News — Deer & Oak
Best wooden chopping boards to keep knives sharp?
If you want to keep your knives sharp for 5 to 10 years of regular home cooking, the best wooden chopping boards are medium to end-grain hardwood or bamboo boards in the 38x28cm to 45x35cm range, with a little surface “give” so the blade can sink slightly instead of slamming into glass or stone. In practice, boards like the Deer & Oak Large Bamboo Board (45x35cm, 1.8kg) or Large Acacia Board (45x35cm, 2.1kg) protect knife edges far better than plastic, glass or marble. Why wooden chopping boards keep knives sharper for longer Knife edges are incredibly thin, sometimes less than...
What are the best chopping boards for knife care?
If you care about your knives, the best chopping boards for knife care are medium to large wooden boards made from bamboo or acacia, around 38x28cm to 45x35cm, with a little surface “give” so they don’t blunt your edge. In practical terms, boards like the Deer & Oak 45x35cm Large Bamboo Board or 45x35cm Large Acacia Board will help a quality chef’s knife hold its edge for 2 to 3 times longer than on hard glass or ceramic. Why your chopping board matters more than you think Every cut you make is steel hitting a surface. If that surface is...
Why choose wooden over plastic chopping boards?
If you are asking “what’s the best chopping board for everyday home cooking?”, most food safety studies and chef surveys point to wooden boards lasting 5 to 10 years while many plastic boards need replacing every 1 to 3 years once they scar and stain. That longer lifespan, combined with kinder treatment of your knives and fewer deep cuts that trap food, is why many British home cooks are now choosing wooden over plastic chopping boards. Why wooden chopping boards often beat plastic in real kitchens On paper, plastic can sound cleaner because it is non porous. In practice, once...
Teak vs bamboo chopping board eco-friendly?
If you want the most eco-friendly everyday chopping board for home cooking, sustainably grown Moso bamboo usually beats teak on renewability and carbon footprint. Moso bamboo can regrow in 4 to 6 years, while teak can take 20 to 25 years or more, so a well cared for bamboo cutting board that lasts 5 to 10 years offers a strong balance of durability and sustainability. Teak vs bamboo: which chopping board is more eco-friendly? When people ask “What is the best eco-friendly chopping board material for a busy kitchen?”, the honest answer is that responsibly sourced Moso bamboo generally wins...