• Sale -11% Adcraft TBL-7 Stainless Steel Claw-Style Ice Tongs, 8" Overall Length

    Adcraft Adcraft TBL-7 Stainless Steel Claw-Style Ice Tongs, 8" Overall Length

    Brand: AdcraftColor: SilverFeatures: Embossed, claw-style tongs can be used to lift ice cubes and place them into a glass or container Claws are shaped like birds' feet and allow user to grab and move ice cubes Made of stainless steel, which resists rust, corrosion, and bending and can be washed and wiped clean Can be washed and wiped clean Measures 8" long Details: The Adcraft TBL-7 stainless steel claw-style ice tongs measure 8" long, have an embossed design, and can be used to lift ice cubes and place them into a glass or container. The ice tongs are made of stainless steel, which resists rust, corrosion, and bending and can be washed and wiped clean. The claws are shaped like birds' feet and allow the user to grab and move ice cubes. Adcraft manufactures equipment, utensils, and supplies for the food service industry. Admiral Craft Equipment (Adcraft) was founded in 1952 and is headquartered in Hicksville, NY.EAN: 0798527054520Package Dimensions: 7.0 x 1.1 x 0.9 inches

    $ 21.99$ 19.49

Ice tools like picks and tongs are essential bar tools for handling ice. It keeps things sanitary, and it protects you from the cold temperature. Other items like stainless steel ice cubes can keep your drink cool without diluting it.

How to Make Clear Ice

1. Warm Water

Use warm water from the tap or boil water in a pot. This will boil off the impurities of the water, helping it achieve clear ice. You can also use filtered water to maximize the chances of clear ice.

2. Cooler

Pour your warm water into a small cooler; the insulating material can help freeze your water faster. The wide base will create a giant block of ice that can be sculpted to the shape you want.

3. Slow Freezing

Leave the lid off and place the small cooler in the freezer. Let it freeze for 18-24 hours, this will freeze most of your ice, but it will leave a small layer of water. If this layer of water freezes, then the block becomes cloudy.

4. Shape

Place your ice onto a clean workspace. You can do this by flipping the cooler and giving it a tap. Let it slide down to the work area. Use a serrated knife to cut and shape your ice.

History of Ice Picks

Ice picks started as an ice ax to cut natural ice from lakes and ponds. They’re made of a long wooden pole with an iron spike tip used to travel on snowfields and glaciers in the Alps.

They later became smaller to use as a household item used to break up, pick at, or chip at the ice. It was used for separating and shaping the blocks of ice found in iceboxes. Ice picks became less popular around the late 1920s and early 1930s since people could make their ice.

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