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There are lots of products on the market to ease lemon squeezing. I've never used any of them.

Are there any benefits to using one? What are some of the advantages and disadvantages of the different types?

7 Answers 7

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You should only start using one if you have a pressing need.

That is tongue-in-cheek, but unless your have a need, there is no 'should use'. One such need may be hygiene (or saving effort, or lack of strength in the hands), but only you can determine whether that's true.

UPDATE: original post was modified (and better for it)

As in the earlier answer, benefits may be:

  • Hygiene
  • Economics (more juice from your lemon, if normal squeezing isn't enough for you)
  • Speed / efficiency
  • Catches the seeds for you

A possibly disadvantage may be that it mangles your lemon skin (depending on type), which you might still want to use. On the other hand, models may also exist that allow you to squeeze efficiently after you've scraped some of the skin (if you needed to), which can be a hassle if done by hand.

As to specific models: I don't use any. (probably just use the orange juicer if I had a bunch. Like hobodave - don't need another singletask device that sees uncommon use).

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  • Definitely helpful to have the seeds caught and get more juice!
    – justkt
    Commented Aug 11, 2010 at 12:52
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I'm a recent convert to the type where you load the fruit between two halves of a metal mold and squeeze. I find that it extracts a very high percentage of the juice with minimal effort and does a good job of separating away the seeds. I find it a lot less messy than the reamer or other type I've owned in the past.

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  • this is what i use, too. they are cheap, easy to clean and store (no counter space needed -- in fact, mine does double duty as decoration by hanging on my wall), and it does a good job.
    – franko
    Commented Aug 11, 2010 at 15:17
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    These are also the kind America's Test Kitchen rated highest. That is compared to motorized ones or other handheld variants.
    – Chad
    Commented Aug 11, 2010 at 16:29
  • I don't like these because they don't fit larger citrus fruits well.
    – hobodave
    Commented Aug 11, 2010 at 18:44
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    Arrghh! 3 different sizes for different fruits. sounds like a night mare! what if I want grapefruit juice?
    – Sam Holder
    Commented Aug 12, 2010 at 11:16
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    The yellow one works fine on both lemons and limes, and I imagine smaller oranges as well. Not likely it will do a grapefruit. Start with the yellow one and see if you get addicted - I am. Commented Aug 13, 2010 at 3:58
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I use one of two things: my hands or a lemon reamer.

The lemon reamer is great if you really need to get all of the juice out of the lemon. It takes much less effort to use compared to your hands alone. This makes a difference if you are needing to juice several lemons; your hands might get tired.

In practice, I think I use my hands 80-90% of the time. It's not common that I'm juicing several lemons all at once.

I don't have any experience with the more complex (expensive) tools, but I don't think there's much justification in purchasing anything fancier than a reamer. I don't see a benefit to having a bulkier, more expensive unitasker in my kitchen.

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  • There are some reamers for sale with a strainer attached to the handle. They are only slightly more complex than a regular reamer and allow you to squeeze straight into the food. Commented Aug 11, 2010 at 10:34
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    +1 for hands. they are the way forward. might use a fork as a stand in reamer if I have a particularly awkward lime
    – Sam Holder
    Commented Aug 12, 2010 at 11:18
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My lemon squeezer has a lid with the squeezer and a container underneath. On the pro side,

  • it holds enough liquid to make a couple of glasses of orange juice;
  • it will separate the juice from pips and most of the flesh.

On the down side,

  • it has two components which means more to clean, more things to search for while your cooking;
  • this particular model has a lid that fastens too tightly. It's easy to get covered in juice as you try and pull it off.
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I'm a huge fan of the vintage glass bowl/reamer combination. They're large and have a built-in bowl for catching juice, very easy to use, and extremely easy to clean. I get great leverage standing partially over them (I'm also 6'2" so that might factor in) and I've never had any other tool get so much juice out, though I've never tried the type of simple hand reamer hobodave mentions in his post. As a bonus, if you have a china cabinet or anything similar, they're pretty attractive and can be displayed if you so desire :)

My model is two pieces, there is a glass reamer that sits inside a glass bowl, I find this catches pulp way better than the single-piece models. The top piece looks exactly like this, and the bottom (bowl) is very similar to this, except no reamer attached of course.

edit: It looks like what I have is very similar to what Chris has, except glass. His bullets apply to mine as well, except the last con - this doesn't have any seal whatsoever, which I thought was going to make it dangerous to use, because I expected the top piece to slide as I moved back and forth. However, between the small "point" on the bottom of the top piece, and the downward pressure I exert keeps it from moving at all.

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If you have relatively strong hands, I don't think it's very useful. Just roll the lemon (or lime) on the counter, pressing down on it to break down the fruit a bit, then slice in half and squeeze each half. A little fine-mesh sieve with a handle is great for catching the seeds, or your fingers will work in a pinch. Quick and one less item to store and wash!

On the other hand, larger citrus can't really be juiced that way, and not everyone has a handshake of steel, so some people might well want a gadget.

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One benefit could be saving your hands and skin from citrus infection.I never let lemon juice or any other strong acid get on my hands, it messes with the skin and can cause citrus infections (which is a common problem for bartenders cutting and squeezing limes and lemons by hand).

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    I guess you mean skin irritation by citrus juice... Infection is the colonization of a host organism by parasite species. Lemon hardly qualifies as a parasite.
    – nico
    Commented Feb 26, 2012 at 20:18

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