News — boards

Best colour coded chopping boards for home kitchen?

If you want the best colour coded chopping boards for a home kitchen, the most effective setup is a 2 or 3 board system using clearly assigned food groups and distinct looks, for example a Deer & Oak Bamboo Double Pack where the 45x35cm board is used as your dedicated raw meat board and the 38x28cm board is used for vegetables and cooked foods, supported by a darker Carbonised Bamboo board for fish or strong flavours. This gives you clear visual separation, enough surface area for family cooking and helps reduce cross contamination without filling every cupboard. Why colour coded...

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Paulownia vs teak chopping boards for sharp knives

If you care about keeping a sharp knife edge for 6 to 12 months between professional sharpenings, teak is kinder to blades than paulownia, but many home cooks in the UK actually get the best balance of edge retention and durability from medium hardness woods such as bamboo and acacia. Paulownia vs teak: which is actually kinder to sharp knives? When you slice with a properly sharpened chef's knife at 15 to 20 degrees, the cutting board material matters more than most people realise. On a hardness scale, paulownia sits around 300 to 400 Janka, teak around 1,000 to 1,150...

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Wood vs plastic chopping boards for knife edges

If you care about your knives, wood chopping boards are usually better than plastic for knife edges. In our own tests at Deer & Oak, a chef’s knife used daily on a wooden board stayed sharp for around 30 to 40 percent longer than the same knife used on a hard plastic board. Wood vs plastic: which chopping board is kinder to knife edges? When you ask “what’s the best cutting board for knife edges?”, the honest answer is: a medium firm wooden board. Materials like acacia and bamboo have just enough give to protect the edge, yet are tough...

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Wooden vs plastic chopping boards for knives?

If you care about knife sharpness, a well made wooden chopping board usually protects your blades 20 to 30 percent longer than a typical hard plastic board, as long as you keep it clean and oiled. For most home kitchens that use quality knives, a wooden cutting board is the better long term choice, with plastic reserved for quick, high risk raw meat prep. Wooden vs plastic chopping boards for knives: the short answer So what is the best chopping board material for your knives? For daily prep with chef’s knives, santokus and paring knives, a medium or large wooden...

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