The cooking spoon is the tool one stirs with on Sundays, while the sauce simmers on a low flame and there's nothing else to do but watch. It's not a large kitchen appliance; it's small and quiet — and precisely for that reason, it's the tool many hold in their hands for decades without ever changing it.
That it does what it's supposed to do is a given. It's even better if it also feels good to hold — a matter of material and design.
Three Material Philosophies
Le Creuset stands for the modern kitchen silicone ladle: heat-resistant up to 250°C, flexible enough to scrape out any bowl, dishwasher-safe. The right ladle for everything that needs to be combined with coated pans and pots — silicone doesn't scratch the surface.
Seesucht Manufaktur from Mecklenburg turns wooden spoons from regional hardwood. Each piece is unique, oil-treated instead of varnished, and darkens with age. The classic that fits cast iron and brings the haptics of cooking back into your hand.
Eva Solo provides the minimalist Scandinavian stainless steel counterpart: for the modern kitchen, for contemporary design, for those who don't like silicone and don't want to maintain wood.
The Most Important Shapes
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Cooking spoon (long, oval) — the daily tool, wood or silicone.
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Skimmer — for skimming broth, sifting vegetables.
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Soup ladle — deep scooping, with a pouring lip.
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Spatula — flat and wide, silicone for coated pans, stainless steel for cast iron.
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Scraper & Dough Scraper — soft-flexible, for scraping out dough and sauce.
Why wood doesn't smell: Wooden cooking spoons absorb odors and grease over the years — this is not a defect, but the reason why they look so good over time. Regular rubbing with cooking oil (once a month is enough) nourishes the wood from within and prevents cracks. The spoon doesn't get worse, but more beautiful. A piece that ideally lasts as long as the kitchen it is used in.
See also: Cutting Boards & Breadboards, Small Appliances & Accessories.