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Home » Recipes » Cooking Tutorials

How To Spiralize Vegetables (Without A Spiralizer!) + 2 Veggie “Pasta” Dishes

August 27, 2012

how to spiralize vegetables-4363

I’m sure many of you are familiar with spiralizer machines – famous for turning vegetables like zucchini into spiraled, curly, pasta-like strands. I first had zucchini “pasta” a few years ago at a raw food restaurant and I couldn’t get over how similar it was to regular pasta noodles. A spiralizer machine has always been in the back of my mind since then!

I found myself at Kitchen Stuff Plus last week and asked a sales person if they sold spiralizer machines.

“No, I’m sorry we don’t, but we do sell julienne peelers.”

Julienne peeler?? My ears perked up.

How did I not know about this amazing invention? I immediately bought both brands of julienne peelers they carried – you know, just in case one was a dud. And one of them WAS a dud, but the other – Zyliss brand – worked fantastically. I was literally yelling, “Yay it worked!!!” to Sketchie who was trying his best to ignore me in his Sketchie Shell (formerly known as the “cat tent”).

Meet my new Zyliss Julienne Peeler:

julienne peeler zucchini pasta-4341

UPDATE: I now use this julienne peeler by Kuhn Rikon.

As soon as I got home I made a huge bowl of pasta-like veggies using a green zucchini, yellow zucchini, and a large carrot.

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To make it, grab zucchini or carrots and peel away like you would a normal peeler. There is no need to cook the vegetables beforehand, but feel free to heat the veggie “noodles” up in a skillet very briefly just before serving. Sometimes I eat it cold and other times warm, it just depends on my mood.

I was quite impressed with how thin it cut the strands! It gets trickier to peel as you get close to the bottom, so I usually chop up the remaining piece and either throw it in or save it for a stir fry later on.

julienne peeler zucchini pasta-4442

I’m sure using julienne peelers for this purpose is old news to many of you, but it’s new, exciting news to me. Don’t you love when you find out a cool trick?

Naturally, I’ve been julienning/spiralizing my little heart out. So far I’ve tried zucchini and carrots, but I’m wondering if it works on other veggies or fruit. I’m sure beets would work, although it would be messy. I’m pretty sure it will work on potatoes too. Butternut squash? Let me know below if you have any ideas and I will be sure to try it out.

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The first thing I made was a mix of green & yellow zucchini, and carrot “pasta” topped with my 15-Minute Creamy Avocado Pasta sauce. It was lovely!

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Avocado pasta sauce tip – if you are looking to cut down the oil, sometimes I sub half the oil (1 tbsp) for 1 tbsp water and it’s never missed.

For some protein, I added tofu on the side. Easy, fun to eat, refreshing, and perfect for a hot summer day.

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Another fun meal I made is this yellow zucchini pasta dish with White Linen Collection Marinara Sauce, hummus, a crumbled veggie burger, basil, and Herbamare.

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Promptly INHALED!

If you are interested in a cheap way to “julienne/spiralize” zucchini, carrots, etc – I highly recommend trying out a julienne peeler. It only takes a few minutes, the clean up is minimal, and if you’re like me, you’ll find yourself upping your veggie intake substantially.

More Cooking Tutorials

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Filed Under: Cooking Tutorials, Dinner, Gluten Free, Low Sugar, Lunch, My Vegan Pantry, No Bake/Raw, Nut Free, Pasta, Product Reviews, Quick & Easy, Salads, Summer

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Genevieve
13 years ago

I have one of those tools and I love using it to make zucchini noodles…My only issue with it is having to be careful not to julienne my own hand or finger in the process! I actually just used it recently to make a combination of zucchini, carrot and beet noodles, like you suggested. The beet was a bit trickier because of its rounder shape, so I couldn’t get many nice long strands with it. But it turned out to be a fun dish to eat, especially coated in a creamy avocado sauce that I made too!

Reply
Angela Liddon (Oh She Glows)
Author
Reply to  Genevieve
13 years ago

Glad to hear you enjoyed it! I will have to try beets soon..just bought a huge bag at the market this weekend.

Reply
Jill
13 years ago

My daughter is vegan and loves to try new things. Went to Amazon, the “in stock” count was going down as I looked at the Zyliss. Managed to snag one! Sending her to your page. She will LOVE it!

Reply
Angela Liddon (Oh She Glows)
Author
Reply to  Jill
13 years ago

Thank you Jill – glad you got one!

Reply
Gena
13 years ago

Ha! I posted on zucchini “tagliatelle” today (using a veggie peeler) and a reader just commented to let me know that you’d just posted on a similar topic yourself :) I have that zyliss peeler, and I love it for carrots! What a wonderful looking dish.

Reply
Kelly @ No Sugar Sweet Life
13 years ago

Love this!! Those “pasta” dishes look wonderful!! Amazon here I come…

Reply
Erica
13 years ago

I’m always looking for ways to eat up the squash that comes in the CSA! This is a great tool. Thank you for sharing,

Reply
Ashley
13 years ago

I wish I had known about this Zyliss Julienne Peeler sooner! I bought a horribly expensive mandoline for this purpose a couple months ago that is just awful. It barely works and every so often my husband will glance up at our dust-gathering mandoline, look at me and shake his head because I had to bat my eyelashes at him to get it and now it never gets used. In my defense if it worked…or if I didn’t have to worry about losing a finger every time I used it, it would be utilized as much as promised at the time of purchase!

Reply
Tammy
13 years ago

I have contemplated buying those crazy spiralizer contraptions but couldn’t make myself buy such a large clunky one-trick kitchen device. Had seen these julienne peelers as an alternative but always wondered if they did the job. Thanks for the tip!

Reply
Colynn
13 years ago

Thanks for this post! I went straight to Bed, Bath, and Beyond and got the Titan Julienne Peeler after reading this (they didn’t have Zyliss)…amazing. ♥

Reply
Amanda
13 years ago

Guess everybody went straight to Amazon to buy their new Zyliss julienne peeler… they’re temporarily out of stock! I just HAD to order one after this post. My friend has been raving about her spiralizer but I don’t want to shell out for one without knowing how much I’d actually use it. This julienning idea looks quick and easy, so thanks for saving me some money! :)

Reply
Connie
13 years ago

Well, they are now apparantely all out of stock. Looks like you have quite the influence on shoppers. :)

Reply
Angela Liddon (Oh She Glows)
Author
Reply to  Connie
13 years ago

That’s funny! Hopefully they will have more in stock soon :)

Reply
Michelle {LiveLoudly}
13 years ago

This looks great! I’ve been looking for an alternative to pasta. I haven’t been a fan of large carb lunches or dinners for a while but I have a huge craving for pasta right now. Have you ever tried gluten free pasta? I’m always hesitant to try it out.
Showed my cook (boyfriend) the tool – he wants one now!
-Michelle

Reply
Angela Liddon (Oh She Glows)
Author
Reply to  Michelle {LiveLoudly}
13 years ago

Yes I have and it’s quite good! My only complaint is that the brown rice pasta tends to get super firm after being chilled (such as leaving leftovers in the fridge). Not sure if other GF pastas are like that too. Either way I think its nice to get a variety of grains and there are so many options now.

Reply
Radhika Sarohia
13 years ago

That vegetable pasta with avocado sauce looks delicious
I tried making a carrot pasta once before but it didn’t come out very well, I’ll try again though

Reply
Kari
13 years ago

I had never heard of one of these before either! After I read this post I found myself turning into the only Salvation Army I’ve found so far in my new city, and there was one lonely julienne peeler!
Works very well and was only $1.30, so much nicer than cutting the zuchinni by hand!

Talk about good timing, Thanks!

Reply
Sarah
13 years ago

For anyone having trouble finding the Zyliss julienne peeler online or elsewhere, I just found it at Winners (in Nova Scotia) for $5.99! HomeSense would probably have them, too. Happy peeling :)

Reply
Moni Meals
13 years ago

Doesn’t it just change an entire dish completely! We all need this tool! ;) great post and pictures!

Reply
kendra
13 years ago

I found this peeler at my local grocery store today by the produce for only $5.99! I saw amazon has them listed at $14.47- the price has increased as demand has gone up. That’s just wrong.
Angela- thanks for the product hilight- ive wanted a spirializer for a year now but didn’t want to pay $30 for one. This peeler works perfectly.

Reply
Jennifer
13 years ago

Zyliss makes the best garlic press, too. Easy easy to use, clean, lasts forever, ( mine is 15 years old) and you dont have to peel each clove if you don’t want to, though I usually peel half to put closer too the holes. If you leave a little of the skin on the clove, the press pushes all the garlic through and only a bit of papery skin remains.

Thanks for the heads up about the julienne peeler. I will get one. Are they also called a mandeline? They are used to make Thai papaya or cucumber salad also.

Reply
Eva
13 years ago

My first thought was, well nice but it’s not pasta after all, is it, but I gave it a try and sauteed the veg in a bit of olive oil and added some sea salt – it was fantastic. You can really stuff yourself full for hardly any calories – great when you’re trying to loose a bit of weight!
I’m wondering – would this work with aubergine? The texture is a bit rubbery so it might actually come close to real pasta. I’ll have to try this one out.
I’ve seen pasta exchanged for steamed cabbage on another blog, that’s also a great idea when you’re trying to keep the carbs down.
Thanks for these fab ideas, Angela!

Reply
Amber from Slim Pickin's Kitchen
13 years ago

This is so exciting! I had no clue these things existed! I’ve already started scouring Amazon & Ebay! Thanks!

Reply
Adrianne
13 years ago

I’ve been eyeing spiralizers on amazon but hesitate to spend the money because I’m not sure if I’d use it as much as I think I would. Thank you so much for this low cost suggestion!

Reply
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I’m Angela, the founder of Oh She Glows. Since 2008, I’ve been on a journey to glow from the inside out by creating crowd-pleasing plant-based recipes. I’m a New York Times Bestselling cookbook author and award-winning app creator. Click below for my full story!
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