Ngày hôm nay, Amazon Prime Day Sale đang diễn ra với nhiều ưu đãi hấp dẫn, bất ngờ đến từ một công cụ ‘bếp’ thông minh và độc đáo, giảm giá 17% chỉ trong hôm nay! #AmazonPrimeDay #Sale #KhuyếnMãi #CôngCụBếp #Amazon #GiảmGiá #ƯuĐãi
Ice that’s melted into chunks shatters beneath its weight. Tightly lidded jars exhale. Garlic peels fly. Meat (in zip-top bags) is gently massaged into uniform thinness. What is this miracle kitchen tool, you ask? One that might surprise — and hopefully delight — you. I’m talking about this specific rubber mallet that just hit a 17% off Amazon Prime Day sale and now costs under $9.
Wait, what? You read that right. I keep this mallet on my windowsill above the sink, within arm’s reach to open stubborn, suctioned-on jar lids with ease and gently tap (or whack) just about anything that needs the delicate touch of a blunt-force instrument.
Did you know? CNET will deliver daily deals under $50 directly to you!
In fact, I used the rubber mallet over the weekend to tap-tap-tap the vertical sides of six Costco-size jars of Rao’s marinara sauce (the best!) to make a cook-ahead dish for a big birthday party I’m hosting this Saturday.
It all started one particularly grueling and soul-sapping night when I was solo in my kitchen and losing the battle against a tight lid. I had tried every safe-for-me method I could think of, including this jar-opening tool I’ve never had luck with, gripping the lid with a towel, holding the jar under a stream of hot water, thumping the sides and bottom to release the seal, even the ill-advised insertion of a butter knife point between the lid and jar lip.
(My colleague, Senior Editor David Watsky, uses the spines on quality kitchen shears to open jars — I love my shears, but know I’d find a way to hurt myself in the process.)
Then I texted a dear friend with a lot of physical adaptations in his life ho lives alone: “How do you open jars?” I trusted his recommendation completely and five minutes later, my purchase was confirmed. Now, when friends laugh when they see my kitchen mallet, I laugh right back. They have no idea what they’re missing.
I don’t worry about gouging myself with this rubber mallet, and I’ve never come close to thwacking my own thumb. With a light tap of the mallet all along the edges of a lid, it more easily twists open, vacuum released. (You still need to have dry hands for grip or else use a towel.) This mallet method is dead simple, takes seconds and works every time — no protective eyeware needed. I gotta admit, swinging a hammer around the kitchen is a lot of fun.
The mallet head is easily covered in a clean bag or cloth whenever you’re using it with meat, but mostly I cover the food at the point of contact, rather than the mallet.
Occasionally, I even use the rubber mallet for nonculinary utilitarian tasks like, you know, smacking in those pesky dowel ends when assembling furniture. But the next time a friend ribs me with a “why do you have a mallet in your kitchen?” line, I’m going to grab the tightest-lidded jar I can find for a demo — and then send them the link above.
For even more smart Amazon Prime Day buys, my Braun do-it-all handheld immersion blender is 20% off right now, this Made In cookware I swear by is up to 25% off and here are even more curated Prime Day sales for under $100.
[ad_2]