News — chopping board
Best chopping board size for busy home kitchen
If you cook most evenings in a family home, the best chopping board size for a busy home kitchen is 45x35cm. A board of this size gives you enough space to prep several ingredients at once, keeps food safely away from the edge and still fits on a standard 60cm worktop without feeling cramped. Why 45x35cm works so well in a busy home kitchen In a typical British kitchen, you want a chopping board that is big enough for a full Sunday roast, stir fry prep or batch cooking, but not so big that it lives permanently in the cupboard....
Why do some chopping boards blunt knives faster?
If you want to keep a sharp edge on your kitchen knives for 5 to 10 years, the best type of chopping board is usually end-grain or medium-density wood or bamboo, not glass or very hard plastic. Some chopping boards blunt knives up to 2 to 3 times faster because the surface is either too hard, too rough or packed with hidden grit. Why some chopping boards blunt knives faster Every cut you make is metal meeting a surface. If that surface is harder or more abrasive than the steel, your knife edge rounds off quickly. In simple terms, boards...
Paulownia vs beech chopping board for knife sharpness?
If you care most about knife sharpness, beech is kinder to your blades than paulownia, but a well made medium hardwood like bamboo or acacia will usually keep everyday kitchen knives sharper for 20 to 30 percent longer than either, while still lasting 5 to 10 years with basic care. Paulownia vs beech: which chopping board is kinder to knives? When you ask about paulownia vs beech chopping board for knife sharpness, you are really asking how hard the surface is and how much it grips the edge. Paulownia is very light and soft. Beech is a medium hardwood that...
Beech vs bamboo chopping boards
If you want to know what’s best for everyday home cooking, beech vs bamboo chopping boards comes down to this: for most modern kitchens a 45x35cm Moso bamboo cutting board is the better all round choice, while serious meat prep and heavy cleaver work still suits a thicker beech or butcher’s block style board. Beech vs bamboo chopping boards: quick answer Both beech and bamboo are proven kitchen board materials, but they solve slightly different problems: Moso bamboo boards are typically 20 to 30% lighter than an equivalent beech block, dry faster and use a fast growing grass that is...