Suncraft Wood Cooking Chopsticks
Streamline your cooking with cooking chopsticks—replace your spatula, tongs, whisk and spoon as you turn, flip, mix and stir with one sleek tool. Longer than chopsticks designed for dining, cooking chopsticks keep your hands far from heat and flames, which makes them safer for risky jobs like deep-frying. And they’re more precise than tongs or spatulas: Gripping food with the pointed ends means you can target even pieces or parts of a single ingredient with extra dexterity, for specific control and even cooking. Suncraft’s are simultaneously fine enough to pick up a single noodle to test doneness or an herb sprig while plating, while also being sturdy enough to toss a whole stir-fry with speed and confidence.
What sets these apart from other cooking chopsticks is a small scoop for seasoning at the thicker end, perfectly sized to add a pinch of salt, pepper or spice while cooking, and a textured point on the narrow end, which provides traction and helps grip food better. Made from handsome dark wood, which won’t scratch up your pans, these chopsticks are resistant to high temperatures.
Hasegawa Wood Core Soft Rubber Cutting Board
This cutting board is not only durable, but it also will prolong the life of your knife blade. The “pull and slice” technique is the common way to slice food in Japanese cooking, which can often lead to chipped edges if using a hard cutting board. But this one is coated in layers of soft plastic that provides much better protection for your knives and protection for your fingers, since it’s non-slip. Plus, the material has strong antimicrobial properties—one of the highest standards in Japan—so it won’t hold germs as much as a standard cutting board would between uses. It’s wood core keeps the cutting board from warping from use and high-temperature dishwashing. And since it’s not entirely made of wood, it much more light weight to use.
EatCo Mazelu Whisk
No kitchen is complete without a slim whisk for mixing small amounts. Made from high-grade stainless steel, this tiny whisk is a workhorse—use it to blend vinaigrettes, eggs, spices, sauces or even cocktails. It’s extra sturdy from a solid steel handle (most comparable whisks of this size have a flimsier spiral handle), and despite a slim profile—less than an inch across—the long 10-inch handle means you can use it taller bowls, jars or glasses comfortably.
EatCo Saji Slim Spoon
We reach for this sturdy, ingenious spoon from EatCo almost every time we cook: Long-handled with a slim profile, it’s perfect for comfortably scooping from narrow jars without getting caught on its way out. The 0.85-inch thin, deep bowl of the spoon holds plenty of seasoning, spices or sauce (it makes a great tasting spoon, too.)
EatCo Suqu Spoon
This Japanese-designed serving spoon is compactly sized and made of high-grade stainless steel. The handle features a brilliant detail on the end: a down-turned lip that can hang on to the rims of bowls or containers, keeping the spoon from slipping in.
Eatco Toku Egg Beater
Traditionally used in Japan to make Tamago Kake Gohan, a meal of hot rice and eggs, this clever tool first beats eggs until smooth and then combines the mixture without picking up clumps of rice the way a normal whisk would. But we also found that this specialized egg beater saves a bit of effort—it does a better job of emulsifying egg whites and yolks with a gentle whisking motion, rather than endless beating. And the loop-shaped end has a serrated edge, which easily picks up unwanted stringy bits of unblended white.