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Finally, a Saucier

Written on October 6th, 2009 by corakentno shouts

SaucierAs a self-proclaimed “gourmet cook”, wouldn’t you think I’d have a saucier?  Every “gourmet cook” has a fine collection of cooking utensils, kitchen equipment and serving items, but this one totally escaped me.   I’m hosting a “Guest Chef” series in my kitchen and one chef asked for this utensil to use in her class. Oh, no, I jumped on Google and got immediately educated into the style and art of cooking using a saucier, a cooking utensil that no French kitchen would be without.

On the Merriam Dictionary site, I read that Saucier is a town of about 1,300 folks in Mississippi, that out of 100 million people, 4,000 have the last name of Saucier, that the word “saucier” is used 20 time a day at Amazon.com and that ” saucier” rhymes with “glossier”.  However, the saucier I was looking for is last definition of the word, “a collectible specialty cooking piece with rounded sides that allow for easy, more efficient whisking”.  This was it, I just had to have a saucier.

Prices for a saucier on the internet run from Farberware $19.99 to AllClad $115.00o to LeCruset in 8 colors for $159.95, but to get one sent to Panama just didn’t seem necessary, I was sure that I could find one here.

The quest to find a saucier began in Boquete.  Since I never knew a saucier existed, it’s possible that our local department store La Reina would have one.  But no, their pots and pans came only in sets and none included a saucier.  The next step was to drive 45 minutes south to David, the capitol city of Chiriqui Province.  The drive went quickly and soon I was searching my favorite kitchen store, Mundial Rawsa, located on the main street leading into downtown David.

The owner, Ms. Tedman, showed me 10 different styles of pots and pans, she seemed to know what I wanted but couldn’t interest me in anything similar.  It had to be a saucier, nothing else would do.  I did find a real Wilton candy thermometer there, a real important find for a “gourmet cook” who doesn’t have a candy thermometer.

My last resort was ERA, Panama’s only commercial kitchen supply store west of Panama City.  Yes, they had a 1 quart, 18-10 stainless steel, “professional” saucier, as pictured here.  The price was $41.00; it gleams, it has a thick bottom and it just feels good.  Keep checking TBG for some good-tasting recipes I make in my new saucier.

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