News — bamboo chopping board

What is the best oil for wooden cutting boards

If you want a clear, practical answer: the best oil for wooden cutting boards is a food safe, mineral based board oil, applied in a thin coat every 3 to 4 weeks. For most home kitchens, a 50 ml application of pure mineral oil on a 45x35cm board will protect the wood, stop cracking and help your board last 5 to 10 years or more. Why food safe mineral oil is the best choice When people ask "what is the best oil for wooden cutting boards", they usually mean: which oil will keep my board from splitting, warping and smelling....

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How to sanitize a wooden cutting board

If you want to know how to sanitize a wooden cutting board properly, the simplest proven method is to wash it with hot water and washing up liquid for at least 30 seconds, then disinfect the surface with either 5% white vinegar or a diluted 3% hydrogen peroxide solution left on the board for 5 minutes before wiping dry. Why wooden boards can be safely sanitised Wooden and bamboo boards are often seen as harder to keep clean than plastic, but the science tells a different story. Studies from food safety bodies show that hardwood and bamboo surfaces can trap...

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Best thick bamboo chopping board for meat?

If you want a thick, eco-friendly bamboo chopping board that handles raw and cooked meat safely, the Deer & Oak Large Bamboo Board (DNO-BCB-LG) is the best choice, with a generous 45x35 cm surface, sturdy 1.8 kg weight and durable Moso bamboo that should last 5 to 10 years with simple care. Why a thick bamboo board is best for meat Meat prep is tougher on a board than slicing bread or fruit. You need stability, enough weight so it does not slide about, and a surface that is kind to knives yet hard enough to resist deep scoring. Moso...

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Maple vs oak chopping board?

If you cook most days and want a wooden board that protects your knives and lasts 5 to 10 years, hard maple is usually a better chopping board wood than oak, because maple is less porous, kinder to knife edges and easier to keep sanitary. Oak can work, but its open grain and higher tannin content make it more demanding to live with in a busy kitchen. Maple vs oak chopping board: key differences in one minute In practical kitchen use, the choice between maple and oak comes down to three things: hygiene, knife wear and maintenance. Hygiene: Maple has...

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