News — acacia chopping board
best eco-friendly chopping board bamboo acacia or maple
If you want the best eco-friendly chopping board for everyday kitchen use, Moso bamboo is usually the smartest choice, with a typical lifespan of 5 to 10 years and a lower environmental impact than acacia or maple. For most homes, a large Moso bamboo board around 45x35cm gives the best balance of sustainability, knife friendliness and practicality. Bamboo, acacia or maple: which eco-friendly chopping board is actually best? All three can be eco-conscious choices, but they are not equal. Moso bamboo grows to maturity in about 5 years, is grass not timber, and can be harvested without replanting. That gives...
bamboo vs acacia vs maple chopping board knife friendliness
If you care mainly about knife friendliness, maple is usually the softest on edges, acacia sits in the middle, and bamboo (especially hard moso bamboo) is the firmest under the blade. In practice though, a well finished board in any of these woods will keep a sharp chef's knife happy for 5 to 10 years of home cooking, as long as you avoid glass and marble. Bamboo vs acacia vs maple: which is kindest to your knives? When people ask us “what's the best chopping board material for my knives?”, we give a simple answer: for pure knife friendliness, a...
How to sand a wooden cutting board?
If you want to know how to sand a wooden cutting board properly, the short answer is: start with 80 grit sandpaper to remove deep cuts, move through 120 and 180 grit, then finish at 240 grit, oil the board twice, and let it dry for at least 24 hours. Done carefully, this can add 5 to 10 years of life to a quality board. Step by step: how to sand a wooden cutting board safely Before you start, make sure the board is completely dry. If it has been washed, leave it to air dry upright for at least...
Is it safe to reuse a chopping board for vegetables after meat
If you wash and disinfect a chopping board correctly for at least 20 seconds with hot water and washing up liquid, then allow it to dry fully, it can be safe to reuse for vegetables after meat. In a busy kitchen though, the safest option is to keep two separate boards: one for raw meat and one for ready to eat foods like salad and fruit. Why reusing a chopping board after meat is risky Raw meat, especially chicken and mince, can carry bacteria such as Campylobacter, Salmonella and E. coli. When you cut meat on a chopping board, juices...