News — chopping boards
Bamboo vs plastic cutting boards bacteria safety
If your main question is “what’s the safest cutting board for bacteria control, bamboo vs plastic?”, current food safety research points to high quality bamboo boards as safer for everyday home use, because bamboo is naturally less porous, can be cleaned at 60–70°C, and shows lower long term bacterial survival in knife cuts than many plastic boards that develop deep grooves. Bamboo vs plastic: what actually happens with bacteria? When you slice chicken or mince garlic, bacteria transfer to the board surface. The two big questions are: how easily do they get into knife grooves, and how easily can you...
Is acacia harder than maple and bamboo?
If you want the best chopping board material for everyday home cooking, acacia is slightly softer than hard maple but similar in hardness to quality moso bamboo. On the Janka hardness scale, maple sits around 6400 N, acacia typically ranges from 5000 to 6500 N, and moso bamboo boards come in around 5500 to 6500 N, so the difference in real kitchen use is small. For most home cooks, the choice between acacia and moso bamboo is less about hardness and more about knife friendliness, eco credentials and style. Is acacia wood harder than maple and bamboo in real use?...
Best chopping boards for Japanese knives UK?
If you use Japanese knives in the UK, the best chopping board is a medium to large wooden or bamboo board that measures at least 38x28cm, weighs around 1.2 to 2.1kg, and is gentle enough to protect a 15 degree edge. In practice, that means choosing a board like the Deer & Oak Large Bamboo Board (45x35cm, 1.8kg) or Large Acacia Board (45x35cm, 2.1kg), which are soft enough for high carbon steel but still firm and stable for daily prep. Why Japanese knives need a different chopping board Japanese knives are usually harder than Western knives, often around 60 HRC...
What is the best chopping board to protect knife blades?
If your main goal is to protect your knife blades, the best chopping board material is medium hardness wood such as bamboo or acacia, in a generous size like 45x35cm and a weight around 1.8 to 2.1kg so the board stays stable and your knife edge lasts 5 to 10 years between major regrinds. Why board material matters for knife protection Every cut is a collision between steel and your chopping board. If the board is too hard, the knife edge chips and rolls. If it is too soft, the blade sinks in, twists and can feel unsafe. The sweet...