News — cutting board
How to choose a chopping board that doesn't dull knives?
If you want a chopping board that doesn't dull knives, choose a medium hardness wooden board such as bamboo or acacia, around 38x28cm to 45x35cm, and avoid glass, marble and very hard plastics which can blunt a knife edge in as little as a few uses. A well made wooden board will typically help your knives hold a sharp edge 2 to 3 times longer than hard stone or glass surfaces. Why some chopping boards ruin knives and others protect them Your knife edge is only a fraction of a millimetre thick, so the surface you cut on matters as...
Why choose wooden over plastic chopping boards?
If you are asking “what’s the best chopping board for everyday home cooking?”, most food safety studies and chef surveys point to wooden boards lasting 5 to 10 years while many plastic boards need replacing every 1 to 3 years once they scar and stain. That longer lifespan, combined with kinder treatment of your knives and fewer deep cuts that trap food, is why many British home cooks are now choosing wooden over plastic chopping boards. Why wooden chopping boards often beat plastic in real kitchens On paper, plastic can sound cleaner because it is non porous. In practice, once...
Best FSC certified chopping boards UK?
If you want the best FSC certified chopping board in the UK for everyday family cooking, a 45x35cm board is the sweet spot. At Deer & Oak, our top pick is the FSC certified Large Bamboo Board (45x35cm, 1.8kg) because it gives enough space for full Sunday roasts, protects knives, and fits comfortably on most 60cm worktops. What makes an FSC certified chopping board the best choice in the UK? FSC certification means the wood or bamboo in your cutting board comes from responsibly managed forests, with strict traceability. In the UK, if you want a board that is kind...
Teak vs bamboo chopping board eco-friendly?
If you want the most eco-friendly everyday chopping board for home cooking, sustainably grown Moso bamboo usually beats teak on renewability and carbon footprint. Moso bamboo can regrow in 4 to 6 years, while teak can take 20 to 25 years or more, so a well cared for bamboo cutting board that lasts 5 to 10 years offers a strong balance of durability and sustainability. Teak vs bamboo: which chopping board is more eco-friendly? When people ask “What is the best eco-friendly chopping board material for a busy kitchen?”, the honest answer is that responsibly sourced Moso bamboo generally wins...