Re: How to get a perfect Skin
- From: "Peter H.M.Brooks" <peter@xxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 30 Aug 2007 07:28:29 +0200
Philip wrote:
"Peter H.M.Brooks" <peter@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:1KmdnTlpx_WTeknbRVnyigA@xxxxxxxxxxxI wouldn't want them too loose.graham wrote:"Peter H.M.Brooks" <peter@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:eKGdnb1mC45I6knbnZ2dneKdnZzinZ2d@xxxxxxxxxxxYes, that's exactly it - it also says that it is reversible, so Philip is correct.Philip wrote:Here's one:"Peter H.M.Brooks" <peter@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:lc-dnT7mKobPak7bnZ2dneKdnZydnZ2d@xxxxxxxxxxxThat's a very good idea. The ones that I've tried, though, had big leather buckles at the bottom to keep them on that wouldn't work inside out. I'm also not sure that the knitting is the same on both sides - I think not, actually, because the outside is designed to be quite rough so as to get a good grip on wet fish or bloody meat.Peter Ashby wrote:Can you not just turn a left hand chain mail glove inside out to wear it on your right hand?Peter Brooks <Peter.H.M.Brooks@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:You can get steel gauntlets made from chain mail at chef's supply shops. I'd love to have a pair, but, sadly, to date, I've only seen them provided for the left hand. I saw a fellow at the Cardiff fish market using one first and thought them a brilliant idea.
On Aug 26, 2:34 pm, Stella <rajeshsharma7...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:Last time I tried to bone a leg of lamb I nearly cut my left indexHow to get a perfect SkinI thought that the important thing was to gas or poison the animal -
and then have a very sharp knife.
It also needs a fair bit of practice. I've tried the trick where you
bone a chicken without breaking the skin and, though I managed it, it
wasn't a very pretty sight.
finger off. That wasn't a pretty sight either ;-)
Left-handed shops ought to supply them for the right hand.
If you're right handed, though, you can get one and never be in danger when boning a piece of meat or even fiddling in the mower or clearing one of those rubbish grinders in sinks. When I last looked they were about seventy quid each, so they're probably double that now.
I'll look into it, though, next time I'm in a good cookery supply shop.
http://www.leevalley.com/wood/page.aspx?c=1&p=56153&cat=1,42207,45887&ap=1
Not entirely. I imagined the gloves would have to be close fitting. Apparently they are loose fitting so the simpler way of changing their handedness would be to turn them back-to-front rather than inside out.
.
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: How to get a perfect Skin
- From: Richard Corfield
- Re: How to get a perfect Skin
- References:
- Re: How to get a perfect Skin
- From: Peter Brooks
- Re: How to get a perfect Skin
- From: Peter Ashby
- Re: How to get a perfect Skin
- From: Peter H.M.Brooks
- Re: How to get a perfect Skin
- From: Philip
- Re: How to get a perfect Skin
- From: Peter H.M.Brooks
- Re: How to get a perfect Skin
- From: graham
- Re: How to get a perfect Skin
- From: Peter H.M.Brooks
- Re: How to get a perfect Skin
- From: Philip
- Re: How to get a perfect Skin
- Prev by Date: Re: An insult
- Next by Date: Re: An insult
- Previous by thread: Re: How to get a perfect Skin
- Next by thread: Re: How to get a perfect Skin
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|