News — acacia

acacia vs bamboo chopping board raw meat

If you want the safest wooden surface for raw meat, a dedicated Moso bamboo chopping board is usually better than acacia, because its tighter grain and lower porosity make it slightly less absorbent and easier to sanitise, especially when you keep one bamboo board just for meat and one for everything else. Acacia vs bamboo for raw meat: the clear answer When people ask “what’s the best chopping board material for raw meat: acacia or bamboo?”, we give a straight answer: for most home kitchens, a bamboo cutting board such as the Deer & Oak Large Bamboo Board (45x35cm, 1.8kg)...

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Beech vs walnut chopping board for kitchen?

If you want a single all round chopping board for your kitchen, walnut is usually the better long term choice than beech because it is slightly harder, more water resistant and can last 5 to 10 years with regular oiling, while beech often starts to look tired after around 3 to 5 years of daily use. That said, both can work well if you match the board to how you cook, how you clean and how sharp you keep your knives. Beech vs walnut chopping board for kitchen: quick comparison When people ask “what’s the best chopping board for my...

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Maple vs oak chopping board?

If you cook most days and want a wooden board that will protect your knives and last 5 to 10 years, hard maple is usually better than oak for a primary chopping board, because maple is slightly softer on knife edges and less porous, while oak can be a bit more open grained and thirsty. That said, in a busy British kitchen you’ll often get the best results by pairing a maple or beech style board with a tougher everyday workhorse such as a bamboo or acacia board, like the Deer & Oak range below. Maple vs oak chopping board:...

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Acacia vs bamboo chopping board which is more water resistant

If you want a chopping board that shrugs off water, acacia hardwood is slightly more water resistant than moso bamboo. In our own tests at Deer & Oak, acacia boards like the 45x35cm Large Acacia Board absorbed around 10 to 15 percent less water after 30 minutes of contact than our 45x35cm Large Bamboo Board, which means acacia moves less, swells less and is a touch more forgiving if it’s left damp on the worktop. Acacia vs bamboo: which cutting board copes better with water? Both acacia and moso bamboo are far more water resistant than softwoods or cheap composite...

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