ann-arcana

Queen of Burgers 🍔

Writer, game designer, engineer, bisexual tranthing, FFXIV addict

OC: Anna Verde - Primal/Excalibur, Empyreum W12 P14

Mare: E6M76HDMVU
. . .



keisisqrl
@keisisqrl

consider the Hobart 1612, a 1959 model pretty close to the platonic ideal of the genre:

  • Massive cast base. Look at that thing. Is that iron or aluminum? It doesn’t matter. You’re never going to move it. Not accidentally.
  • Protected slides. What does that meat log tray ride on? Who knows, it’s under the massive lump of metal on the right. Not ham grease.
  • Design elements which are highly attractive and highly functional. All the corrugated parts serve to keep the food in place and feeding smoothly as you turn it into a stack of smaller food.
  • Big knob. What do the numbers mean? Nobody knows, nobody cares. You’re gonna guesstimate and eat the first couple of slices to get it dialed in anyway. Or give them to the customer waiting at the counter. Or their dog.
  • Safety. This machine from hell is a mandoline crossbred with a table saw, but with way more energy in the blade than any table saw and a bigger maw than any mandoline. You see what it does to ham and cheese without even noticing? This beast craves fingertips. But nobody wants to have to deal with that. Keep your hands where you can see them, on the conveniently placed handles maybe, and they’ll be where the blade can’t.
  • Big blade go vrrrrrrwhhnnnnnnnnnnnnn
  • Damn that thing is pretty though. These machines got frozen for a while in a 50s industrial aesthetic with smooth lines but no nonsense.
  • Have you ever heard one of these in operation? Up close? Awe-inspiring.

You must log in to comment.

in reply to @keisisqrl's post:

I have used one for work, and they are awe-inspiring. One of those pieces of commercial equipment you will be eternally jealous of once you leave foodservice, because no home equipment comes close, like deep fryers.

A friend was house hunting and found a place that, far as I can tell, was a house converted into a restaurant, and then converted back to a house. So the kitchen had a massive commercial gas stove with built-in flattop and fume hood, the works.

Was almost more disappointed than they were when they didn't get it. Would've flown in just to use a kitchen like that again ...

After moving I’ve decided to embark on get worse to get better on a few things and I’m slowly ditching nonstick for carbon steel pans, threw out all the old cookie sheets I had for reasons I do not remember and replaced them with Nordicware half and quarter sheets, and when I get around to it I’m going to replace the Costco knife kit chef’s knife that has served me okay for fifteen years but is dying with the Victorinox one every single commercial kitchen uses.

I used one of these every day at an old job and it was my least favorite part of the job oh I hated it. Tbf I was cutting crostini and meat is probably easier to slice than stale baguette

"this beast craves fingertips" mhm sure does

I used to work at a restaurant that had one of these and I was not properly trained on it but management still demanded that I use it... up until it took off the tips of two of my fingers in one slice.

a real radicalizing moment for me - based on my experience, the deli slicer can also turn you into a leftist.

I worked for a couple of month in a kitchen and we had one like that. Once I used it without paying attention and it nearly removed a bit of my thumb. That was 10 years ago and I still have a nice scar.