Pain de Mie Pans Palette Knives Palotes Panettone Moulds Paniyaram Pans Pans -- Aebleskiver Pans -- Angel Food Cake Pans -- Appachatti Pans -- Appakarai Pans -- Baking Pans -- Bread Pans -- Broiling Pans -- Bundt Pans -- Cheesecake Pans -- Electric Frying Pans -- Flan Pans -- Fluted Tube Pans -- Frying Pans -- Girdle Pans -- Griddles Pans -- Jelly Roll Pans -- Kanom Krok Pans -- Mary Ann Pans -- Meat Loaf Pans -- Non-Reactive Pans -- Non-Stick Pans -- Omelet Pans -- Pie Pans -- Pullman Loaf Pans -- Quiche Pans -- Roasting Pans -- Sauté Pans -- Spider Pans -- Springform Pans -- Tart Previous | Next | Contact Paper© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforcedContact Paper is water repellent, self-adhesive paper that comes on rolls for covering kitchen surfaces with. It is meant to be affixed relatively permanently to the surface, and wipe clean with a damp cloth. Two well-known brands are Contac® paper made by Rubbermaid®, and Magic Cover made by Kittrich Corporation. The back of Contact paper is covered with peel-off paper, and there are grids on the covering paper to help cut it accurately. Earlier versions of it used to stick to itself, and be very hard to remove without ripping the surface off of whatever it was stuck to. More modern versions are more versatile. After it's in one place, you can lift it up and move it to another, without leaving any residue behind, and it will still stick in the new place. Contact Paper can be used to line shelves and the bottoms of drawers, to cover the fronts of kitchen cabinets to give them a fresh look and to cover recipe books. Some people like to cover their entire kitchen walls with it, because it's easy to wipe splatters and grease off of. Some people inherit kitchens in which that's been done and curse the previous occupants. There are zillions of patterns available. Classic ones are clear (transparent), marble-patterned, and checks. There are informal fan clubs, full of keen people who inspire each other to find uses for Contact Paper throughout the house, with ideas such as using it to turn emptied wine boxes into magazine holders. Cooking Tips Other entries for: Cooking ToolsAlambic Stills, Apple Corer, Avocado Slicers, Baking Mats, Baking Stones, Batterie de Cuisine, Biscuit Brake, Blowtorches, Branding Iron, Bread Bins, Bread Machines, Bulb Baster, Butter Bell, Butter Muslin, Caja China, Can Openers, Canning Funnels, Cans, Chopsticks, Contact Paper, Cookware, Cooling Racks, Corkscrews, CorningWare, Cuppitiello, Dishwashers, Doughnut Cutters, Egg Cups, Esky, Fat Separators, Firkins, Flour Dredgers, Flour Duster, Food Pushers, Funnels, Girdle, Graters, Griddles, Heat Diffuser, Ice Pick, Icing Syringe, Kitchen String, Kitchen Tongs, Kneading Gloves, Knives, Measuring Cups, Melon Baller, Mesquite, Milk Cellar, Non-Electrical Rotisseries, Olive Pitter, Oshibori, Oxo Good Grips, Paraffin, Pastry Brush, Pastry Frame, Pea Sheller, Petites Marmites, Pie Plates, Pie Racks, Pizzelle Iron, Proof Box, Ramekins, Rolling Cookie Cutters, Rolling Pins, Salad Spinner, Salamanders, Scales, Spatulas, Steamers, Sugar Cutters, Sushi-oke, Tassie Cups, Tea Trappings, Thermometers, Tortilla Warmers, Treen, Tupperware, Uchiwa, Waffle Iron, Whisks |
|

