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Traditional French Potato Peeler from Nogent

2009_01_09-Peeler.jpgWhen I was in France last fall, I took a wonderful cooking class with Rosa Jackson, and during the class I was introduced to a new sort of peeler. This is a very simple peeler, but it worked so nicely that I made sure to leave France with one of my own!

 
 

2009_01_09-Peeler02.jpgThis traditional peeler, said Rosa, is the sort you find in every French kitchen. Every chef she knows peels his vegetables with a peeler just like this.

It's constructed very simply, rather like a paring knife. There's no ergonomically designed handle or swiveling blade. There's one blade, with a pointed tip that comes in handy for digging out potato eyes. There is a one-sided peeler cut into the blade.

This peeler fits snugly in the hand, and it lets you keep a close hold on whatever you're peeling. It's rather different from most peelers I have used, but I really liked the way it felt. I use it often now for apples, pears, and potatoes.

These traditional peelers can be found in the USA at Conran.

Nogent Potato Peeler, $6

Related: Good Peeler: CUTCO Vegetable Peeler

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Cutlery, France, peeler

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Comments (3)

I grew up with this kind of peeler, and was surprised when my fiance didn't know what to do with it! I didn't know there were other kinds of peelers until I was 25!

posted by jillelise on January 9th 2009 at 1:31pm
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That style of peeler is also great for making big, food-porn style shavings of Parmigiano-Reggiano ( or any other hard cheese). They look and taste great!

posted by Pulse on January 9th 2009 at 4:32pm
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I've used this kind of peeler - not a big fan. As someone living in a city apartment where space is always at a premium, I like my kitchen tools to be a multi-tasking as possible. This style of peeler is good for the types of hard, relatively round & thick skinned produce you could peel with a paring knife. For other produce, like carrots, parsnips, cucumbers, asparagus, etc, I've found them to work incredibly poorly.

Personally, I'd rather use the excellent OXO Good Grips i-Series Y-Peeler, which has the added advantage of having a replaceable blade. (The french style peeler above needs to be periodically resharpened, which can be a bear.)

posted by Dave on January 9th 2009 at 10:32pm
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