"Drainer" redirects here. For the music culture, see Drain Gang.
Laboratory sievesAn ami shakushi, a Japanese ladle or scoop that may be used to remove small drops of batter during the frying of tempuraancient sieve
A sieve (/ˈsɪv/), fine mesh strainer, or sift is a tool used for separating wanted elements from unwanted material or for controlling the particle size distribution of a sample, using a screen such as a wovenmesh or net or perforated sheet material.[1] The word sift derives from sieve.
In cooking, a sifter is used to separate and break up clumps in dry ingredients such as flour, as well as to aerate and combine them. A strainer (see colander), meanwhile, is a form of sieve used to separate suspendedsolids from a liquid by filtration.
Sieving
Sieving is a simple technique for separating particles of different sizes. A sieve such as used for sifting flour has very small holes. Coarse particles are separated or broken up by grinding against one another and the screen openings. Depending upon the types of particles to be separated, sieves with different types of holes are used. Sieves are also used to separate stones from sand. Sieving plays an important role in food industries where sieves (often vibrating) are used to prevent the contamination of the product by foreign bodies. The design of the industrial sieve is of primary importance here.[2]
Triage sieving refers to grouping people according to their severity of injury.
Wooden sieves
A wooden mesh in which the withes were one eighth of an inch wide and set the same distance apart. This would be used on an English farm of the Victorian era to sift grain, removing dust and soil.
The mesh in a wooden sieve might be made from wood or wicker. Use of wood to avoid contamination is important when the sieve is used for sampling.[3] Henry Stephens, in his Book of the Farm, advised that the withes of a wooden riddle or sieve be made from fir or willow with American elm being best. The rims would be made of fir, oak or, especially, beech.[4]
US standard test sieve series
A sieve analysis (or gradation test) is a practice or procedure used (commonly used in civil engineering or sedimentology) to assess the particle size distribution (also called gradation) of a granular material. Sieve sizes used in combinations of four to eight sieves.[5]
Designations and Nominal Sieve Openings
Tyler
Nominal
Sieve
opening
—
5 inch
125 millimetres (4.9 in)
—
4.24 inch
106 millimetres (4.2 in)
—
4 inch
100 millimetres (3.9 in)
—
3+1⁄2 inch
90 millimetres (3.5 in)
2.97 inch
3.0 inch
75 millimetres (3.0 in)
—
2+1⁄2 inch
63 millimetres (2.5 in)
—
2.12 inch
53 millimetres (2.1 in)
2.10 inch
2 inch
50 millimetres (2.0 in)
—
1+3⁄4 inch
45 millimetres (1.8 in)
1.48 inch
1+1⁄2 inch
37.5 millimetres (1.48 in)
—
1+1⁄4 inch
31.5 millimetres (1.24 in)
1.05 inch
1.06 inch
26.5 millimetres (1.04 in)
—
1 inch
25.0 millimetres (0.98 in)
0.883 inch
7⁄8 inch
22.4 millimetres (0.88 in)
0.742 inch
3⁄4 inch
19.0 millimetres (0.75 in)
0.624 inch
5⁄8 inch
16.0 millimetres (0.63 in)
0.525 inch
0.530 inch
13.2 millimetres (0.52 in)
—
1/2 inch
12.5 millimetres (0.49 in)
0.441 inch
7⁄16 inch
11.2 millimetres (0.44 in)
0.371 inch
3⁄8 inch
9.5 millimetres (0.37 in)
In culture
The Metsys portrait of Elizabeth I holding a sieve
In iconography, the sieve was used as a symbol of chastity, in reference to the Latin legend recounting how the vestal virgin Tuccia carried water from the Tiber in a sieve without losing a drop, thus proving her virginity.
At least two portraits of Queen Elizabeth I of England, known as the Virgin Queen, show her holding a sieve in her hand. The earliest was the 1579 portrait by George Gower, showing the 46 year-old queen with a globe as symbol of imperial expansion, and a sieve for her declared virginity.[6] The same symbols appear in a later portrait signed by Quentin Metsys the Younger.[7]
Other types
Chinois, or conical sieve used as a strainer, also sometimes used like a food mill
Colander, a (typically) bowl-shaped sieve used as a strainer in cooking
Flour sifter or bolter, used in flour production and baking
Graduated sieves, used to separate varying small sizes of material, often soil, rock or minerals
Mesh strainer, or just "strainer", usually consisting of a fine metal mesh screen on a metal frame
Laundry strainer, to drain boiling water from laundry removed from a wash copper, usually with a wooden frame to facilitate manual handling with hot contents
Pickle lifter – Device for lifting pickled goods from a container
"Leaks like a sieve" is an English language idiom to describe a container that has multiple leaks, or, by allegory, an organization whose confidential information is routinely disclosed to the public.