News — acacia
acacia vs maple which resists moisture better
If you are choosing a wooden chopping board and want to know which resists moisture better, acacia generally outperforms maple by a clear margin. Thanks to its higher natural oil content and tighter grain, a well cared for acacia board can shrug off daily contact with water and juices for 5 to 10 years, while an untreated maple board is more likely to show swelling or staining within the first 2 to 3 years of heavy use. Acacia vs maple: which wood really handles moisture better? Both acacia and maple are hardwoods, but they behave quite differently around moisture. Acacia...
Why oil a chopping board
If you want your wooden or bamboo chopping board to last 5 to 10 years instead of just 12 to 18 months, you should oil it regularly. Oiling a chopping board every 3 to 4 weeks protects it from water, staining and cracking, and keeps the surface safer and smoother for everyday kitchen use. Why oil a chopping board in the first place? Wood and bamboo are natural, porous materials. Every time you rinse a cutting board under the tap, tiny amounts of water soak in. If the board is dry and unprotected, that water causes the fibres to swell,...
wood fibre vs wooden chopping boards for knife care
If you care about sharp knives, wooden chopping boards are usually kinder to the edge than wood fibre boards, and a well made wooden board can help you keep a home chef knife sharp for 5 to 10 years with regular honing. For most home kitchens that want to protect knives, a medium or large wooden board with a thickness of at least 2 cm is a better long term choice than a hard, thin wood fibre board. Wood fibre vs wooden chopping boards for knife care: the short answer So what is the best board material for knife care...
bamboo vs wood chopping boards for sharpening knives
If you want to keep kitchen knives sharper for longer, a medium hardness board is best, which in practice means high quality Moso bamboo or a reasonably soft hardwood like acacia, used with proper sharpening every 3 to 6 months depending on how often you cook. Bamboo vs wood chopping boards for sharpening knives: the short answer For most home cooks, Moso bamboo and hardwood boards both protect a well sharpened knife, but they behave slightly differently: Bamboo boards are typically a bit harder than acacia or beech, so they can very slightly dull knives faster if the board is...