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Enables me to get more consistent results with old and downsized recipes. Very good quality. More usefull sizes than other odd-size measuring spoons.
Considering that out of the two sets, there are only six spoons I really need, that are truly useful and not redundant, they are costing me more than $4 per spoon. That's not the size I would have chosen to have two of. But not everyone knows that -- certainly a lot of novice cooks do not -- so it would have been nice to have the spoon marked accordingly.I can take a "pinch" with my fingers and don't really need a spoon to do that, nor do I need a "2 tsp" spoon when I can just dip the 1 tsp twice if I need that much.I haven't decided whether to send them all back. A 1/3 tsp is immeasurably more useful than a 2/3 tsp, if you have to choose, since you can always dip the 1/3 tsp twice if you need 2/3 tsp of an ingredient, but it's very difficult to eyeball half the 2/3 tsp if you only need 1/3 tsp.The spoons themselves are nicely made, but I would not have bought this set at all had the regular set included a 1/2 Tblsp, which is really the only "odd size" spoon I wanted, and which if you do a lot of baking you know is not that odd at all.
I bought both the standard Cuisipro measuring spoon set (1/8 tsp, 1/4 tsp, 1/2 tsp, 1 tsp & 1 Tblsp) and this one ("pinch", 1/8 tsp, 2/3 tsp, 1-1/2 tsp and 2 tsp) thinking they would fully complement one another. I think that's a bit high regardless of how well made they are.ADDENDUM:I found the Culinary Institute of America's spoons (search for "CIA 6 Piece Measuring Spoon Set") and decided to return the two Cuisipro sets and get that instead, at $19.95 for the exact six sizes I want. It's annoying to pay an additional $11.95 over the initial $12.95 just to get one spoon I need, and a bunch more I don't, including the duplicate. They don't.
It's in here under the name "1-1/2 tsp", since a Tablespoon is equivalent to three teaspoons. And it's what the pros use. I am now the proud owner of two of the 1/8 tsp spoons. Meanwhile, while this set includes a 2/3 tsp, there is no 1/3 tsp in either set.
There isn't even a tablespoon measurement. If you are using the metric system, great, but if you are using an English system cooking book, for example, anything in the US, then these will be useless. There are five measuring spoons, but in very strange sizes. This is a European company and they have converted the metric measures to English equivalent.
The pinch and dash are not as useful, I think, although they are apparently technically 1/16th tsp and 1/8th tsp. While I thought this set was going to be useful, it's even more useful than I thought. Now I wish I could get the regular Cuisipro measuring spoons, except they apparently only come with measuring cups, which I don't need. At those amounts, I can just use my fingers.The shape of the spoons is useful too because the narrowness lets me put them into those annoyingly narrow spice jars. Half of a Tablespoon is 1-1/2 teaspoons. It used to drive me made when a recipe asked for 1-1/2 Tbsp because I'd have to drag out three spoons to measure.
Came very quickly, but I think the shipping charge (which cost as much as the spoons) was excessive, AND I was not allowed to see the shipping charge until after I made the purchase.
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