Out of the blue a few months back, my power-baker friend Shannon texted photos of a failed baking project. Instead of a picture of a plateful of crumbly cookies, she sent three successive shots of the stripped gears in her high-end stand mixer, which was in the process of falling apart.
“Do I just bite the bullet and shell out $3K for the Hobart n50,” she asked, referring to a pro model that looks like it could power a tiny tractor through a stony field, “which at that price, should rub your feet and tell you that you're beautiful?”
I sent Shannon's pictures to another power-baker friend, Tara, as something of a joke, à la “look at the weird stuff people send me!” Instead, she had a suggestion.
“Tell her to get the Ankarsrum.”
“The what now?”
“The Ankarsrum. It's from Sweden.”
As a product reviewer, it's always a bit of a thrill to say, “I've never heard of such a thing,” knowing it's preapproved by someone who knows what's what in the kitchen.
I looked it up, and this unique Swedish gem—the $700 Ankarsrum Assistent—which originally came out in 1940, did not disappoint.
Here in the United States, where the brand of reference is KitchenAid, we're used to stand mixers whose motor and moving parts are all above the bowl and whose primary attachments—the dough hook, paddle, and whisk—all spin around in the bowl.
In the Ank, as aficionados call it, the main bowl spins, powered by a motor in the base of the machine. Once I started testing it, I'd tell friends about it, usually accompanied by a short video I took, which would invariably elicit a response along the lines of “what the hell is that?”
The Ank's motor is controlled by a pair of dials: One is for the speed, and the other is an on/off switch that also allows it to run on a timer for up to 12 minutes, something that's handy when you want to multitask, but not overmix. The metal bowl is a cavernous seven quarts, and the company’s website touts its ability to make five kilos of dough (11 pounds!) at a time. In the machine's back corner is a tower with an arm that swings out over the bowl and attaches to a kneading dough roller.


