Aebleskiver Pans Alambic Stills Angel Food Cake Cutters Angel Food Cake Pans Appachatti Pans Appakarai Pans Apple Corer Apple Slicers Asparagus Peelers Asparagus Steamers Asparagus Tongs Avocado Slicers Bacon Press Bags -- Linen Crash Jelly Bags -- Oven Bags -- Pastry Bags -- Sachet Baker's Blade Baker's Peel Baker's Wax Baking Cups Baking Mats Baking Pans Baking Pans by Dimension Baking Pans by Volume Baking Stones Baking Tiles Baller -- Melon Balls -- Tea Bamboo Steamers Previous | Next | Double Boiler© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforcedA Double Boiler is a kitchen tool that works on a principle very similar to that of a water bath (aka "bain-marie"): using water between the source of heat and the item being heated or cooked in order to moderate the level of heat being delivered. The heat delivered to the top saucepan will not exceed that of the boiling point of the water, It consists of two saucepans, one over the other. The bottom one is filled with water, and put on to boil, You cook in the top saucepan. Many pots & pans sets have two saucepans that can either be used in their own right as saucepans, or stacked as a double-boiler. They are designed to stack tightly, so that the top one fits relatively snugly into the bottom one. Many other pots & pans manufacturers make various sized inserts for their various-sized pots: an insert, like a metal bowl, fits over the top of the saucepan and the bowl goes down into the pot, where the boiling water will be. Older ones made of copper with ceramic or porcelain inserts can be still found. Rufus Estes, in his "Good Things to Eat" (1911), called for one in his Strawberry Syrup recipe: "Pick over, rinse, drain and remove the hulls from several quarts of ripe berries. Fill a porcelain-lined Double Boiler with the fruit and set it over the lower boiler half full of boiling water, and let it heat until the juice flows freely." Purpose-made ones also come in heat-proof glass. Be forewarned: any procedure calling for a Double Boiler usually also involves you standing and stirring for quite a long time. Many of the uses of a Double Boiler such as melting chocolate and making polenta, puddings and custard can now be done with less fuss in the microwave. Some people swear by scrambled eggs cooked over a Double Boiler. Cooking Tips Also called: Wasserbadtopf (German)
See Also:Rufus Estes, Water BathOther entries for: PotsBogrács Kettles, Charentais Devil, Cocotte, Donabe, Double Boiler, Dutch Oven, Kettles, Marmite Pots, Pressure Cookers, Sinsollo, Splatter Screens, Steam-Jacketed Kettle, Stockpots 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 |
|

