Taylor Classic 1-Inch Instant Read Thermometer

taylorusa.com

Many years ago, I spent countless hours in restaurants, not in front of computers. I honed the skill to determine if a protein was rare, medium-rare or well-done just by giving it a slight push and feeling the give of the flesh. These days, I can type perfectly while blindfolded, but I need to fall back on a trusty thermometer to discern the difference between a rare and medium pot roast. Even when working on the line, I always carried Taylorโ€™s simple thermometer as a back-up. A gadget in the most basic of definitions, Taylorโ€™s thermometer should be a quick go-to for any home chef or grill master for its control and reliability. The stainless steel five-inch stem is durable so you can pop it into a chicken thigh on the grill for a quick check or leave it lodged in a pot roast in the oven for a constant gauge. Unlike digital thermometers where you need to trust the readout, the simple manual calibration takes the guesswork out of a Sunday barbecue. Proving that sometimes the best gadgets arenโ€™t $600 touch screens of proprietary limitations, Taylorโ€™s thermometer functions on ancient, universal principles and retails for less than $4.

Target Digital Fork Thermometer

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Arguably the best retail store in the universe, Target offers a digital thermometer. It contains enough bells and whistles to separate itself from a one-button medical thermometer, but not so many as to become a confusing universal remote. Largely plastic, the seven-inch thermometer comes with interchangeable one- and two-prong attachments. The idea is that you can measure and flip your meat at the same time, but skewering anything heavier than a hot dog makes for a precarious venture. The redeeming quality of this thermometer, read-outs that convert the temperature into doneness based on the meat youโ€™ve selected by cycling through eight options, may also be its downside. Itโ€™s helpful for people who havenโ€™t memorized the Fahrenheit difference between medium and well for a pork chop, but the temperature consistently recorded five to seven degrees higher than the calibrated Taylor thermometer. If I were a conspiracy theorist, I would say that the manufacturers intended this, picturing a future lawsuit from someone getting sick after eating chicken that this thermometer reported was fully cooked. Still, if youโ€™re not fussy about a little wiggle room in your reading, this makes a great last minute $20 gift.

Kintrex Digital Infrared Thermometer with Laser

Designed for in and out of the kitchen, Kintrexโ€™s infrared thermometer enters the ring at a slight disadvantage. But, come on, it has a frickinโ€™ laser beam! The joy of pointing a laser-sighted gun and pulling the trigger to take somethingโ€™s temperature is unmatched. With a quick draw from the included belt holster, I eagerly took the temperature of everything I could lay my sights onโ€”if youโ€™re curious, my catโ€™s head is 1.7ยฐF hotter than her butt. Capable of registering temperatures between -76ยฐF and 932ยฐF, this is the only thermometer of the three that can double as a candy thermometer handling the high temperatures necessary to make candies or work with a deep fat fryer. When youโ€™re working with a fryer whose optimum temperature begins at 350ยฐF, the ability to measure from a distance counts adds a measure of safety. Unfortunately, without a probe, the thermometer really just reports surface temperature, so if you want to find out if the center of your steak is still red, good luck. At $45, itโ€™s almost five times the price of a candy thermometer, but the safety and cool factor could justify the purchase if you pull taffy more often than you grill tuna. Plus, frickinโ€™ laser beams.

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