News — bamboo chopping board
Beech wood vs bamboo chopping board?
If you want the best all round cutting board for everyday home cooking, a high quality Moso bamboo chopping board typically outperforms beech wood for durability, water resistance and eco credentials, while still being kind to knives when it is at least 1.5 cm thick. In our tests, a 45x35 cm Moso bamboo board lasted around 5 to 10 years in a busy family kitchen with simple monthly oiling. Beech wood vs bamboo: what actually matters in the kitchen? Beech and bamboo are both popular for chopping boards, but they behave quite differently once you start slicing onions or jointing...
Are plastic chopping boards eco-friendly?
If you want the most eco-friendly chopping board for a busy kitchen, a well made bamboo or acacia board that lasts 5 to 10 years will usually have a lower environmental impact than a plastic board that needs replacing every 1 to 3 years. So are plastic chopping boards eco-friendly? In most home kitchens the honest answer is no, not compared with long lasting wooden options. Are plastic chopping boards eco-friendly compared with wood and bamboo? Plastic chopping boards are made from petroleum based plastics like polypropylene or polyethylene. These materials can last for decades in the environment, yet many...
Red chopping board vs plastic for raw beef?
If you want the safest option for raw beef at home, a dedicated red chopping board that is easy to disinfect is better than a general plastic board used for everything. The key is colour coding and material: a red board reserved only for raw meat, cleaned at 60–70°C, cuts your cross contamination risk far more than a single all purpose plastic board. Why red chopping boards are used for raw beef Professional kitchens follow a simple colour code: red for raw meat, blue for raw fish, green for vegetables, yellow for cooked meats and so on. That red board...
What colour chopping board for raw meat UK?
In the UK, the recommended colour chopping board for raw meat is red. Food hygiene guidance used in many professional British kitchens follows a colour coded system where red boards are for raw meat only, yellow for cooked meats, green for salad and fruit, and blue for raw fish. At home, the safest option is to copy this system and keep one clearly identified “raw meat only” board, ideally sized at around 45x35cm so juices stay on the board and off your worktops. UK colour codes for chopping boards and why red means raw meat Most UK catering colleges, food...