Shallow Cooker - Western Maple - Shovel Bowl - 12"
This spoon came from a relatively straight grained section of Western Maple. The original chunk of wood, looked at from the side, had grain flowing nearly identical to the profile of this spoon design, so . . . I had to make it!
My shallow cooker spoons are, well, shallow cooking spoons. The bowl depth is typical to an average cooking spoon you’ll find in most kitchens. The “shovel type” bowl on this design is intended to allow for scraping the pan or bowl, flip the pancakes, scramble the eggs, etc. This is the design I reach for in my kitchen most often, and I find it to be the most all-around useful cooking spoon shape in my catalog.
This spoon came from a relatively straight grained section of Western Maple. The original chunk of wood, looked at from the side, had grain flowing nearly identical to the profile of this spoon design, so . . . I had to make it!
My shallow cooker spoons are, well, shallow cooking spoons. The bowl depth is typical to an average cooking spoon you’ll find in most kitchens. The “shovel type” bowl on this design is intended to allow for scraping the pan or bowl, flip the pancakes, scramble the eggs, etc. This is the design I reach for in my kitchen most often, and I find it to be the most all-around useful cooking spoon shape in my catalog.
This spoon came from a relatively straight grained section of Western Maple. The original chunk of wood, looked at from the side, had grain flowing nearly identical to the profile of this spoon design, so . . . I had to make it!
My shallow cooker spoons are, well, shallow cooking spoons. The bowl depth is typical to an average cooking spoon you’ll find in most kitchens. The “shovel type” bowl on this design is intended to allow for scraping the pan or bowl, flip the pancakes, scramble the eggs, etc. This is the design I reach for in my kitchen most often, and I find it to be the most all-around useful cooking spoon shape in my catalog.