#20 in Cheese tools
Use arrows to jump to the previous/next product
Reddit mentions of Microplane Professional Series Ribbon Grater, 18/8, Stainless Steel
Sentiment score: 1
Reddit mentions: 1
We found 1 Reddit mentions of Microplane Professional Series Ribbon Grater, 18/8, Stainless Steel. Here are the top ones.
Buying options
View on Amazon.comor
This grater provides a slightly thickerThis cheese grater is best used with parmesanUse a coarse grater to put a delicious chocolate
Specs:
Color | Stainless Steel |
Height | 0.7874 Inches |
Length | 12.9921 Inches |
Number of items | 1 |
Release date | May 2019 |
Size | 1 Count (Pack of 1) |
Weight | 0.35494424182 Pounds |
Width | 2.95275 Inches |
First off, Pchops is the best overall price grocery. Hannaford is your nicer but still affordable grocery. Save-A-Lot is dirt cheap but sketchy as hell. Save the farmers market for when you'd like to treat yourself. Farmers market food is delicious but you do pay for the quality. I would advise mixing all of the above to fit with your budget. I dunno if Pchops still does it but when I was still in school they had this deal where every X dollars of groceries you bought and used your AdvantEdge card for, you got 10 cents of per gallon of gas at Sunoco. I didn't drive much further than Pchops usually so I ended up racking up over a dollar between fill ups sometimes which really was awesome. Also one of the Sunocos is always cheaper but I have a terrible sense of direction so you are going to have to figure out which one it is on your own.
Here are some of my easy/solid/quick recipes:
That's probably way more than you needed and perhaps too simple. I don't know your skill level so my apologies if they were too easy/hard. Feel free to message me if you got any questions on anything. I strongly encourage you to try recipes you find online. Foodgawker has a pinterest-like interface but the recipes are generally good. Pinterest itself I would advise against, people put all kinds of crap up there and you can't really trust it. Some foodgawker recipes are pretty intense, so don't feel bad if you think they are way too complicated because some of them are.
Also one thing I do advise you spend money on is a nice cheese grater. I have a microplane that cuts in both directions (well now I have two different ones, one for hard cheeses and one for stuff like cheddar). Mine was a little under $20 and it was so worth it. I got it my senior year at RPI after the $2 walmart version broke badly enough that it didn't work. Shredding cheese yourself is cheaper than buying the pre-shredded kind and spending the money on the decent cheese grater will save you from a lot of swearing and bleeding. I am serious. It is worth it. (Mine is almost exactly like this one but it has a plastic handle.)
Other miscellaneous tips for cost effectiveness:
Sorry for the super long post.