Jaccard

HUNNYB

New member
So I finally bought a jaccard. Anybody have an simple way of washing it?
I've held it with the blades exposed, but with artritic hands, it was a
challenge. I don't have a dishwasher. It's a single row of
blades...thanks....Sharon in Canada
 
"biig" wrote:



Sharon,

Slide the blue button to the left and you can then pry the top section up
and the whole blade assembly pulls out for easy cleaning.

Best,

Andy
 
Actually even easier, push the blue button to the left then press the
handle down and the blade assembly will pop up enough to grab and remove.

After cleaning, just insert it back in and it'll click back into place.

Andy
 
sf wrote:



sf!

It came with a page or two user manual. The same kind that usually comes
with can openers, etc., along with the typical warnings about operating
it safely in a couple languages. They seem to feel it's more vital to
warn the English, French and Spanish. :(((

;)

Best,

Andy
 
sf and others,

BTW,

From the official Jaccard web page, this is the model I bought:

http://alturl.com/incek One of the pictures shows the blade assembly
detached.

Some of the other models may just have a push in button like the model
on your URL.

I would add for the benefit of future owners, don't buy the three row
45- or 48-pin Jaccard tenderizers as the more pins, the more serious
elbow grease you must apply! Even I wouldn't own one. The straight 15-
or 16 pins are MUCH easier to use.

Also keep in mind, depending on how thick the meat you're tenderizing
is, the blades can easily stab through the meat and into cutting boards,
so easy does it!

Best,

Andy
 
On Sun, 03 Apr 2011 16:15:42 -0500, Andy wrote:


Or maybe the blue button was facing away? I dunno much about them.
All good advice and something I hadn't considered. Thanks, Andy.

--

Today's mighty oak is just yesterday's nut that held its ground.
 
"sf" wrote in message
news:[email protected]...

Thanks Andy and SF.....my jaccard doesn't have any way of coming apart. I
just tried to hold it with the blades exposed and wash it with a vegetable
brush. I got it cleaned, but it was a pain. It has a single row of blades.
Maybe I should have shopped around a bit ...lol....Sharon in Canada
 
On Mon, 4 Apr 2011 08:14:32 -0400, "biig" wrote:


If it makes you feel any better, I didn't know any model had a way to
take it apart, I didn't even know that the more teeth it had the more
elbow grease it took to use it. So I learned from this thread too.

--

Today's mighty oak is just yesterday's nut that held its ground.
 
On Mon, 04 Apr 2011 12:14:50 -0500, Andy wrote:


I do, but there's all that new stuff that keeps coming up. ;)

--

Today's mighty oak is just yesterday's nut that held its ground.
 
I MEANT twew dat.

Andy
Andy's Evil Twin: ... I told him so!!!

Know-it-all

You should know!

I know better than you!

Do not!

Do so!

Not!

So!

I turn in homework what do you do?

I study.

BS.

BSTU2!

....
 
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