News — acacia

acacia vs bamboo cutting board for heavy prep

If you do heavy prep for 5 or more meals a week and use a sharp chef's knife daily, acacia hardwood is usually the better cutting board material than bamboo because it is slightly softer on knife edges and dense enough to last 5 to 10 years with monthly oiling. For busy batch cooking and lots of chopping, a 45x35cm acacia board around 2.1kg gives more stability than a similar sized bamboo board at 1.8kg, although bamboo wins on price and eco credentials. Acacia vs bamboo cutting board for heavy prep: the short answer If your priority is durability under...

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which is most eco friendly bamboo acacia or maple

If you want the most eco friendly option for everyday chopping boards, moso bamboo usually wins over acacia and maple, because it can grow up to 90 cm per day, reaches harvest in around 5 years and regrows from the same root system without replanting. That rapid growth rate and low land use mean a moso bamboo board, like our 45x35 cm Large Bamboo Board, typically has a lower resource footprint than an equivalent acacia or maple hardwood board when both are responsibly sourced. Eco comparison in one glance Here is the simple answer many people are really asking: which...

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acacia vs maple chopping board durability

If you want the longest lasting wooden chopping board for daily kitchen use, maple typically edges ahead of acacia by around 2 to 3 years of service life, with well cared for maple boards often lasting 10 to 15 years and acacia boards usually lasting 8 to 12 years. That said, in a busy British home kitchen using standard chef knives, a quality acacia board will feel harder under the blade and show fewer deep cuts in the first 3 to 5 years. Acacia vs maple: which chopping board is actually more durable? When people ask “what’s the best wood...

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How to remove odors from wooden cutting board with lemon and salt?

If you want to know how to remove odours from a wooden cutting board with lemon and salt, the most effective method is to scrub the board for 60 seconds with half a fresh lemon and 1 tablespoon of coarse salt, then let it sit for 5 to 10 minutes before rinsing and drying upright. Step by step: how to remove odours from a wooden cutting board with lemon and salt This simple routine works on garlic, onion, fish and meat smells without harsh chemicals. It is safe for bamboo and hardwood boards when you avoid soaking and dry them...

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