume allows for a reduction in temperature. Pressure cooker - increases temperature in a fixed volume. Vacuum sealer decreases in pressure and temperature in a fixed volume. At a fixed volume of 1 unit ( 1 pressure cooker or 1 vacuum sealer) you have a simplified formula of P = T. As one increases so does the other and as one decreases so does the other. A direct relationship.

  • @linguisticstudy
    @linguisticstudy 3 місяці тому +8

    Why do I feel that Kush proposed this series, so he can have all the tools in the back kitchen?

  • @clarissagafoor5222
    @clarissagafoor5222 3 місяці тому +34

    Never is Ben more lovable than when he`s in big-brother mode teaching us things!

  • @kateh7484
    @kateh7484 3 місяці тому +153

    Grandpa Ben loves his manual devices 😂

    • @SortedFood
      @SortedFood  3 місяці тому +27

      Indeed!

    • @andy70d35
      @andy70d35 3 місяці тому +8

      Less to go wrong, some of these style of devices have been passed down the generations., and still work, unlike throw away electrical devices these days.

    • @RustyDust101
      @RustyDust101 3 місяці тому +6

      Especially as SOME manual devices work better than a full electric or electronic device. For example the high speed grinders and spice choppers CAN be used to chop nuts but the extremely high rotational speed can cause the oils in the ground nuts to separate, clumping together the nut meal. Instead a slow but consistent grind will leave a dry nut meal that is perfect for use in certain recipes.
      So yeah, some devices are actually better as a manual version.

    • @thecoldpoet
      @thecoldpoet 2 місяці тому

      LUBBERS!
      @@RustyDust101

  • @MrRastaRasmus
    @MrRastaRasmus 3 місяці тому +8

    One of the cool uses of a vacuum is that once you suck all the air out of something, it leaves room for something else to get sucked in. Which is a really really fast way to pickle or infuse something, becasue you suck the air out of the item, and then the space gets immediatly filled with the liquid you have it in.
    Like cutting apple slices and placing them in some liquid, they will get almost transparent, and infused with the liquid.

  • @Coogles
    @Coogles 3 місяці тому +44

    Chamber sealers are good for a lot of things other than packing for sous vide and food storage. You can use them for fruit compression (I like fresh pineapple bagged with a little rum), instant pickles and instant infused oils. I would recommend against using it to cool down hot liquids though, aside from the mess it makes all that water vapor getting pulled into the vacuum pump will drastically shorten the lifespan of the pump oil (assuming that model uses an oil pump rather than a dry piston pump).

    • @YaaLFH
      @YaaLFH 3 місяці тому +1

      Food prep and marinading!

  • @xTapirmaedchen
    @xTapirmaedchen 2 місяці тому +8

    The Moulin is still used a LOT in austria and as far as I know also in germany. It's called Flotte Lotte here and we use it a lot to make (tomato) sauce, jams and purrees. I still use the one from my grandma from the 70s when we harvest all the vegs in summer. Best thing ever. I'm genuinely surprised, that our normals didn't know it.

  • @ArielK1987
    @ArielK1987 3 місяці тому +105

    These were probably one of the best cooking gadgets episode you've made. Given that every single one are a must have in the kitchen.

    • @SortedFood
      @SortedFood  3 місяці тому +24

      Wow, thanks! A must have?! Bold.

    • @bcaye
      @bcaye 3 місяці тому +6

      Maybe a professional kitchen. I have one of these (food mill) and I don't really use it.

    • @wairgald
      @wairgald 3 місяці тому +6

      @@bcaye I think it will really depend on the person. If you're in need of a kitchen tool and it is something you will use a lot, it is almost always better to get a commercial grade version of it. They are more likely to last longer and tend to come with better warranties. The vacuum sealer and sausage maker might be a little much, but I can see a legitimate need for all of these devices in a home, especially if you have a big family.

    • @Zelmel
      @Zelmel 3 місяці тому +4

      @@wairgaldOr if you like making batches of canned/preserved foods that last a while all at once. Food mills are the absolute best tool for applesauce.

    • @Henrik_Holst
      @Henrik_Holst 3 місяці тому

      @@wairgaldagreed though there should be smaller versions made for the home kitchen, there is simply a far to large distance today in quality and function between these gadgets and their equivalent for-home products.

  • @rowanhowes524
    @rowanhowes524 3 місяці тому +14

    Hear me out - mystery sous vide battle, boys have to pick 3 bags (that they can't see inside of) that have been sous vided and make a dish out of them :))

    • @SortedFood
      @SortedFood  3 місяці тому +6

      Great idea!💡

    • @rolfs2165
      @rolfs2165 3 місяці тому

      @@SortedFood Also, sausage battle. Each of the guys can come up with their own sausage mix and use the stuffer. Two (relatively) basic sides, and then it's judging time.

    • @YaaLFH
      @YaaLFH 3 місяці тому

      @@rolfs2165 Before a sausage battle they need to visit Poland.

  • @seanspurrell7514
    @seanspurrell7514 3 місяці тому +17

    Master butcher by trade, don't work in the industry anymore but have all the kit to process most things at home. Love my powered 50lb stuffer, still have a vertical 5lb stuffer for small batches. Lots of work but oh so satisfying! Have my Hobart service tech friend hunting me down a reasonably priced buffalo chopper for emulsified sausages.

  • @angelwendy84
    @angelwendy84 3 місяці тому +3

    This video should have been titled, "Home cooks test out presents for the Sorted Food Team" or as I like to think of the team: the Sorted Kitchen Elves

  • @Jacen32272
    @Jacen32272 3 місяці тому +26

    The first one looks like something my family used called a Tomato Mill to process blanched tomatoes and separate out the skins and seeds when making a large (tens of gallons; mom got over a bushel of tomatoes that year) batch of sauce we then canned and stored for years thereafter. I only remember using it once, and it may have been borrowed, but I remember using it. (As a six year old, Mom though turning the crank was a reasonably safe way for me to contribute and stay out from underfoot.)

  • @gardon62
    @gardon62 3 місяці тому +110

    The Moulin is really popular in germany for tomatoes that get used in sauces and soups. The method is called "Passieren"

    • @74bish
      @74bish 3 місяці тому +33

      Flotte Lotte!

    • @Piggelgesicht
      @Piggelgesicht 3 місяці тому +12

      I use it for fruit preserves. Flotte Lotte ftw!!
      Edit: WHATTTT?? 220 £??!! I paid 20 €. And it's stainless steel and I have two different sizes for the grate plates.

    • @rolfs2165
      @rolfs2165 3 місяці тому +5

      Also for making jams (e.g. rosehip). I also use mine to make applesauce (can't be arsed to peel that amount of apples).

    • @Locomaid
      @Locomaid 3 місяці тому

      @@74bishAbsolut!

    • @engineeringtheapocalypse
      @engineeringtheapocalypse 3 місяці тому +2

      @@Piggelgesicht Probably the size ... regular sizes are definitely cheaper (like you said)

  • @tildessmoo
    @tildessmoo 3 місяці тому +13

    Vacuum science! First, we need some heat science:
    When you boil water on the stove, what you're doing on a very simplistic level is pushing energy into the water. That energy does two things: 1. It raises the temperature of the water, and 2. It changes the state of the water from liquid to gas. There's a little of the latter going on all the time (let's not get into vapor pressures just yet), but when the water reaches a certain temperature (100° C), all the energy goes into state change instead of temperature increase. And that takes almost as much energy as heating it to 100° took in the first place. That's right, the energy difference between 100° water and 100° steam is similar to the difference between 20° water and 100° water.
    Now, back to vapor pressure. Molecules that aren't locked into crystals tend to move about as much as they can. The most they can move around is in a gas, but once there's enough gas in their vicinity, there's basically no more room for it to move like that, so the rest goes into the second-best state, which is liquid. This is why water evaporates when you leave it out at room temperature: the air drifting about will randomly leave areas of less moisture above the liquid water (yes, moisture specifically, we're not getting into the law of partial pressures today!), allowing a few molecules to become gas, but because the atmosphere is so much larger than any container of water, this basically happens thousands of times per second, making it basically a continuous process. However, remember that bit about how much energy it takes for water to turn into a gas? Well, if you're not adding heat to the liquid, then every molecule that escapes to the gas phase has to get that energy from somewhere, and that somewhere is usually the heat energy of the rest of the liquid it's coming from. This is why you sweat, actually: the water evaporating from your skin helps cool you off, because in order to evaporate it has to take energy - aka heat - away from your skin.
    Now, when you apply a vacuum, you're reducing the amount of gas the water has to compete with, allowing more of it to move from liquid to gas at once. As all of that liquid evaporates, it takes energy from the surrounding liquid, cooling it off rapidly! That's how it all works, and it's actually possible to freeze water in this way (CodysLab has a video demonstrating it if you're interested). It's also how refrigeration/air conditioning works, by carefully manipulating the pressure of a fluid as it moves through a loop so that it becomes a gas (thus absorbing energy) on the side of the loop you want to keep cool, and becoming a liquid (releasing energy to the environment) on the side you don't mind being warm - though the fluid used in HVAC systems is generally not water but something with a much lower boiling point. Also, heat pumps, which are just air conditioning in reverse! (Yes, that was a Technology Connections reference.)

  • @Getpojke
    @Getpojke 3 місяці тому +44

    I have a home vacuum sealer & it's a useful thing, not just for sous vide. I use it a lot for portioning up for cooking later when I batch cook. Vacuumed bags take up vastly less space in the freezer than rigid containers. I also vacuum bag bones, carcasses & scraps (both meat or veg) to freeze for making stocks & glace later. Great for doing "compressed fruit" where you change the texture & can add flavour. And of course food can be vac-packed to extend its life in the fridge by excluding air. You can also re-use some vac-bags, they just get washed out & dried & when you reseal the next time they just get a little smaller. I reckon my vacuum machine saves me a lot of money & space every-time I use it. 💸💷

    • @Steelmage99
      @Steelmage99 3 місяці тому +3

      I use my vacuum sealer (and sous vide) for trekking food.
      Make an easy stew, vacuum pack, then pasteurize (145 F/65 C, for 30 minutes), and finally freeze. Will last for a week when properly stored and insulated in a backpack.
      Since the sous vide bag is already heat-resistant you just pop it in boiling water and eat right out of the bag (like those MREs we all know and love) - reducing clean up to a minimum.
      A *_LOT_* cheaper than freeze-dried food bought at exorbitant prices at an outdoor supply store.

    • @janetnz3389
      @janetnz3389 3 місяці тому +1

      Also use for revealing frozen food bags

    • @divab63
      @divab63 3 місяці тому +7

      You can also buy the rolls to cut your own size bag so that there is less plastic waste.

    • @ninathomson1735
      @ninathomson1735 3 місяці тому +2

      I use mine to ferment in. Far less likely to mould than other methods as there’s less oxygen

    • @alisaishere
      @alisaishere 3 місяці тому +1

      Depending on the plastic you use, those at home vacuum sealers are great for sous vide. I have a basic Food Saver brand from years ago and get the rolls of plastic to make the correct size needed. But I sous vide with those bags all the time.

  • @DanahFattouh
    @DanahFattouh 3 місяці тому +5

    3:27 In my culture (I’m from Lebanon), we use moulins in our home kitchens. My mother has one that her mother used before her. We make soups and broths and even mashed potatoes!

  • @ThomasBarthoulot
    @ThomasBarthoulot 3 місяці тому +7

    The moulin can be found in a lot (if not most) of french "normal" households, maybe more in the rural ones, but it's quite a common thing for people who are used to making jams, or tomato sauce or things like that

  • @alexdavis5766
    @alexdavis5766 3 місяці тому +29

    These videos just make me wish I had a lottery win and a massive kitchen to buy all these and play with them and have space to store the. 😂😂

    • @SortedFood
      @SortedFood  3 місяці тому +5

      Haha, which was your favourite from today's video?

    • @alexdavis5766
      @alexdavis5766 3 місяці тому +3

      @@SortedFoodthe sausage one, so I could make my own vegan sausages in various flavours

    • @ElGeFe
      @ElGeFe 3 місяці тому +2

      If money was no object I would 100% have a vacuum chamber sealer and a permanent sous vide station using distilled water in my bespoke kitchen.

    • @YaaLFH
      @YaaLFH 3 місяці тому +1

      Vacuum sealers for home kitchens are smaller than a shoe box and very useful, well worth the space they take up. Mine has space for a roll of bags inside which is very convenient.
      Not expensive either, you can get a decent one under £30, even Lidl has them occasionally.

  • @KevCampbell
    @KevCampbell 3 місяці тому +6

    I’ve got a much less fancy vacuum packaging machine that’s pretty similar to that sousvide unit, and it gets used every other day. Costco size blocks of cheese, portions of meat from a full size brisket that’s been smoked, soup, beans, coffee - I use it for everything and would go back into a burning kitchen to save it!

  • @Getpojke
    @Getpojke 3 місяці тому +10

    Would be great if you could review some bacon/meat slicers. I've wanted one for ages, great for slicing meat, bread, fruit & veg. I want one even more now as I bout a "ham presser" for making & cooking round logs of pressed meats & being able to do perfect slices of cold cuts quickly would really make me happy.

  • @lowenl8255
    @lowenl8255 3 місяці тому +2

    I am actually surprised by the 1st one (which I call "passe-vite" instead of "moulin") because there's the same one at my parents house from since before I was born, I have used it plenty of times and I was convinced it was something everyone had in their kitchen 😮

  • @Huckleberry42
    @Huckleberry42 3 місяці тому +160

    Mike and jamie smack talking each other is something I never knew I needed

    • @SortedFood
      @SortedFood  3 місяці тому +47

      The hatred runs deep ever since band practice 2003

    • @Paperscrapper
      @Paperscrapper 3 місяці тому +15

      Neither is wrong. Jamie makes variations of the same foods all the time, and Mike is fidgety and takes time to make a decision.

    • @Camof1990
      @Camof1990 3 місяці тому +1

      @@SortedFood I think we all need an explanation to this during the next table talk.

    • @christianhill4057
      @christianhill4057 3 місяці тому +11

      I clocked out after Jamie said he did well under pressure in the kitchen.
      Me remembering all the times he fumbled the ball in a Pass It On....

  • @lstray3699
    @lstray3699 3 місяці тому +4

    The moulin is commonly used in hungarian households to preparing the tomato for preserving, and to processing the fishbroth base for the szeged style fisherman's soup.

  • @nayakal9362
    @nayakal9362 3 місяці тому +7

    I love how everyone in the flyer- ad - screen for the battle royal everyone has their angry/fighty face on, except James, who is probably wondering what he put himself into

  • @loriegabidel
    @loriegabidel 3 місяці тому +1

    I just love seeing how excited Mike and Barry get and how much fun they have.
    I do wish I could play with the vacuum sealer, though.

  • @jaystevens137
    @jaystevens137 3 місяці тому +1

    I love that for the most part, these were all manually operated. Maybe not the vacuum chamber, but the others are all great professional use kit and just required a little elbow grease. Easy to move, easy to use.

  • @joelclayton2696
    @joelclayton2696 3 місяці тому +4

    Physics PhD student and long time viewer here! Pressure is force per area (think pounds of force per square inch of surface). The air around us is at a certain pressure where each air molecule collides with the molecules that are trying to evaporate from the liquid that you are looking at. As they colide they apply a force to the molecules which pack them in more tightly. When you reduce the pressure, i.e put it in a vaccum packer, you reduce the number of molecules applying the force and thus more molecules can evaporate and the liquid boils.
    Science! Love you guys, Happy Easter!

  • @tompugh5566
    @tompugh5566 3 місяці тому +4

    Why I feel like these videos start with Kush and Ben just deciding they want a new kitchen gadget and having to then shoehorn a video out just so they can get a vac packer

    • @morganalori
      @morganalori 3 місяці тому

      Or they already bought it and go "Hey! we can do a professional kit review and write em off as a business expense" (maybe, not sure of UK taxes)

  • @Nooticus
    @Nooticus 3 місяці тому +1

    Barry saying 'bus has arrived' was hilarious haha

  • @wadebrost7105
    @wadebrost7105 3 місяці тому

    Everything about this video makes my heart happy. I loved using all of these when I was cooking professionally

  • @valliarlette6596
    @valliarlette6596 3 місяці тому +6

    That’s how I make mashed potatoes! I process a lot, then freeze the purée in portions. Thaw, add cream and butter, best mash ever. Yes, as cooking school chore, not a favorite.

    • @SortedFood
      @SortedFood  3 місяці тому +3

      That's FANTASTIC 👏

  • @plaitedlight
    @plaitedlight 3 місяці тому +10

    The Moulin is interesting to me. I have a home kitchen sized one. To me it's a totally normal part of a home canning set up. I've known it as a food mill. I use for fruit to make a puree for sauce or to strain the juice from for jelly, for veg as you did in the video for sauce. It's overkill for potato mash IMO. It's a unique tool in that it strains out the bits of skin and seeds while pureeing. And it's easy to clean up. Worth the storage space to me, even though I only use it a couple times a year.

    • @ElGeFe
      @ElGeFe 3 місяці тому

      Overkill for mash, but not for Robuchon's pommes puree.

    • @headspacedeficit
      @headspacedeficit 3 місяці тому +1

      My aunt's food mill is always overkill for mashed potatoes except for Thanksgiving upon which it transforms into a godsend

    • @victorcalvert9543
      @victorcalvert9543 2 місяці тому

      There are also vertical-oriented ones that use an auger and a mesh cone, instead of the disc. That design is even better for jelly, and usually has finer screens. It works really well for single-variety berry jelly (blackberry, raspberry, etc.).

  • @ChelseaFCallday2
    @ChelseaFCallday2 3 місяці тому +1

    the pure unadulterated joy the boys get from sausages will never fail to make me laugh🤣

  • @plomox1234
    @plomox1234 3 місяці тому +1

    Mike let the intrusive thoughts win, you can see him thinking about it for a hot second before he commits😂

  • @thomasjameskay
    @thomasjameskay 2 місяці тому +3

    One day you should all sit around the table and tell us about where all the gadgets have ended up - eg still used, sold, given back (if they were borrowed?!), ended up in Barry’s kitchen ?? 😂

  • @moonchild7755
    @moonchild7755 3 місяці тому +6

    This came up when I had just finished watching the first one!! Happy Easter to all at Sorted as well

  • @williamradke4290
    @williamradke4290 3 місяці тому +2

    I love the callback to the Innuendo bingo video!😆 That's one of my favorites among your old videos.

  • @ambergristones
    @ambergristones 3 місяці тому +1

    One step closer to the Ordinary Sausage Collab I dream of

  • @daylemullaney8164
    @daylemullaney8164 3 місяці тому +4

    I’ve recently discovered your channel and I’m so hooked! I love to binge watch your videos. The camaraderie between everyone is so much fun.
    Video idea: I have a very picky 9 year old. It’s so hard to feed her in a healthy way. Maybe do a pass it on picky kids edition.
    Cheers from Canada🇨🇦

    • @SortedFood
      @SortedFood  3 місяці тому +2

      Welcome to the community! Great to have you here and i'll pass on your video suggestion 😃
      Hayley @ Team Sorted

  • @sargeabernathy
    @sargeabernathy 3 місяці тому +5

    First one was familiar. Grew up with one for making Lentil Soup!

  • @denisekelly1888
    @denisekelly1888 2 місяці тому +1

    Now we need a sausage battle with each of the normals making their own flavors.

  • @MichaelBabcock
    @MichaelBabcock 3 місяці тому +2

    I'm glad Mike asked about the plastic; plastic recycling is all but a myth if you look it up.

  • @kandihenderson7226
    @kandihenderson7226 3 місяці тому +22

    The moulin......we in the USA call that a food mill

    • @TheFallenFaob
      @TheFallenFaob 3 місяці тому +1

      They paid much much more than we do for it the highest price I could find is $190 or 150 pounds for an extra large version

    • @corinneportmann326
      @corinneportmann326 3 місяці тому +1

      We call it a Passe Vite (get stuff through quickly is implied) in Switzerland. It's no longer standard in each household but still a well known item and only costs about half of what they paid. The cultural differences are quite interesting...

    • @clarissagafoor5222
      @clarissagafoor5222 3 місяці тому +1

      ah - that`s what a food-mill is!

    • @nicolad8822
      @nicolad8822 2 місяці тому

      Moulin is just french for mill, British English has tended to keep french words for cooking/food related things.

  • @annl.8909
    @annl.8909 3 місяці тому +5

    Lubbers.... i love it.... or ludders.... ebbers the luddite.... well done mike!

  • @cookingforone6359
    @cookingforone6359 2 місяці тому +1

    The HOME vesion of a CHAMBER vacuum sealer is the perfect tool for the home cook looking for a vast variety of one and two serving creations. The plastic bags are much more economical then the edge vacuum type.

  • @charlottetooth1457
    @charlottetooth1457 3 місяці тому +2

    I remember my grandma having a mouli - a smaller one than the big moulin that you have.
    Specifically, I remember her using it to make baby food for my little sister. This was in the early 1970's

  • @JanPospisilArt
    @JanPospisilArt 3 місяці тому +3

    Working that Moulin will undoubtedly make a man out of you.

  • @danielsantiagourtado3430
    @danielsantiagourtado3430 3 місяці тому +11

    Sausage maker?! I see PLENTY of sauage innuendo bingo in sight like in that amazing old video😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @thomasjameskay
    @thomasjameskay 2 місяці тому

    Very cool to see these insights into commercial kitchens. Thanks for sharing!!

  • @Belokhann
    @Belokhann 3 місяці тому +1

    I love using the moulin for jams and purées!

  • @_SurferGeek_
    @_SurferGeek_ 3 місяці тому +9

    Unfortunately, there are very few areas or municipalities that recycle thin or thin film plastics.
    Some grocery stores have collection points for thin film plastics but they seem to be few and far between.

    • @TheIrishAlchemist205
      @TheIrishAlchemist205 3 місяці тому

      Not to mention recyclables that have been contaminated by food 1) are no longer recyclable unless thoroughly washed by the consumer, and 2) depending on the amount of residue, can spoil an entire batch/drum of recyclables, causing recycling plants to have to pitch the entire lot into a landfill anyway. (Still, the benefit of vacuum sealing outweighs the small amount of plastic used imo, and I think that's a "necessary" use of plastic. We should aim to **reduce frivolous use** of plastic, it's needed and extremely beneficial for some things.) I'm glad Sorted mentions and thinks about all of these things, but I think they're reaching a point of preaching misinformation, and should probably do some research about other facets of food (and related materials) waste.

  • @Kaelajin96
    @Kaelajin96 3 місяці тому +4

    Happy easter boys!!❤

  • @shakawhenthewallsfell8570
    @shakawhenthewallsfell8570 3 місяці тому +2

    I got me a sausage stuffer a while back for home use, since I make quite a bit of home-made sausages. Usually around 20 pound batch at a time. The model I got has 5 kilo capacity and pretty much same functionality, but is vertical, which makes loading and turning the crank easier than the one featured here. It is so much better than trying to use a meat grinder to do the stuffing, and it was $180.
    Also got me a 30 pound capacity meat mixer recently. A serious time saver over trying to mix 20 pounds by hand.
    My brother got himself a similar vacuum machine as the one here. It doesn't do sous vide or any of the fancy stuff, but still cost him around $1500. Meanwhile, I got a little Greenwise machine that cost me $80.

  • @joshuaholmes6324
    @joshuaholmes6324 3 місяці тому

    yessss another one… love you guys

  • @charmaineperkins7332
    @charmaineperkins7332 3 місяці тому +3

    Hi from Australia…..hope you have a happy Easter.

  • @joystarsstory9915
    @joystarsstory9915 3 місяці тому +4

    The home version of the Moulin is called a food mill and they are usually under $30us.
    Plastic is a HUGE environmental issue and most of the plastic in the world does not get recycled, even if it's sent to recycling!

    • @evo3481
      @evo3481 3 місяці тому

      We got ours stainless steel for 20$ usd, I’m extremely surprised they paid so much for it unless there’s a huge difference between the home and professional kitchen one

    • @christjan08
      @christjan08 3 місяці тому

      ​@@evo3481 yeah, there's a huge difference between the home one and the commercial ones. I had a home one, and it broke after a few weeks. The commercial one I had at work would easily and regularly process 200kg of potatoes and never broke or had any issues.

    • @chandrawong449
      @chandrawong449 3 місяці тому

      I have a home food mill that's been going strong for easily 70 years (through the generations). Things in general are not made as well as they used to be (built-in obsolescence is a real thing), but you got a crap one, @evo3481 .

    • @joystarsstory9915
      @joystarsstory9915 3 місяці тому

      @@christjan08 The one I use has been working for absolute YEARS!

  • @Getpojke
    @Getpojke 3 місяці тому +2

    The Moulin along with a Chinois are brilliant things to have in the home kitchen of you're pretty serious about cooking. They make a great team when making mash, puree, stock & consommé as they save a lot of time faffing about.

  • @thunderejjim
    @thunderejjim 3 місяці тому +2

    There was a gadget I used to have to use on a daily basis that everyone hated because it was a pain to put together before using and an even bigger pain to disassemble/clean. I believe it was called the NEMCO Slicer. Big, heavy duty steel beast designed for slicing veg as evenly as possible. I'd recommend it for another video like this just because the boys would probably have a field day with the spinning blades and how easy it is to use.

  • @sinocte
    @sinocte 3 місяці тому +8

    I have one of those restaurant grade food mills, but I honestly use it like 3 times a year... it's just the best tool for the job. I process 3 or 4 bushels of tomatoes for canning every fall, and I break it out for jams during blackberry and boysenberry seasons.

    • @stephaniefairey8633
      @stephaniefairey8633 3 місяці тому

      Our blackberries used to line the banks of the local river. Council poisoned them cause they're a pest. So no blackberries, no fish or yabbies (cause of the poison), and no water either cause the banks all washed away because the blackberries were holding them together. F**king idiots. I hate people sometimes.

    • @kunimitsune177
      @kunimitsune177 3 місяці тому

      *autumn

  • @finkelmana
    @finkelmana 3 місяці тому +13

    I do want to point out, at least in the US, plastic being sent off the be recycled doesnt actually get recycled. It ends up in a land fill. Only 5% of the plastic ends up being recycled.

    • @rianfelis3156
      @rianfelis3156 3 місяці тому +5

      Agreed. Post-consumer plastic recycling is one of the biggest lies of recent decades.

    • @thenovicenovelist
      @thenovicenovelist 3 місяці тому +2

      Ted-Ed did a video about this months ago. They explained why different items had different numbers inside the recycling triangle symbol and why very few plastics are actually recycled. Thanks for pointing this out though because I don't think most people know about this.

  • @gozerthegozarian9500
    @gozerthegozarian9500 3 місяці тому +2

    German Omas know the first item (the moulin) under the name "flotte Lotte", "flott" being German for "quick" or "swift" and Lotte (pronounced something like "Lott-uh") being a diminuitive/shortened form of the feminine first name Charlotte.

  • @Shearper2
    @Shearper2 3 місяці тому +2

    pass it on idea: bangers and mash. but, the boys have to make their own sausage using the sausage stuffer and mash using the moulin

  • @antimon05
    @antimon05 3 місяці тому +3

    I love how some of these "pro" kitchen gadgets, like the moulin, the sausage stuffer or the mandolin from last time are staples of my grandparents' households, as these are the key tools for long-term preservation of food, which was still a common practice for average families a couple of generations ago - especially here in Central Europe.

    • @antimon05
      @antimon05 3 місяці тому

      This also means gadgets like these are priced much lower in countries where they can be found in every household.

  • @spiderdude2099
    @spiderdude2099 3 місяці тому +7

    18:13
    I can explain how this works. First off, temperature is defined as the average amount of kinetic energy of a substance. However, because it is an average, some particles will have a higher kinetic energy, and some will have a lower amount. When a hot substance is put under vacuum, the particles with the highest kinetic energy will have the easiest time escaping from the other particles around it. So, essentially, you remove the hottest particles under vacuum and leave behind the particles with lower energy, and that’s how it ends up colder.

  • @13LavenderRose
    @13LavenderRose 3 місяці тому

    When I was still working at a restaurant here in the states, we used the second gadget a LOT when prepping diced tomatoes for our salads.

  • @stephenlittle7534
    @stephenlittle7534 3 місяці тому

    Hi Guy's. One of my first tool for my new house was a Moulin. And loved it. Fir the tomato sauce and for mashed potatoes. Early day. Before I had a ricer.

  • @simplysang5580
    @simplysang5580 3 місяці тому +6

    This feel to me like a trip through a foodie museum. An interactive foodie museum and I Love it.

  • @ketanchachad
    @ketanchachad 3 місяці тому +11

    Gadget no 1, we in Maharashtra India call puran yantra. Yantra meaning equipment and puran is the sweet stuffing we put inside puranpoli

  • @jeanettanorton5646
    @jeanettanorton5646 3 місяці тому

    You guys are so fun to watch. I remember using lots of things in the Vintage items videos 😍. Hello from Indiana USA and this 63 year old lady.

  • @Smile8924
    @Smile8924 3 місяці тому

    Great Episode! 100% More of this!

  • @Warlundrie
    @Warlundrie 3 місяці тому +3

    The Moulin at work is at least 10 years old and its still going strong, during high season 10kg och steaming potatoes goes through it every week for mash and its never broken.
    That being said the vacuum machine at work is the best thing in the kitchen, the amount of food waste it saves is astonishing!

  • @dannyhewson5687
    @dannyhewson5687 3 місяці тому +4

    How long before Jamie gets that sausage stuffer out during a pass it on?

  • @GerryLewis
    @GerryLewis 3 місяці тому

    I use my vacuum chamber to as well for pickling instantly and also adding clarity to fluid gels.

  • @karenlu8840
    @karenlu8840 3 місяці тому +4

    I'd looove to see a collab with Barry Lewis, maybe reveiwing kitchen gadgets? ❤

  • @freedfg6694
    @freedfg6694 3 місяці тому +5

    Ben's missed opportunity to say "Boys, stop playing with your sausage"

  • @akshaypatel5497
    @akshaypatel5497 3 місяці тому +5

    Vacuum cooling is simple to understand because as pressure decreases boiling point of liquid also goes down thus water evaporates quickly and the sauce cools down quicker

    • @SortedFood
      @SortedFood  3 місяці тому +5

      Thank you. Sound so simple when you say it 🙌

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. 3 місяці тому +5

    6:01 Omg they tore up Dizzy from ‘Bob The Builder’.

  • @dougk7084
    @dougk7084 3 місяці тому +2

    The moulin is also great for making spätzle.

  • @cdugral
    @cdugral 3 місяці тому +1

    We call the moulin „Flotte Lotte“ and yes I have one @home, smaller though. But very useful!

  • @invertin
    @invertin 3 місяці тому +3

    sucker feet? i ardly know er!

  • @fpoiana
    @fpoiana 3 місяці тому +4

    I have a theory: they are buying Equipment for their upcoming restaurant and in the meantime using it to make content. And that special "live" battle coming, like the one done during the holidays was done to get funds for the project. Am I crazy? Could you give a thumbs up if you agree?

  • @huehuetecti6115
    @huehuetecti6115 3 місяці тому +2

    My mom has a smaller moulin that she uses for making tomato pasata. She's had it for decades and it works amazing

  • @flii87
    @flii87 3 місяці тому

    Well done, I loved this video so much!!

  • @itsema91
    @itsema91 3 місяці тому

    the moulin is pretty common (slightly smaller versions) in homes both in Spain and France. My grandma had one, my mum has one and I have one too. Use it all the time to make soups and sauces!

  • @Zelmel
    @Zelmel 3 місяці тому

    Oh hey, that first one is something I've known since I was a young child and have since bought for myself! Food mills (moulin) aren't really an everyday use thing for a home cook but they're super useful when you can use them!

  • @cherihabegger9856
    @cherihabegger9856 3 місяці тому +2

    I use what you call the moulin, to make and can tomato juice from my garden. I have an ancient one and a newer one, but both work well.

  • @YaaLFH
    @YaaLFH 3 місяці тому

    These are all great for professional kitchens.
    For home cooks that have a Kenwood Chef, some of these tools are available as attachments:
    - continuous slicer and dicing attachment are available
    - sausage stuffer comes as accessory for the mincer
    - if you need a Moulin in your life, you can get a "colander and sieve" attachment - unfortunately used only as they don't seem to make them any more, but still. Very useful.
    Vacuum sealers are also very useful and you can even occasionally get them in Lidl. If you want to go with a brand, I can recommend Food Saver - I've been using mine for a few years, it comes with a built in bag cutter, has space for a roll inside and can also seal vacuum containers. It's not intelligent - you have to press the right button to tell it whether your food is dry or wet, but that's not a big problem at home. Great for sealing plastic bags without taking out the air too - so you can seal half a bag of crisps and they will not go soft.
    BTW you don't have to throw the vacuum bags out after a single use - they can be washed and reused a few times.

  • @Umami_bomb
    @Umami_bomb 3 місяці тому

    I absolutely love my home vacuum sealer, it’s way smaller than the beastly machines we use in pro kitchens but it does the job! I can easily buy whole chickens or whole sides of fish, break em down, seal em and pop em in the freezer and I’ve got meals for days…Anova makes the best Sous vide gadgets in my opinion

  • @nenebops7744
    @nenebops7744 3 місяці тому

    I really enjoyed that! Mike and Barrys excitement was 100% worth the money 😂

  • @seanmegan1278
    @seanmegan1278 2 місяці тому

    I actually gasped out loud with the price of the last one.... hilarious vid as always ❤

  • @dadegroot
    @dadegroot 3 місяці тому

    I have two of those (moulin and sausage stuffer). The former definitely gets more use than the latter, but there's nothing like a good home made snag.

  • @Halyska
    @Halyska 3 місяці тому +1

    I work for a restaurant supply company and I look at all these things when customers order them but it's fun to get to see them in use!

  • @AnnabelSmyth
    @AnnabelSmyth 3 місяці тому

    I have a small plastic moulin designed to make baby puree which I have owned for the past 43 years, and still use periodically! My mother had one - I think stainless steel - which was in between yours and mine in size, which she used a lot. They are an excellent gadget and easier to use than a normal sieve.

  • @SJFishWeaver72
    @SJFishWeaver72 3 місяці тому

    This was a great, informative video, guys. Well done.