I'm making a fair amount of lox and have given some as gifts. It would be a better presentation if the lox were sliced. I know you can buy pre-sliced lox. I want the machine that they use. What is it? Any ideas on How'd they do that[^][^][^]
gotbbq (http://www.dow-mgc.org/smilies/Launch63.gif)
I am not sure there is a machine. I once saw some trivia in which a lox slicer with so many years of experience can earn about $60,000.00 annually.
Do a search for "salmon slicers" you will get hundreds of sites that sell special knives for slicing loxs.
Hey I answered your other posting, but I forgot to say if you purchase a hand slicer make sure it is <b>not</b> a stainless steel blade no matter how much it cost.
You want an ultra high carbon steel blade. A high quality carbon knife looks like a stainless steel knife. However, you can put an edge on it where that is real hard to do, if not impossible to do on a stainless steel blade.
What I mean by an edge is you can shave the hair off your arm going with the grain and not up your arm against the hair.
Olds
(http://www.dow-mgc.org/smilies/Launch47.gif)
http://rminor.com
I checked for salmon slicers, nothing. I was hoping thre was some machine but maybe by hand is the answer.[^][^][^]
gotbbq (http://www.dow-mgc.org/smilies/Launch63.gif)
When I watch them do it in the deli here they use a long (14") thin bladed knife that is about 3/4" wide and honed like a razor. Slicing it on a shallow diagonal gives nice presentation cuts.
Tom
Smokin' in Switzerland
I've checked out quite a few sources on this one, including some pro salmon slicing friends and, so far, I haven't found anything that beats a knife for thin slicing this soft/sticky meat.
I use Wusthof Dreizackwerk knives for my kitchen work and they sell a 12" Salmon slicer that looks ideal for slicing "see through" lox for around $90-125 range. Here's one site that lists one of these gems: http://www.discountcutlery.us/item/B0001WVZD8.html
I actually prefer my own slicing to what I used to do on my ol' trusty electrical meat slicer...but then again, I'm retired now and enjoy a LOT more things that take more time/skill these days[;)][8D][:D]
35 years of extinguishing smoking stuff and now I'm wondering WHY!
Kummok @ Homer, AK USA
Kummok,
I posted somewhere else that I found the electric slicing machine for lox/soft fish. The company is geba. The machines start at $18,000-$20,000. The salesman told me it's designed for at least 150 lbs per day, smallest machine. Back to the knife. He also mentioned ducktrap and a small hand-held slicer they have. Not sure what that is about. Maybe the next exploration.
Rich
gotbbq (http://www.dow-mgc.org/smilies/Launch63.gif)
<blockquote id="quote"><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by gotbbq</i>
<br />....The machines start at $18,000-$20,000.....<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">
Yikes!! I can buy gasoline for my Landcruiser for a MONTH on THAT kinda dough!![;)] Makes the Wusthof 12" salmon slicer even THAT much more valuable[;)][;)]
Just guessing here, but I'm thinkin' that the "Ducktrap" he's talking about is the Ducktrap River Fish Farm in Maine http://www.ducktrap.com/catalog/default.php A quick search of their site showed some great recipes[:p][:p] but nothing on a slicer. They do show a photo of what appears to be thin sliced lox........
35 years of extinguishing smoking stuff and now I'm wondering WHY!
Kummok @ Homer, AK USA
The $100 - $200 knives, really look like a good deal now.[:)]