News — cutting

Bamboo vs plastic cutting boards for raw chicken?

If you want the safest and most eco-friendly option for raw chicken, a sealed Moso bamboo board that you wash immediately after use is a better long term choice than a plastic board, which typically shows deep knife grooves within 6 to 12 months. With proper washing at 60°C water, prompt drying and separate use for meat, a quality bamboo board can last 5 to 10 years, while a plastic board often needs replacing every 1 to 2 years once it becomes heavily scored. Is bamboo actually safe for raw chicken? The key question is simple: can you safely cut...

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Best antibacterial cutting boards for meat?

If you want the best antibacterial cutting boards for meat, choose a closed grain wooden board that is at least 38x28cm, weighs around 1.2kg or more and is kept scrupulously clean and dry between uses. In the Deer & Oak range, the Carbonised Bamboo Board 45x35cm (DNO-CBB-LG) is the strongest single choice for raw meat because its dark carbonised surface, 1.9kg weight and tight grain structure help limit moisture absorption and make thorough cleaning easier. What makes a cutting board antibacterial for meat? There is no cutting board that kills every germ on contact. Instead, the best antibacterial cutting boards...

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Why avoid glass chopping boards for knives?

If you want your kitchen knives to stay sharp for more than 6 to 12 months of regular use, you should avoid glass chopping boards completely and use wood or bamboo instead. Glass boards are on average 5 to 10 times harder than a typical knife edge, which means every cut is like hitting your blade against a sheet of fine sandpaper. Why glass chopping boards are so harsh on knives Glass looks clean and modern, so why avoid a glass chopping board for knives in a busy kitchen? The problem is simple: hardness and impact. Harder than your knife:...

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Plastic vs wooden chopping boards for hygiene?

If your main concern is hygiene, a well maintained wooden chopping board is usually safer over 5 to 10 years than a plastic board, because wood naturally traps and dries out bacteria while plastic tends to hold bacteria in deep knife scars. That said, the most hygienic option in a busy kitchen is often a combination: a dedicated plastic board for raw meat and a high quality wooden board for fruit, vegetables and cooked foods. Plastic vs wooden chopping boards: what is actually more hygienic? Studies from food science labs have shown that bacteria like E. coli and Salmonella can...

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