Selasa, 17 Desember 2013

Back to Basics PC17581 Gourmet Treat Dipper, Red

HOT PRODUCT TODAYBack to Basics PC17581 Gourmet Treat Dipper, Red
Back to Basics PC17581 Gourmet Treat Dipper, Red

HOT PRODUCT TODAY Back to Basics PC17581 Gourmet Treat Dipper, Red

Price : * (on 12/26/2013)
Code : B001EYUEC0
Rating :
HOT PRODUCT TODAY
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Specification






Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #100856 in Kitchen & Housewares
  • Color: Red
  • Brand: Back to Basics
  • Model: PC17581
  • Dimensions: 1.00" h x
    1.00" w x
    1.00" l,

Features

  • 24 oz stoneware melting crock perfectly sized for one 14-oz bag of caramels or 12-oz bag of chocolate chips
  • Melting Crock large enough to completely dip a large-sized apple for gourmet-style dipped apples
  • Includes a dipping fork for pretzels, small fruit, and nuts
  • 180 watt electric heating base includes off/low/high dial for maximum control over candy mixture without burning











Product Description

Enjoy gourmet treats without leaving you house! The gourmet treat dipper is a fun easy-to-use appliance for making gourmet candy-dipped apples, pretzels and fruit at home







Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews

14 of 16 people found the following review helpful.
5We'll be dippin' for the holidays!!
By Gratitude
What a TREAT this dipper is! We've used it for the first time today and already have so many other ideas to experiment with.For starters, the 'set' consists of a burner 'pot' in a footed bowl. I was worried that perhaps since I have younger children and the bowl being wider at the top that it maybe top heavy but it's actually sturdy and doesn't wobble which is important to me. It has a very easy to use, large dial to turn the device: OFF, LOW or HIGH. It comes with a ceramic fluted inner bowl that you melt your food into and a glass top with a knob to hold onto and 2 dipper forks that look like mini forked ladles. The cord used to plug the device into is fairly short so unless you use some sort of extension cord, you'll have to find a sturdy surface to place the Gourmet Treat Dipper right by an outlet. Personally I like this feature so that there are less chances of one tripping on a cord if left dangling. We used it on our kitchen island that has an outlet and placed the Dipper in the middle of the island.The directions have mentioned in at least 2 places to NOT allow ANY water at all in the chocolate so we were really careful to dry the lid, pot and any utensils and foods we had planned to use.We first tried melting chocolate chips. Since the directions state that it takes approximately 40 minutes to melt a bag of chocolate chips or 1 bar of chocolate, we used 8 oz of semi-sweet chocolate chips. We washed & dried our strawberries and had these mini chocolate chip cookies we wanted to try as well. Since I have had issues in the past melting chocolate on the stove and having it burn frequently, I decided to test out the higher heat and see if I could detect ANY chocolate burning at all and I couldn't - even with a small amount of chocolate in the bowl (8oz of chocolate chips melted to about 1/4 capacity in the bowl). I was pleasantly surprised that some of the chips started to melt after 5 minutes. After about 25 minutes, with some stirring every now and then, our we had nice, thick melted chocolate.It may be because we are inexperienced with them but so far, the dipping forks are a bit awkward for us to use. We found that dipping the strawberries by hand while holding onto the green stems / leaves are best which is not much for the little ones because they had to simply stand by and watch since the white ceramic bowl AND the red, heating bowl tend to get very hot.Next came the mini chocolate chip cookies. The boys were able to lower the cookies in the chocolate just fine but since the chocolate was fairly thick, they struggled in trying to 'drown' their cookies in the chocolate since the cookie tended to stay on top of the melted chocolate so we dumped the cookie in the bowl and had to push the cookie in the chocolate in order to cover it up then scoop it up with the dipper fork (it did come in handy for this!) and we dumped it on a plate covered with parchment paper.On our second round, we added 1/2 tsp of coconut oil to the chocolate and it turned out to me MUCH smoother in consistency and was easier to 'dunk' the cookies into. The instruction pamphlet does mention that if you are going to add anything to dilute the chocolate, to not add anything but vegetable oil (no water or milk) or you will ruin your batch of chocolate.After our chocolate experiment, we rinsed the bowl out (with hot water since our bowl was hot...we didn't want to wash it w/ cold before it cooled down and risk it cracking due to varying extreme temperatures) we then melted 5 caramel sheets (the instructions suggest 1 bag of caramel candies). These took a bit longer to fully melt, even with stirring encouraged because the middle tended to glob together. We started out with HIGH heat then I noticed that some of the melted caramel started to darken on the sides (slightly burned color) so we kept the temperature at LOW for the caramel until we finished. It took about 35-40 minutes to fully melt the caramel at LOW temperature, the book stated it would take this long so no surprised there. We then stuck popsicle sticks in our apples and sumberged them in the melting pot, pulled them out and smoothed over some areas that had excess caramel wtih another wooden stick and placed them in mason jars so they would dry without touching anything.After we dipped a couple of apples, I wanted to see if the caramel would in fact burn at high heat...I could have missed it, but I didn't read anywhere in the instruction manual about NOT turning caramel specifically at high heat (it does state that some candy will burn at high heat but it does not state any specific foods). Sure enough after 20 minutes, half of our caramel burned and stuck to the ceramic sides.I see endless possibilities with this little thing! There are chocolate stores in the mall that sell candy coated apples for $8-$14!! We could do our own at home and give them for gifts from $1-$3.00!! You could do one layer in caramel, coat it with crushed nuts, allow it to dry then do a second layer in chocolate with crushed toffee, wrap it and give it away as a really nice gift.I happen to have a bag of these chocolate chips when I made some items for my son's school but we generally don't eat a lot of sweets...I make my own 'no sugar' chocolate from: raw cocoa powder, raw cacao butter and powdered lakanto or stevia...I'll be trying a version using the powdered Body Ecology powdered Lakanto and dip some healthier foods in it to experiment with some healthier options.What I love about this little thing is that it's nice in appearance, it's VERY easy to clean, and most of all that it can be used for different foods - NOT just candy! You can use it for melted cheese / queso, other warm / hot dips from veggie dips to chili.If I can make a suggestion to the manufacturer...I'd ask that they create a ceramic bowl with a SMIDGE deeper groove so that it's more seated and has less of a chance of sliding off should someone move it from one area to another. We kept it stationary so we didn't have any issues but I could see how the lid COULD slide off if being moved and someone weren't careful.I would highly suggest this item - just test out the food at the LOW temp FIRST or just not leave your foods at the HIGH temp unattended to avoid burning your foods. Don't let the high temp issue deter you...we melted the chocolate on high and kept it at high with no issues at all. I think this would make a GREAT gift that you can use for anywhere from 2 people for an intimate setting to an entire large family gathering. I plan to use this for Thanksgiving, Christmas and Valentine's Day! I CANNOT verbally express HOW DELICIOUS the chocolate covered strawberries are!!! YUMMY!!

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful.
3Not a bad idea, but not enough ideas
By cmp
I figured, what the heck? and picked this up for free using the Vine program. My husband and I own an actual fondue pot, with both metal and ceramic inserts, and have enjoyed it from time to time, though not lately. I figured from the description that this would be a small gadget, not a repeat.For starters, it's huge - don't know where I'm going to put it to live. ;)It's basically the ceramic type electric fondue pot - it does not get hot enough to do oil and meats. The description here on amazon.com says that you can do cheese fondue, but nothing in the box mentions this.The "back to basics" is certainly true in the instructions - more or less, they tell you nothing more than "put some chocolate in the pot and melt it" with some side things of "add some nuts or chopped candy post-dipping" - but there is certainly nothing in the way of recipes or other ideas included.It melted 3 bags of chocolate chips quickly and well (though it was very thick, but the one good instruction was "do not add water"), which we certainly enjoyed Christmas evening with friends - dipping sugar cookies, strawberries, and apples, and drizzling the chocolate over cheescake.However, if you are looking for any instruction at all, this falls short. We have enjoyed many rather complex cheese fondue recipes in our "real" fondue pot, and we would certainly not know this is possible with the included literature. I am, in fact, scared to try cheese fondues as the included paperwork mentions nothing about it.I guess if you're looking to melt some chocolate cheaply, this would be a good way to go. If you're interested in anything more complex, you're certainly going to have to buy at least one recipe book along with this item.

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
5By far the coolest fondue pot I've ever used
By The Three Woods
Yes, I'll be the first to admit I'm a fondue fanatic. So of course when I saw this neat little gadget, I just had to own it. Especially since I have two children at home and using our fondue pots with an open flame have always made me nervous.Three things I love about this Treat Dipper:1. NO FIRE - which is a major plus in my book.2. Easy to clean - I don't know how they do it, but just a little soap and warm water and there goes the gooey mess. I love the pour spouts to neatly dispose of the unused chocolate/cheese.3. You can control the heat! (although it does take quite some time to get your chocolate melted - I'd suggest pre-melting.)The only downside that I can find - which is very minor - is you are limited on apple/food sizes. You can also only dip one apple at a time when making caramel apples. I found that I had to stick with smaller fuji apples. I do have my larger fondue pots that can take it's place for larger food items, but I've really gotten to like using just this one. One minor frustration is the flimsy dipping "forks" that come with the treat dipper. While I haven't broken them yet, they make me nervous to use. I still can't fathom how that flimsy plastic doesn't melt.I'm impressed with the Treat Dipper enough that I'm purchasing it as a Christmas gift for several fellow fondue lovers. It's "classy" looking and fits well into the party decor. I'm also thinking of getting a second one for myself since we often entertain with fondues and I'm addicted to using this one!UPDATE ---- July 15th, 2009As you can see, I've been using this fantastic "fondue pot" for a while now. It still is the talked about item at all our parties. It still is easy to clean and going strong - has withstood 5 - 12 year olds and adults using it at every gathering. Amazingly, those flimsy forks haven't broken either. Granted, I don't let kids use them, but still - I'm impressed.

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