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Index  »  Projects  »  phpMyEdit  »  Forum  »  Every Cook Needs a Silicone Spatula

phpMyEdit General     Every Cook Needs a Silicone Spatula
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upamfva     Joined: 05 May 2021   Posts: 918  
Post Posted: 2022-12-27 05:39
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Every Cook Needs a Silicone Spatula



If it’s confession time, I don’t think of myself as someone who treats her kitchen utensils particularly well. I’ve accidentally tossed wood-handle whisks into the dishwasher, mistakenly slammed metal serving spoons in the drawer enough times that the handles warped, and have definitely left porous ceramics soaking too long in the sink.Get more news about Silicone Spatulas ,you can vist our website!

What I’m most guilty of: Leaving my spatula perched on the rim of a hot pan, melting a shameful divot or searing a burn mark into its handle. I have a mini graveyard of unsightly plastic spatulas and kitchen tools shoved in the back of my drawer, marred by my carelessness.

Silicone spatulas have been an absolute game changer. Their durability, functionality, and ability to withstand high temperatures—and my negligence—has made all the difference in my cooking. The best silicone spatula is the GIR Ultimate Spatula, and it’s among my most-used pieces of cookware.
It can take the heat
The Ultimate Spatula is made of a single piece of pharmaceutical grade, BPA-free silicone, ensuring that every last inch is high heat resistant. For most home cooks, this will be the spatula you reach for everyday, whether you’re sautéing or baking or getting every last bit of sauce out of the pan. It measures 11 inches long and just under 2 inches wide at the head, comes in a rainbow of different colors (including the exuberant “sprinkles”), and is dishwasher-safe.

Why silicone? With my older non-silicone spatulas, if I left one sitting on the rim of a pot or pan it would be a death sentence, resulting in melted plastic and a gluey residue. With my GIR spatula however—which, according to its website, boasts heat resistance up to 550 degrees—I have yet to encounter any warping or melting, even as I’m scraping away at the bottom of my nonstick pan. It’s durable enough that after eight months of use, it looks as good as new (which can’t be said for the ones relegated to my back-of-drawer spatula graveyard).

It’s easy to clean
If you’ve ever used a spatula that has a wood handle and a silicone head, you know that attempts to clean it can lead to unsightly surprises like mold trapped beneath the silicone or neglected nooks and crannies with remnants of crusted brownie batter. Even some spatulas that have an all-silicone one-piece design can have crevices you can’t easily wipe clean. The GIR spatula is sleek, smooth, and a cinch to clean—even when hand-washing. And as someone who cooks with a lot of turmeric, it’s remarkably stain resistant in a way my other spatulas haven’t been. It has a comfortable, ergonomic grip and a pleasantly velvety feel, unlike some of the stickier ones on the market.

It’s both sturdy and flexible
A pet peeve of mine: working a mixing bowl full of a stiff dough (like, say, the base for these Salted Coconut Ladoos, or the batter for this Blueberry Muffin Cake) with a flimsy spatula that isn’t up to the task. The GIR Ultimate spatula hits that perfect sweet spot of sturdiness and flexibility, able to hold up to tougher bake jobs, but bendy enough for scraping bowls and getting at every bit of batter or dough—a rarity in the silicone spatula world.
Stock up on other sizes
The Ultimate is the model I reach for the most, but there’s a GIR spatula for every occasion. The Skinny Spatula is the jar spatula of your dreams, thin (just 1.5 inches wide) and maneuverable enough to scrape the bottom of peanut butter containers and chili oil bottles, leaving no corner untouched. It’s also especially ideal for when you’re hurriedly scrambling a single egg in nonstick cookware or toasting spices in a tiny pan.

 
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