News — cutting
Best colour coded chopping boards for home kitchen?
If you want the best colour coded chopping boards for a home kitchen, the most effective setup is a 2 or 3 board system using clearly assigned food groups and distinct looks, for example a Deer & Oak Bamboo Double Pack where the 45x35cm board is used as your dedicated raw meat board and the 38x28cm board is used for vegetables and cooked foods, supported by a darker Carbonised Bamboo board for fish or strong flavours. This gives you clear visual separation, enough surface area for family cooking and helps reduce cross contamination without filling every cupboard. Why colour coded...
How to oil a wooden cutting board?
If you want to know how to oil a wooden cutting board properly, the most effective method is to apply a thin layer of food safe mineral oil every 4 to 6 weeks, let it soak for at least 20 minutes, then wipe away the excess so the board feels dry, not greasy. Done regularly, this can extend the life of a quality board to 5 to 10 years or more. Why oiling a wooden cutting board matters Wood is naturally porous. Without oil, your board dries out, warps, or cracks, especially along the grain. Regular oiling does three important...
Best budget wooden chopping board for everyday use?
If you want the best budget wooden chopping board for everyday use, a medium sized bamboo board around 38x28cm and under £30 is the sweet spot. In the Deer & Oak range, the Medium Bamboo Board (38x28cm, 1.2kg, £24.99) is the most practical budget choice for daily chopping in a home kitchen. Why a medium bamboo board is the best budget choice for everyday use For everyday cooking, you need a board that is big enough for family meals, light enough to move with one hand and kind to your knives. The Deer & Oak Medium Bamboo Board (SKU DNO-BCB-MD)...
Paulownia vs teak chopping boards for sharp knives
If you care about keeping a sharp knife edge for 6 to 12 months between professional sharpenings, teak is kinder to blades than paulownia, but many home cooks in the UK actually get the best balance of edge retention and durability from medium hardness woods such as bamboo and acacia. Paulownia vs teak: which is actually kinder to sharp knives? When you slice with a properly sharpened chef's knife at 15 to 20 degrees, the cutting board material matters more than most people realise. On a hardness scale, paulownia sits around 300 to 400 Janka, teak around 1,000 to 1,150...