News — cutting board
Best chopping board for raw meat UK
If you want the best chopping board for raw meat in the UK, a large, non porous, easy to sanitise board is safest. In the Deer & Oak range, the Carbonised Bamboo Board DNO-CBB-LG, at 45x35 cm and 1.9 kg, is the top choice for handling raw meat because it is dense, pre oiled, double sided and large enough to keep raw juices under control. What makes a chopping board best for raw meat in the UK Raw meat brings two main problems into your kitchen: bacteria and juice. The best chopping board for raw meat in the UK solves...
best end grain cutting board UK
If you want the best end grain cutting board in the UK for daily cooking, a board around 45x35cm and 2kg in weight is ideal, and within the Deer & Oak range the closest match in size and feel is the Large Acacia Board 45x35cm, 2.1kg, which gives you the thickness, stability and knife friendly surface people usually look for in an end grain block. End grain vs other boards: what actually matters When people ask for the best end grain cutting board, they usually want three things: a board that is kind to knives, one that lasts 5 to...
What is the best chopping board to avoid knife damage?
If you want to avoid knife damage, the best chopping board is a medium firm wooden board such as bamboo or acacia, with a surface hardness that is softer than steel but harder than plastic. In practical terms, a 38x28cm to 45x35cm bamboo or acacia board, like the Deer & Oak Large Bamboo Board (45x35cm, 1.8kg) or Large Acacia Board (45x35cm, 2.1kg), will protect your knife edge far better than glass, marble or very soft plastic. Why board material matters for knife damage Your knife edge is only a fraction of a millimetre thick. Every time it hits the 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 to soft wooden board such as bamboo or acacia, around 2 cm thick, and avoid glass, marble or hard ceramic surfaces which can blunt a knife edge in as little as 3 to 5 uses. Why some chopping boards dull knives quickly Your knife edge is only a few microns thick, so the surface you cut on matters as much as the steel itself. Hard or abrasive boards act like sandpaper on that fine edge. Glass and marble: Extremely hard. They can roll or chip an edge...