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Posted

Hi folks! I've been asked to produce about 10 lbs of candied ginger a month, which I'm fine with, but I need some ideas on how to peel that much ginger. For smaller (say 2-3 lb) batches I'm fine with peeling it the old-fashioned way using a small spoon to rasp off the skin, but 10 lbs would take me a week to do that way and I'd probably end up with crippled claws in place of my hands.

Does anybody know of reasonably-priced ginger peeling machines, or have ideas on how I might build such a beast myself (I'm fairly handy mechanically)? My first thought was an expanded-metal drum of some sort that I could tumble the ginger in, but I'm unsure whether that would work.

Thanks in advance!

Elizabeth Campbell, baking 10,000 feet up at 1° South latitude.

My eG Food Blog (2011)My eG Foodblog (2012)

Posted

My first thought was the tumbler idea... :smile:

Wondering if a small rock tumbler would work...that kind of idea?

Dejah

www.hillmanweb.com

Posted

No, but are you candying the result? Don't you find that it's tough(er)?

Also, I should mention that I'm not working with the sort of pristinely-washed supermarket ginger that North Americans are used to. I get roots that have come straight out of the field and I'm lucky if they've been washed in even the most cursory of manners.

Elizabeth Campbell, baking 10,000 feet up at 1° South latitude.

My eG Food Blog (2011)My eG Foodblog (2012)

Posted

There seem to be some interesting ginger peeler washers commercially available that you might be able to scale down if you're building it yourself or having it built. Here are a few that I found. It seems like your tumbler idea is definitely a good starting point.

lab scale washer / peeler

Posted

If it were me, I'd tend to just waste more ginger and use a knife to peel it, lopping off smaller protrusions (if you wash / scrub it well first, you can use the leftover unpeeled bits for cooking, or to make ginger syrup or other stuff).

Posted

I don't peel ginger, the skin is very thin and will not effect taste.

However, if you must peel, try these:

1. Use a st. steel wool pad to crub the skin off.

or

2. Freeze the ginger and scrap the skin off with a knife.

or

3. using a high speed drill with a 6" diameter st. steel wheel brush to brush the skin off.

dcarch

Posted

I don't know if the poster YWalker was talking about an electric potato peeler or the small knife kind.

An electric potato peeler, found in large commercial kitchens is a tumbler of sorts, a cylinder with rough-coated walls and a spinning bottom that is rough coated as well. Water is introduced, the machine spun, and the peels abraded off. Works well with onions and garlic too, and "back in the day" we would do carrots and parsnips as well. You would, of course, have to remove all knobby bits before running it in the potato peeler.

Posted

I just waste a lot and slab sides off with a knife. Wasteful as heck, shame on me, but I decided I hate peeling them.

And ten pounds??? Out comes the knife.

Posted

I really wish that I had a camera to show you what I'm working with. Fresh field ginger isn't large enough to do the knife treatment - I'd lose more than 50% of each piece of rhizome, and that's a wasteage that I'm not comfortable with.

I will try the plastic brush in the power drill, though - that sounds as though it will work superbly.

Elizabeth Campbell, baking 10,000 feet up at 1° South latitude.

My eG Food Blog (2011)My eG Foodblog (2012)

Posted

When I see ginger in Asian markets here, where there is a very high turnover, the freshest pieces seem not to have formed much of a skin. The skin appears thin and translucent, and I usually don't peel it when it is in this state. How fresh can you get it?

That's not freshness, that's age. Young ginger will have a thinner skin.

PS: I am a guy.

Posted

When I see ginger in Asian markets here, where there is a very high turnover, the freshest pieces seem not to have formed much of a skin. The skin appears thin and translucent, and I usually don't peel it when it is in this state. How fresh can you get it?

That's age, not freshness. Even very fresh old ginger will have a tough rind on it, although that rind might be a bit softer if it's still less than a day out of the soil...

I believe that I mentioned that I get my ginger about 12 hours from when it's removed from the fields. The past 20 lbs or so have been very small rhizomes, more like setts than proper chunks of the spice. The last 10 lbs I suspect of being at least partially Mariposas Blancas (Hedychium coronarium), and partially Galangal, since there was a huge disparity in piece size and shape as well as core colour. (Not that I mind the Mariposas; it's a touch sweeter than true ginger and candies marvellously. The Galangal I try to separate out as it can turn an entire batch bitter.)

Elizabeth Campbell, baking 10,000 feet up at 1° South latitude.

My eG Food Blog (2011)My eG Foodblog (2012)

Posted

I don't peel ginger, the skin is very thin and will not effect taste.

However, if you must peel, try these:

1. Use a st. steel wool pad to crub the skin off.

or

2. Freeze the ginger and scrape the skin off with a knife.

or

3. using a high speed drill with a 6" diameter st. steel wheel brush to brush the skin off.

dcarch

OK guys,I just tried all three methods. All three worked very well. Quick and not much waste.

The third method works better with a wheel with softer bristles.

dcarch

Posted (edited)

I would get an oyster glove or something like it so you don't peel the skin from your bones if you are going with the drill option.

Edited by Alchemist (log)

A DUSTY SHAKER LEADS TO A THIRSTY LIFE

Posted

My first thought was exfoliating gloves, if you can get hold of some; I use them to clean potatoes (they make them in brown, and marked 'potatoes', for this very purpose, but they're the exact same things, just more expensive), and they make a quick job of it. They are pretty durable, cheap, and take a good deal of the skin off new potatoes (more so, if they've been soaking for 5 minutes or so).

Or, if the skin on the ginger is thickish, perhaps you could use the mail gloves you already have?

Michaela, aka "Mjx"
Manager, eG Forums
mscioscia@egstaff.org

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