Chapter 4: Knives & Smallwares
Vegetable cleaver
A cleaver with a rectangular blade and straight sides; often used in the same applications as a chef's knife.
Santoku knife
A general purpose knife that originated in Japan; has a blade that curves down towards the tip. It is used for slicing, chopping, and mincing food.
Sheet pan
All-purpose baking pan; it is shallow and rectangular, with sides generally no higher than 1 inch. They may be full, half, or quarter size.
Chef's knife
All-purpose knife used for peeling, trimming, slicing, chopping, and dicing. Blade is usually 8 to 12 inches long. Also known as French knife.
Bain marie
Another name for a double-broiler
Warewashing station
Area for rinsing, washing, and holding tools, ports and pans, and dishes. Also includes trashcans, sinks, garbage disposals and dish-washing equipment.
Custard cup
Baking dish that is round and straight-edge; comes in various sizes.
Ramekin
Baking dish that is round and straight-edge; comes in various sizes.
Souffle dish
Baking dish that is round and straight-edged; comes in various sizes.
Meat cleaver
Cleaver with a very heavy blade; used to chop through sinews and bones. Also called a butcher's cleaver.
Zest
Colored outer layer of citrus fruit peel.
Wok
Cookware for fast stove top cooking, such as stir-frying; has tall, sloped sides. Once one ingredient cooks, you can push it up the sides, leaving the hot center free for another ingredient.
Double boiler
Cookware that is actually a pair of nesting pots. The bottom pot is filled with water and heated, providing steady, even heat for the top pot.
Oblique cut
Cut for vegetables where sides are neither parallel nor perpendicular but cut on an angle, with the vegetable rolled after each cut. Used for long, cylindrical vegetables such as parsnips, carrots, and celery.
Dice
Cut that produces a cube-shaped piece of food.
Chiffonade
Cut used for cutting herbs and leafy greens into fine shreds.
Ricer
Device in which cooked food, typically potatoes, is pushed through a pierced container, resulting in rice-like pieces.
Lozenge
Diamond-shaped cut measuring 1/2 inch long, 1/2 inch wide, and 1/4 inch thick; most often used in garnishes.
Undercounter dishwasher
Dishwasher that holds portable dish racks to allow for easy transfer of clean and dirty dishes.
Single-rack dishwasher
Dishwasher that processes small loads of dishes quickly.
Microplane
General-purpose tool used for grating food, such as grating the skin of a lemon to produce fine lemon zest.
Whip
Hand mixing tool similar to a whisk but narrower and with thicker wires; used to blend sauces or batters without adding too much air.
Whisk
Hand mixing tool with thin wires in a sphere or an oval shape use to incorporate air for making foams. Very round whisks incorporate a large amount of air and are sometimes called balloon whisks.
Box grater
Hand tool used for grating; has four sides each with a different-sized grate.
Smallware
Hand tools, pots, and pans used for cooking.
Whetstone
Hard, fine grained stone for sharpening knives and other tools.
Tempering
Heating and cooling a blade several times to ensure that the blade will be properly hardened and will not be brittle.
Heat transfer
How efficiently heat passes from cookware to the food inside it.
Stamped blade
Knife blade made by cutting blade-shaped pieces from sheets of previously milled steel.
Forged blade
Knife blade made from a single piece of heated metal; it is dropped into a mold and then the metal is cut free and hammered into the correct shape.
Serrated edge
Knife edge that has a row of teeth; works well for slicing foods with a crust or firm skin.
Scimitar
Knife with a long curved blade, used for portioning raw meats.
Slicer
Knife with a long thin blade used to make smooth slices in a single stroke.
Filleting knife
Knife with flexible blade; used for filleting fish.
Conveyor belt dishwasher
Large piece of dishwashing equipment that can process a high volume of dishes as continuous flow.
Stockpot
Large pot that is taller than it is wide and has straight sides. Used to cook large quantities of liquid, such as stocks or soups. Some stockpots has a spigot at the base so the liquid can be drained off without lifting the heavy pot.
Colander
Large, perforated stainless steel or aluminum bowl used to strain or drain foods.
Fish poacher
Long, narrow metal pan with a perforated rack used to raise or lower the fish so it doesn't break apart.
Julienne
Long, rectangular cut measuring 1/8 inch wide x 1/8 inch thick and 1 to 2 inches in length.
Batonnet
Long, rectangular cut that is 1/4 inch wide by 1/4 thick and 2 to 2 1/2 inches long.
Conical sieve
Made of very fine mesh and shaped like a cone. Also called a chinois, a china cap, or a bouillon strainer. Used to strain or puree foods.
Parisienne scoop
Melon baller with a scoop at each end, one larger than the other.
Spine (of blade)
Noncutting edge of a knife blade.
Pate mold
Oven cookware that is deep, rectangular, and made of metal, sometimes with hinged sides.
Terrine mold
Oven cookware usually made of pottery but can also be metal, enameled cast iron, or ceramic. Produced in a wide range of sizes and shapes; some have lids.
Saucepan
Pan that has straight or slightly flared sides and a single long handle.
Roasting pan
Pan used for roasting and baking; has low sides and comes in various sizes. Roasting racks are placed inside the panto hold foods as they cook so the bottom, sides, and top of the food all are cooked evenly.
Braising pan
Pan with medium-high walls and lid to keep moisture in.
Casserole
Pan with medium-high walls and lid to keep moisture in.
Tournee knife
Paring knife with a curved blade. Also called a bird's beak knife.
Rivets
Pieces of metal used to attach the handle of a knife to the blade; lie flush with the surface of the handle.
Saucepot
Pot that is similar in shape to a stockpot but not as large. Has straight sides and two loop-style handles to ease lifting.
Rondelles
Round shapes produced by cutting through any cylindrical vegetable, such as a carrot or cucumber. Means 'rounds' in French.
Fermiere
Rustic cut that produce 1/8 to 1/2 inch pieces. Means farmer' in French.
Paysanne
Rustic type of cut that produces 1/2 inch square by 1/8 inch thick pieces. Means 'peasant' in French.
Sautoir
Saute pan that has straight sides and a long handle; often referred to as a skillet.
Sauteuse
Saute pan that is wide and shallow with sloping sides and a single long handle.
Portion scale
Scale that measure the weight of a small amount of food or ingredient (typically a portion). Can be reset to zero to allow for the weight of a container or weigh more than one ingredient at a time. Also known as a spring scale.
Balance scale
Scale typically used for weighing baking ingredients. Ingredients are placed on one side; weights are placed on the other side. When the sides balance, the ingredients weight the same at the weights.
Spring scale
Scale used to measure the weight of a small amount of food or an ingredient; can typically be reset to zero so you can allow for the weight of a container. Also known as a portion scale.
Kitchen shears
Scissors used for kitchen chores such as cutting string and butcher's twine, trimming artichoke leaves, cutting grapes into clusters, and trimming herbs.
Rubber spatula
Scraping tool with a broad, flexible rubber or plastic tip. Used to scrape food from the inside of bowls and pans and also to mix in whipped cream or egg whites.
Drum sieve
Screen stretched on an aluminum or wood frame; used to sift dry ingredients or puree very soft foods.
Tang
Section of knife blade that extends into handle. Tangs can be full or partial.
Steamer
Set of stacked pots or bamboo baskets with a tight-fitting lid. The upper pots or baskets have perforated bottoms so steam can gently cook or warm the contents of the pots of baskets. In a metal steamer, water is placed int he bottom pot and it is placed on the range. Bamboo steamers are generally placed over water in a wok.
Gratin dish
Shallow baking dish made of ceramic, enameled cast iron, or enameled steel.
Crepe pan
Shallow skillet with very short, sloping sides; often has a non-stick coating.
Omelet pan
Shallow skillet with very short, sloping sides; often has a nonstick coating.
Saute pan
Shallow, general-purpose pan.
Paring knife
Small knife with 2- to 4- inch blade; used mainly for trimming and peeling fruits and vegetables.
Utility knife
Smaller, lighter version of the chef's knife, with a 5- to 7-inch blade.
Mandoline
Special slicing tool used for precise slicing. It has extremely sharp blades that can be adjusted to achieve precise cuts and thicknesses
Honing
Straightening a knife's edge on a steel to sharpen the knife.
Liquid-filled thermometer
Thermometer that has either a glass or metal stem filled with a colored liquid. Designed to stay in the food while cooking.
Bimetallic-coil thermometer
Thermometer that uses a metal coil in the probe to measure temperature. Oven-safe version can stay in food while cooking and gives a reading in 1 to 2 minutes. Instant-read version is not oven-safe and gives a reading in 15 to 20 seconds.
Thermistor thermometer
Thermometer that uses a resistor (electronic semiconductor) to measure temperature. Gives a fast reading, can measure temperature in thin and thick foods, and is not designed to stay in food while cooking.
Thermocouple thermometer
Thermometer that uses two fine wires within the probe to measure temperature. Gives the fastest reading, can measure the temperature in thin and thick foods, and is not designed to stay in food while cooking.
Gauge
Thickness of the material of which cookware is made.
Puree
To process food until it has a soft, smooth consistency.
Zester
Tool that cuts away thin strips of citrus fruit peel.
Tongs
Tool used for picking up hot items such as meat or large vegetables. Can also be used for sanitary serving of such items as cookies or ice cubes.
Channel knife
Tool used to cut grooves lengthwise in a vegetable such a cucumber or carrot. A rondelle cut from the grooved vegetable was decorative edges that resemble a flower.
Steel
Tool used to maintain a knife's edge between sharpenings; it is a rod made of textured steel or ceramic.
Corer
Tool used to remove the core of an apple or pear in long, round piece; corers are available in various sizes to use with small fruits like apples or larger fruits like pineapples.
Melon baller
Tool used to scoop smooth balls from melons, cheese, and butter.
Food mill
Tool used to strain and puree at the same time. Has a flat, curving blade that is rotated over a disk by hand-operated crank to puree foods.
Turner
Tool with a broad blade and a short handle that is bent to keep the user's hands off hot surfaces. Used to turn or lift hot foods from hot cookware, grills, broilers, and griddles. Also called an offset spatula or a flipper.
Skimmer
Tool with a perforated surface used to skim impurities from liquids; also used to remove cooked food or pasta from hot liquid. Sometimes referred to as a spider.
Palette knife
Tool with along, flexible blade and a rounded end; used for turning cooked for grilled foods and spreading filings or glazes. Sometimes used in baking. Also called a straight spatula or a flat spatula.
Cookware
Utensils used for cooking, such as pots and pans.
Diagonal cut
Variation of a rondelle, cutting diagonally instead of straight down, to expose a greater surface area of the vegetable.
Tare weight
Weight of the container holding food on a scale. To account for the tare, reset the scale to zero while weighing the empty container. If the scale cannot be reset, subtract the tare from the total weight.
Heel (of blade)
Widest, thickets part of the knife blade closest to the handle; used for cutting tasks that require some force, such as chopping through the joints of a chicken
grater
a device having a surface covered with holes edged by slightly raised cutting edges, used for grating cheese and other foods.
colander
a perforated bowl used to strain off liquid from food, especially after cooking.
whisk
a utensil for whipping eggs or cream.
tongs
an instrument with two movable arms that are joined at one end, used for picking up and holding things.
Boning knife
knife about 6 inches long with a narrow blade, used to separate meat from the bone.
Bolster
point at the heel of a knife blade where the blade and handle come together. Gives the blade greater strength and durability.
Brunoise
smallest dice cut, about 1/8 inches square. Means 'to brown' in French.