Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/food-preparation-utensils

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Potato ricer

Kitchen tool used to process potatoes or other food

Potato ricer

Kitchen tool used to process potatoes or other food

A potato ricer in use

A potato ricer (also called a ricer) is a kitchen implement used to process potatoes or other food by forcing it through a sheet of small holes, which are typically about the diameter of a grain of rice. This form of food processing is called ricing.

Description

Collage showing a potato ricer from four angles

A common variety of potato ricer resembles a large garlic press. It has two long handles, one with a perforated basket at the end, the other with a flat surface that fits into the basket. The food is placed in the basket, then the flat surface is pushed down into the basket by pressing the handles together, forcing the food through the holes.

Another form, sometimes called a rotary ricer, is cone-shaped with small perforations all around the cone. It comes with a wooden pestle that is used to push the food through the holes.

A food mill can be used as a substitute for a ricer.

Uses

This tool is commonly used to rice potatoes, a process that forces cooked potatoes through the ricer and turns the potatoes into fine, thin shreds. The resulting potatoes are lighter and fluffier. The process allows the full starch cells of high-starch potatoes to maintain their integrity and stay separate, giving the potatoes a fluffy, full texture. At this point, milk, butter, and other additives can easily be blended to maintain the starch structure, the result being consistent mashed potatoes. The process works since uniform texture is created due to the passing of potatoes through evenly sized holes, which ensures that the potatoes are smashed only once. With this method, the cell walls are much less likely to break open.

Pressing cooked vegetables and fruits through the small holes produces a puree comparable to using a drum sieve. Many foods can now be pureed more easily in a food processor; however, a manual method such as ricing is best for potatoes, which are starchy and become glutinous (in the sense of being glue-like or sticky, and not in the sense of containing gluten) when over-processed. Ricers are often used to puree food for babies.

A ricer can be used to remove excess water from foods such as cooked greens that are to be added to quiche, thawed frozen spinach, and sliced or grated potatoes to improve the quality of potato chips or hash browns made from them.

Ricers are also used to make Mont Blanc (a dessert of chestnut puree), lefse (a Norwegian) flatbread, spätzle (German noodles), passatelli (a type of Italian pasta), and process ice cream when making the German dish spaghettieis.

Potters and ceramicists use ricers to extrude "hair" for sculptures of humans or animals such as sheep.

References

References

  1. (2004). "Eating Your Words". Oxford University Press.
  2. Potato Ricer. CooksInfo.com. Published 02/18/2007. Updated 05/27/2009. Web. Retrieved 11/29/2012 from http://www.cooksinfo.com/potato-ricer
  3. (1989). "Rodale's Basic Natural Foods Cookbook". Simon & Schuster.
  4. Wolff, Eric. (November 1993). "Mashed Potatoes".
  5. "Starches: Grains, Pasta, Potatoes and Bread-Based Dishes".
  6. Peterson, James. (2003). "Essentials of Cooking". Artisan.
  7. Sears, Robert W.. (2009). "HappyBaby: the Organic Guide to Baby's First 24 Months". Harper.
  8. Simmons, Marie. (2008). "Things Cooks Love: Implements, Ingredients, Recipes". Andrews McMeel Pub.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Potato ricer — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report