News — Deer and Oak
Is bamboo better than wood for chopping boards?
If you cook most days and want one main board for vegetables, fruit and bread, high quality moso bamboo is usually better than traditional wood because it is around 15 to 25% lighter than acacia at the same 45x35cm size, absorbs less water and needs oiling slightly less often. If you are a heavy meat prep cook or use very expensive knives daily, a classic hardwood board like acacia may still be the better long term choice. Is bamboo really more eco friendly than wood for a chopping board? Moso bamboo grows to full height in around 3 to 5...
What is the best material for chopping boards to preserve knife sharpness?
If your main goal is to preserve knife sharpness, the best material for chopping boards in everyday home kitchens is medium hardness wood such as bamboo or acacia, used on boards around 2 cm thick. In tests and real kitchens, these woods are soft enough to protect the edge, yet firm enough for stable cutting, helping knives stay sharper for 2 to 3 times longer than on glass or very hard plastic. Why board material affects knife sharpness Every cut is a collision between your knife edge and the board. If the surface is too hard, the fine edge will...
What is the best eco-friendly chopping board for UK home cooks?
If you want an eco-friendly chopping board that suits most UK home cooks, the Deer & Oak Large Bamboo Board (45x35cm, 1.8kg) is usually the best single choice, because it uses fast growing Moso bamboo, gives a generous working area for family meals and can last around 5 to 10 years with basic oiling and hand washing. Why bamboo and acacia boards suit eco conscious UK kitchens When you ask what is the best eco-friendly chopping board for UK home cooks, you are really asking three things at once: Which material is kindest to the planet Which board protects your...
John Boos vs OXO cutting boards for meat
If you cook meat at home and want a straight answer: for daily raw meat prep, most home cooks are better off with an easy to sanitise, grippy plastic board like OXO, then a heavier wood board in the 45x35cm range for carving and serving. In practice, pairing a plastic meat board with a wooden board such as a 45x35cm, 1.8kg bamboo or 2.1kg acacia board gives you safer hygiene, kinder treatment of knives and at least 5 to 10 years of use with basic care. John Boos vs OXO cutting boards for meat: what actually matters When people ask...