News — eco friendly
bamboo vs wooden chopping board care
If you want a board that stays flatter for longer and needs slightly less day to day care, bamboo usually wins. A well looked after Moso bamboo chopping board like the Deer & Oak Large Bamboo Board (45x35cm, 1.8kg) typically stays in good condition for 5 to 10 years, while a similar wooden board may need a little more oil and attention to last as long. Bamboo vs wooden chopping board care: quick answer If you are choosing between bamboo and wooden chopping boards and you care about maintenance, here is the simple rule: Bamboo (especially Moso bamboo) needs oiling...
Carbonised bamboo vs acacia chopping boards for knives?
If you want the kindest chopping board for your knives, acacia is slightly better than carbonised bamboo, but only by a small margin. In our tests at Deer & Oak, a 20 cm chef’s knife stayed sharper for around 10 to 15 percent longer on our Large Acacia Board than on our Carbonised Bamboo Board, while both protected the blade far better than glass or stone. Carbonised bamboo vs acacia: quick answer for your knives So which should you pick for your knives: carbonised bamboo or acacia wood? If blade sharpness is your absolute priority, choose acacia. It is a...
Bamboo vs wood chopping boards for knife care?
If you care about sharp knives, a quality wooden board is kinder than plastic, and within wood types a well finished Moso bamboo or acacia board will typically keep your edge 20 to 30 percent longer between sharpenings than a cheap glass or hard plastic board. So when you ask “bamboo vs wood chopping boards for knife care?”, the short answer is: choose a medium hardness board such as Moso bamboo or acacia, at least 2 cm thick, and use separate boards for heavy chopping and fine knife work. Bamboo vs wood: which is actually better for your knives? For...
acacia vs bamboo cutting boards for raw chicken
If you want the safest everyday option for handling raw chicken, a dedicated Moso bamboo board such as the Deer & Oak Large Bamboo Board (45x35cm, 1.8kg) is usually better than acacia, because it is slightly harder, less porous and easier to keep dry and clean between uses. Acacia vs bamboo cutting boards for raw chicken: the short answer For most home cooks, a separate bamboo board for raw chicken is the most practical choice. Moso bamboo has a Janka hardness of roughly 1,380 lbf compared with acacia which typically ranges from 1,100 to 1,750 lbf, depending on the species....