Shred Better With a Ribbon Grater

For perfectly melty nachos, crispy latkes, and beautiful salads, don't forget this side of your box grater.
Shred Better With a Ribbon Grater
Photo by Chelsea Kyle

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What has holes that are bigger than a rasp grater but smaller than a box grater? This is not a riddle, we're really asking! The answer is a ribbon grater, a wonderful kitchen companion that turns a bevy of ingredients into airy, light medium-size curls with ease.

Available as alightweight, standalone toolor asone side of a box grater(你可能最俯瞰,《),ribbon grater has dual-edged teeth that create thin strips in two directions. This means you can run your block of cheddar or whole lemon backwards and forwards, quickly transforming either into a featherlike heap of cheese or zest. Below are a few of our favorite ways to use the tool.


With cheese

Epi alum and kitchen tool aficionadoAnna Stockwellrecommends using a ribbon grater on cheeses of medium texture and firmness, like gouda or cheddar. Where a rasp grater is useful for hard cheeses like Parm or pecorino, the just-right-sized ribbon grater is best for turning more flexible, meltable varieties into ribbons for even coverage. Anna makes a great case for adding delicate wisps of ribbon-grated cheese to apicturesque salad, or amping up apile of nachos. The fluffy and airy pieces of cheese melt faster than the more traditional coarse and chunky shreds from the large holes of a box grater.


With citrus

Finely grated citrus zest, the kind you'd make with a rasp grater, is ideal for folding into doughs or batters or whisking into salad dressings. But as a garnish, the slightly sturdier shavings from a ribbon grater are your best bet. Top your baked goods, salads, plates of roasted vegetables, and more with slivers of lemon, lime, orange, and grapefruit for a pretty and flavorful finishing touch.


With chocolate

The two-way grating system on a ribbon grater is great for making thin, decorative strips of chocolate that quite literally melt in your mouth. A nice way to finish off a dessert, those curls of milk, dark, or white chocolate add a new level of pizzazz to mousses and cakes and add a textural element to the top of a tiramisu instead of cocoa powder. We recommend using a wide block of chocolate or sturdy baking bar that can handle the friction from the grater—you can find one at most grocery stores oronline.


With vegetables

If you’re going the vegetable route, the ribbon grater is excellent for makingsalads,fritters,orlatkes. When used on denser producer, it'll yield slivers that allow for a more compact fritter—one that sticks together and cooks fast. And for baked goods with grated veg in the batter, like zucchini bread or carrot cake, a ribbon grater is the key to a finer, more delicate bite without the big shards made by a box grater or food processor.


Convinced?

The ribbon graters from Microplane (much like the brand's beloved rasp graters) are Team Epi favorites. And for under $20, they make great gifts for anyone looking to up their decorative grating game. Or, for more versatility, opt for an upgraded box grater from Microplane.

Microplane Ribbon Grater

Microplane Box Grater