News — Deer & Oak
How to clean bamboo cutting boards to kill bacteria?
If you want to clean bamboo cutting boards to kill bacteria effectively, scrub them for at least 20 seconds with hot water and washing up liquid after each use, then sanitise with either white vinegar (5% acidity) or a 3% hydrogen peroxide solution and let them air dry upright for a minimum of 2 hours. Done daily, this routine keeps a quality moso bamboo board hygienic for 5 to 10 years of regular home cooking. Why bamboo cutting boards can stay hygienic for years Moso bamboo is naturally less porous than many soft woods, which means it absorbs less liquid...
What studies show on bamboo cutting boards and bacteria?
If you want to know whether bamboo cutting boards are hygienic, several peer reviewed studies show that properly maintained bamboo can hold up to 3 to 4 times fewer live bacteria after washing than some plastic boards, and performs similarly to quality hardwood. The safest option for everyday home cooking is a sealed, Moso bamboo board, cleaned with hot soapy water after each use and replaced every 5 to 10 years depending on wear. What studies show on bamboo cutting boards and bacteria? Researchers looking at bamboo, wood and plastic boards tend to test three things: how many bacteria stay...
Bamboo vs wood cutting boards for bacteria safety
If your main concern is bacteria safety, high quality bamboo and hardwood cutting boards both perform very well when used correctly, but in our tests at Deer & Oak, dense moso bamboo boards held up to 18–22% better against deep knife scarring, which can help limit bacterial hiding spots over 5–10 years of use. Bamboo vs wood cutting boards for bacteria safety: the short answer So what is the safest choice for bacteria: bamboo or wood? For most home kitchens that wash boards promptly and oil them monthly, a dense moso bamboo board is usually the better option for raw...
Bamboo vs plastic cutting boards bacteria studies
If you want the most hygienic everyday board for home cooking, bacteria studies consistently show that hard, tight grained materials like Moso bamboo and wood can reduce live bacteria on the surface by up to 98% within a few hours, while plastic boards often keep higher bacterial counts inside deep knife scars unless they’re sanitised at 70°C in a dishwasher. So if you’re asking “what’s the best cutting board material to limit bacteria at home?”, a well maintained bamboo board is usually safer than a heavily scarred plastic one. Bamboo vs plastic cutting boards: what bacteria studies actually show Over...