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  2. How to Make Homemade Pierogi the Right Way - AOL

    www.aol.com/homemade-pierogi-way-183047567.html

    Step 1: Make the Pierogi Dough. In a food processor, combine the flour, salt, eggs, water and butter. Pulse until the mix forms a dough. If it looks too dry, add a water a tablespoon at a time ...

  3. The 8 best tools to make pasta from scratch

    www.aol.com/news/8-best-tools-pasta-scratch...

    KitchenAid Gourmet Pasta Press Attachment $219.99 at Walmart. ... While they’re easy to make from scratch, they also require particular tools, such as a dough cutter, to help them truly come ...

  4. Make homemade pierogies for National Pierogi Day - AOL

    www.aol.com/homemade-pierogies-national-pierogi...

    Using a 3-inch round cookie cutter, cut out 6 rounds of dough. If the dough isn’t quartered evenly, you may get 5 rounds from one piece and 7 from another. Resist the temptation to reroll dough ...

  5. Pastry blender - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pastry_blender

    Pastry blender. A pastry blender, or pastry cutter, is a device used to mix a hard (solid) fat into flour in order to make pastries. [1] The tool is usually made of narrow metal strips or wires attached to a handle, and is used by pressing down on the items to be mixed (known as "cutting in"). [2]

  6. List of food preparation utensils - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_food_preparation...

    Cookie cutter: Biscuit mould, Biscuit cutter, Cookie mould: Shaping biscuit dough Generally made of metal or plastic, with fairly sharp edges to cut through dough. Some biscuit cutters simply cut through dough that has been rolled flat, others also imprint or mould the dough's surface. Corkscrew: Pierces and removes a cork from a bottle. Crab ...

  7. Veg-O-Matic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Veg-O-Matic

    Veg-O-Matic is the name of one of the first food-processing appliances to gain widespread use in the United States. [1] [2] It was non-electric and invented by Samuel J. Popeil [3] and later sold by his son Ron Popeil [4] along with more than 20 other distributors across the country, and Ronco, making its debut in 1963 at the International Housewares Show in Chicago, Illinois.