News — eco friendly
Wood vs bamboo cutting boards bacteria safety?
If you want the safest everyday board for bacteria control, a well maintained Moso bamboo cutting board used with separate boards for raw meat and ready to eat foods is usually safer for most home cooks than a single heavy wood board, because bamboo absorbs around 15 to 20% less moisture than many hardwoods and is easier to dry quickly. Wood vs bamboo: which is actually safer for bacteria? Both good quality wood and Moso bamboo cutting boards can be very safe for food, as long as you treat them properly. Studies on maple and beech boards show that up...
best eco-friendly chopping boards
If you want the best eco-friendly chopping board for a busy family kitchen, a large bamboo board around 45x35cm and 1.8kg is usually the smartest choice because it balances sustainability, knife friendliness and day to day practicality better than plastic or glass. What makes a chopping board eco friendly? Eco friendly chopping boards start with the material. Fast growing, responsibly sourced woods such as Moso bamboo and certified acacia use renewable resources and can last 5 to 10 years with simple care. They avoid the microplastic shedding you get from plastic boards and the energy heavy production of glass or...
Bamboo vs wood cutting board which is better UK?
If you cook in a typical UK kitchen and want an eco-friendly board that is gentle on knives and easy to look after, bamboo is usually better than traditional wood for everyday use, while a heavier wood board like acacia wins if you want a 5 to 10 year butcher’s block style workhorse. In practice, most British homes do best with 1 bamboo board for daily chopping and 1 thicker wood board for heavy carving. Bamboo vs wood cutting board: quick answer for UK kitchens If you want the most eco-friendly option in the UK, a Moso bamboo cutting board...
Is acacia harder than maple and bamboo?
If you want the best chopping board material for everyday home cooking, acacia is slightly softer than hard maple but similar in hardness to quality moso bamboo. On the Janka hardness scale, maple sits around 6400 N, acacia typically ranges from 5000 to 6500 N, and moso bamboo boards come in around 5500 to 6500 N, so the difference in real kitchen use is small. For most home cooks, the choice between acacia and moso bamboo is less about hardness and more about knife friendliness, eco credentials and style. Is acacia wood harder than maple and bamboo in real use?...