The Best Fruit and Vegetable Peelers | Equipment Review



A great peeler makes short work of prepping vegetables and fruit. The best are light and comfortable, with a sharp, maneuverable blade that peels neatly without waste and keeps its edge. There are two main types: Y-shaped and straight; we chose favorites of each.

Buy the Kuhn Rikon Original Swiss Peeler:
Buy a 3-pack of Kuhn Rikon Original Swiss Peeler:
Buy the OXO Good Grips Swivel Peeler:

Read our review:

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43 Comments

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  2. Been buying the Kuhn rikon peelers as gifts for years. I try to have a few extras on hand at all times to give as impromptu gifts. They stay sharp for a long long time ( I’ve replaced mine once in close to twenty years), and, they are very inexpensive.

  3. I find Y peelers awkward to use because I typically peel toward myself, like you would using a paring knife. I've been using the same Oxo Good Grips straight peeler for over 20 years and it's still going strong. If it should break, I'll get another one.

  4. As a "lefty", if you have right-handed people who share in the prep duties; a straight peeler is not for you (or you need to each have your own). As a straight peeler gets used, the leading edge of the blade that is not cutting (but leads on the stroke) will get slightly bent inwards. This makes it unusable for a person of the opposite hand to use because now the cutting blade is bend or dished inwards.

  5. I called OXO to suggest that they make their peelers with a rounded or bowed blade and they haven't changed it in 2 years since. Most vegetables we peel are round like carrots and potatoes etc.You don't get just a narrow cut if the blade wraps around the vegetable.

  6. i have a Kitchenaid peeler and it must be some freak one off because i have bought 8 others that were suppose to be the very best and they didn't hold a candle to this Kitchenaid and i bought 2 others Kitchenaids and they were junk , i guess if you have something that works , treasure it !!

  7. I have a ceramic blade peeler that's about 20 years old and it's still sharp as a razor. Have some ceramic knives that old too and they haven't needed sharpening yet even though the company (Kyocera) offers that service.

  8. I bought the OXO straight peeler back when it was serrated. They don't sell it anymore and after having cut myself once on it I understand why. But it's still very good and has lasted me many years even with running through the dishwasher.

  9. I bought 4 of the Rikon peelers nearly 10 years ago – still using those today, very often. Only thing I do have is an "old fashioned" potato peeler with the pointed end for getting out the eyes on potatoes.

  10. Cheap stainless steel y peeler for me. I’ve tried just about every peeler, from ceramic bladed y peelers to disc shaped peelers. The weak point of a y peeler is where it connects to the frame, and plastic doesn’t last a day for me. Ceramic blades break. A simple stainless steel model that I can afford to replace regularly is my go-to. As a caveat, I peel citrus fruit, needing a thin cut with an absolute minimum of pith on each piece, and peel in batches of 40kg to 100kg of fruit. Makrut/Kaffir lime is the toughest, and on a 40kg batch recently I got through 3 peelers before finding my preferred model, which is also one of the cheapest.

  11. This is what I feel is correct. A straight peeler has 2 blades one for left hand useage one for right hand. The Y peeler has two blades so you can peel in BOTH directions, which can speed up and alot of wasted effort is'nt wasted, however I find this works best on long vegs.. not so much on small or round.

  12. i have a peeler that's a cookie cutter model to the kuhn rikon (blue one) by WMF. I used to have a few but because it was so sharp and goody it got stolen by sneaky colleagues a few times. I had one left, and its the only peeler i still use, and i have had it for twenty years now or close to it. i got it in the mid early 2000s. (and it was also cheap as hell as it only cost less than 5 dollars.) mine's still sharp as hell, (keep it dry asap after using and the little oil rubbing as mentioned works) so sharp if you aren't paying attention when peeling, it can peel your finger and nail. i used to peel batshit loads of potato daily for lunch service and prefer this over the straight. frankly i have no problem peeling anything with the peeler. all that matter is that it is super lightweight and sharp so your hand wont feel fatigue for that bulk peeling.

  13. Have been cooking for the last 40 years, I have use a lot of peelers. Y-shape is the way to go, I am surprised that my favorite peeler is not in this group. Good video, will try the Kuhn Rikon (translates to "hold On" from Hausa, go figure…)

  14. I have the OXO good grips peeler that Santa, aka my Father, put in my stocking over 30 years ago. I've got rheumatoid arthritis and I'm finding it difficult to grip now, though it's still sharp. I've just ordered a Kuhn Rikon peeler from Amazon and I think my hands will thank me. Also, I'm sure my Dad would approve 😉

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