thread: Do you own scales?

  1. #1

    Mar 2004
    Sparta
    12,662

    Do you own scales?

    I just read a really interesting articles about scales.
    I won some but seldom use them. This article makes me think I should go and invest in a giant set of über-scales.

    Tipping the Balance for Kitchen Scales
    By FARHAD MANJOO
    Published: September 13, 2011



    CONSIDER the Parmesan problem: Imagine that you’re making lasagna with a recipe that calls for topping it with “a cup of grated cheese.”

    This was a straightforward instruction when the box grater was the only way to shred cheese. In the last few years, though, more cooks have bought Microplanes, which can turn a small chunk of Parmesan into mountains of billowy ribbons of cheese. And there lies the difficulty: the heavier shavings of a box grater can fill a cup with twice as much cheese as a Microplane’s fluffy snow.

    J. Kenji Lopez-Alt, the managing editor of the blog Serious Eats, once asked 10 people to measure a cup of all-purpose flour into a bowl. When the cooks were done, Mr. Lopez-Alt weighed each bowl. “Depending on how strong you are or your scooping method, I found that a ‘cup of flour’ could be anywhere from 4 to 6 ounces,” he said. That’s a significant difference: one cook might be making a cake with one-and-a-half times as much flour as another.

    Professional chefs have long argued that there is nothing simple about a simple cup of flour. Nor is there anything foolproof in that cup of grated cheese, a half-cup of diced carrots or a tablespoon of butter. When you fill a measuring cup or spoon with any ingredient, the amount you get depends on a number of factors: how small you’ve sliced it, how tightly you’ve packed it in, how carefully you’ve scooped and whether you manage to get all of it out of the spoon. (Consider the mess of getting all the honey out of a tablespoon measure.)

    But when you weigh the same ingredients on a scale, none of these factors comes into play. Four ounces of flour (or cheese, carrots, honey or anything else) are 4 ounces, no matter who’s measuring, or how.

    Over the last few years digital kitchen scales have become cheap and widely available. I’ve tried several and even the cheapest — the Ozeri Pro, about $20 — was easy to use and thoroughly accurate. Other models were just as terrific: The Soehnle digital kitchen scale, about $23, and the Oxo Good Grips model, $50, were slightly snappier to look at than the Ozeri Pro, but all three were equally adept at their primary function.

    Yet the scale has failed to become a must-have tool in American kitchens. Cooks Illustrated magazine said scales were in the kitchens of only a third of its readers, and they’re a fairly committed group of cooks.

    There’s a simple reason for this: The scale doesn’t show up in most published recipes. American cookbooks, other than baking books, and magazines and newspapers generally specify only cup and spoon measurements for ingredients. A few, like Cooks Illustrated, offer weights for baking recipes, but not for savory cooking. (The Times Dining section recently began using weight measurements with baking recipes.)

    This creates a chicken-and-egg problem for the kitchen scale. Cooks don’t own scales because recipes don’t call for one, and recipes don’t call for one because cooks don’t own one.

    Consider this a plea on behalf of the kitchen scale. It’s time for recipe publishers to recognize this humble gadget for the amazing tool that it is. If more recipes began specifying weight measurements, more cooks would buy a scale. And they would instantly recognize it as one of the most useful gadgets in their kitchens.

    Cooks who have ditched cups and spoons for a scale can be rhapsodic on the subject; many describe getting a kitchen scale as an epiphany on the order of sharpening knives that haven’t had an edge in years, or buying a new set of eyeglasses. Not only does a scale provide the most accurate measure, but also, as you get used it, you’ll notice it begin to change how you move about the kitchen.

    With a scale, you can get your ingredients together more quickly, and with less clean-up. Recipes that call for weights are also easier to halve, double or otherwise adapt. And the scale is handy for many other tasks.

    “The greatest feat the kitchen scale accomplishes is that it turns almost any recipe into a one-bowl recipe,” said Deb Perelman, who writes the blog Smitten Kitchen. “You’re not hunting for six cups and six spoons to make a cake.”

    Instead, you place a bowl on the scale, then pour the flour straight from the bag until you get to the desired weight. Most kitchen scales let you bring the readout back to zero after each ingredient. Do that, then pour your next ingredient — and so on. With a scale you can get away with using nothing more than a bowl and one spoon.

    Ms. Perelman and other cooks who’ve taken to using scales say that over time, they begin to pick up the weight-volume conversions of common ingredients whose weight barely varies. This lets you use a scale even for recipes that don’t specify weights. If you know that a cup of sugar is about 200 grams, why bother reaching for the cup?

    Dave Arnold, director of culinary technology at the French Culinary Institute, recommends that you make a chart with the standard equivalences, and tack it up next to the scale. The conversions sometimes require some math, but there’s a payoff if you can brave it.

    “If you start cooking that way, it makes your life so much easier,” Mr. Arnold said. “You’ll do everything just so much faster.”

    But the scale is handy even if you’re not converting recipes. For instance, it makes getting the right portion size for dinner a breeze. When I’m preparing pasta for two, I lay the box of linguine on the scale, and then pull out 4 ounces for each person.

    Mr. Lopez-Alt does a similar thing making hamburger patties, and Ms. Perelman uses the scale for portioning batter evenly between two layers of a cake, and making a batch of dinner rolls that are each the same size.

    The scale also ensures repeatability. I once calibrated exactly the amount of beans that I need to make coffee the way I like. Now, every morning, I place my can of beans on the scale, and then scoop out 28 grams — allowing me to repeat the same pot every day.

    Michael Chu, who runs the Web site Cooking for Engineers, uses a scale for making iced tea. “A slight difference in how much sugar you add to your tea changes the flavor dramatically,” he said. “So I figured out just how much sugar I like, and now that’s how much goes in.”

    I’ve also found that it’s simpler to weigh liquid ingredients rather than to use a liquid measuring cup. A fluid ounce of water weighs roughly one dry ounce, which means that a cup of water will register 8 ounces on your scale.

    Recently I needed 7 1/2 cups of water for polenta. If I were using a two-cup Pyrex measure, I’d need to fill it three times, and then almost fill it one more time, which is obviously a lot of effort. Instead, I simply placed the pot on the scale, then ran the faucet until the scale registered 60 ounces.

    But these are all ancillary benefits. A few new cookbooks offer recipes that specify weights for every ingredient, and it’s when you cook from those that you notice the true brilliance of using a scale.

    The other day I made the delicious macaroni and cheese from “Ideas in Food,” the new cookbook by the husband-and-wife chefs H. Alexander Talbot and Aki Kamozawa. The recipe included shredded cheese, butter and several other ingredients that would have been a mess to measure with cups and spoons.

    With the scale, I made the entire casserole with just a grater, one knife, one spoon, one bowl and a baking dish.

    Cookbook publishers of America: every recipe can be this friendly.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/14/di...pagewanted=all

  2. #2
    Moderator

    Oct 2004
    In my Zombie proof fortress.
    6,449

    Scale user here! If anything I get cranky these days if a recipe does not use weights. Measuring out things like a tbsp of butter is just silly, much easier to cut off an amount and weigh it.

    I have found measuring cups to be slightly different to each other, plus there is a tendency to lose one (missing a 1/3 cup here). Also there is all that confusion between tablespoon being 15 or 20 ml depending on what recipe you are using. No confusion if a weight is given. It is amazing how many tablespoon measure for sale in Aus that are 15ml, not the Aus standard of 20ml

  3. #3
    Registered User

    Oct 2008
    Victoria
    4,601

    Yep! Love my scales, I'm not one to just throw in ingredients, I need an exact measurement

  4. #4
    Registered User

    Feb 2009
    Central Coast NSW
    592

    Yeah I own a pair but need to replace them with digital. I find that English cooking books, particularly older one call for weights in grams which annoys the crap out of me as it requires the scales. But it makes it easier to calculate the caloric quantity of things and I've used it for that more than cooking TBH.

  5. #5
    Registered User

    Mar 2007
    Melbourne
    4,031

    Sure do... I love my Accura digital scales. I now prefer ingredients in grams and ml even pd ounces as that's what the scales can measure in, I can swap between whatever the weight needs to be measured in. They are great.
    I have heard quite often that 1 cup can be very different from cup to cup, even if you have meauring cups.

  6. #6
    Registered User

    Jul 2007
    Melbourne
    3,660

    I want some.
    I would be much more food-home-handy if I had them I think.

  7. #7
    Registered User

    Jan 2010
    Shoe Heaven
    4,839

    I have a scale & I use it a lot

    But I do just throw in a lot of time when I'm not cooking to a recipe

  8. #8
    BellyBelly Member
    Add Party-of-five on Facebook

    Sep 2008
    bunbury WA
    2,114

    yep love my scales

  9. #9
    Registered User

    Sep 2011
    63

    I have digital scales and absolutely love them. Unbelievably handy!

    Also love and appreciate Nigella's recipes for showing ingredients by weight. Makes baking so much more successful!

  10. #10
    Registered User

    Jun 2005
    665

    Also love and appreciate Nigella's recipes for showing ingredients by weight. Makes baking so much more successful!
    Totally agree!

    I use my scales daily. I couldn't (and wouldn't want to) bake without them!

  11. #11
    Registered User
    Add CrazyLady on Facebook

    Aug 2009
    2,328

    scales here. some recipes i've found say have 1 cup listed as200gram and others 250gram. scales are better for that purpose.

    I think this thread needs a poll

  12. #12
    BellyBelly Life Subscriber

    Jun 2008
    In snuggle land
    4,499

    The Thermomix has in built scales and the recipes are normally all by weight. When I need to add tablespoons etc I note the actual weight and write it on the recipe for next time. I still might add a bit too much occasionally but scales do make things easier. Even liquids should be in weight for ease of use.

  13. #13
    Registered User

    Mar 2009
    2,269

    Always use scales for baking here! Don't really bother for other cooking but baking is definitely an exact science

  14. #14
    Registered User

    Sep 2005
    In the middle of nowhere
    9,362

    Yep me too.
    I read a very similar article last week.

  15. #15
    Registered User

    Dec 2009
    Perth
    1,916

    I thought all this was common sense. Amazed at what a startling revelation it seems to be. Amused too :P

    Sent from my HTC Legend using Tapatalk

  16. #16
    BellyBelly Member

    Jun 2010
    597

    We were given some as a wedding gift. Not something I would have ever thought to buy, but I use them almost daily