Easy and Clean Way of Grating Ginger
- 1 as much (to taste) Ginger, garlic, wasabi, etc.
- 1 as much as you need Parchment paper
- Place a sheet of parchment paper on top of your grater.
- You only need a small amount.
- For those who need coarsely grated ginger, it's best to grate up and down the grater in one direction.
- If you grate in different directions, the paper might tear.
- Do not move the parchment paper.
- For those who need finely grated ginger, grate in a circular motion.
- Placing the grater on a flat surface should prevent the parchment paper from shifting.
- Scrape the ginger off the parchment paper with chopsticks or a spoon.
- Aluminum paper or plastic wrap will tear this way, but not parchment paper.
- With the technique of scraping off the ginger as shown in Step 4, some ginger will remain on the paper.
- Lift the paper off of the grater, place the paper on a flat surface such as a cutting board, and use your finger to gather the grated ginger.
- This way, there is no waste, and every grated bit can be used.
- It's very handy when you just need a tiny bit of grated garlic or wasabi.
- Since the fibers don't get stuck in the grater this way, clean-up is also very easy and hygienic.
- You could also use aluminium foil, but there will be some waste.
- And even if you grate the ginger and lift up the foil, you are likely to get tiny foil particles mixed in with the ginger.
much, much
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/147058-easy-and-clean-way-of-grating-ginger (may not work)