News — eco friendly

Bamboo vs beech cutting boards for bacteria safety

If your main question is “what’s the safest cutting board material for bacteria: bamboo or beech?”, the short answer is this: high quality moso bamboo boards tend to harbour less moisture and often show fewer deep knife grooves than beech, which can make them slightly easier to keep under 10 CFU/cm² (a common kitchen hygiene benchmark) with normal washing and oiling. Bamboo vs beech cutting boards for bacteria safety: the essentials Both bamboo and beech are naturally antibacterial, especially when they are well finished, kept dry between uses and oiled every 4 to 8 weeks. Studies on hardwood boards show...

Read more →


Wood vs bamboo cutting boards bacterial survival

If your main question is which is safer for bacterial survival, wood vs bamboo cutting boards, then properly cared for Moso bamboo boards and dense hardwood boards like acacia perform very similarly, with studies showing most surface bacteria die off within 3 to 12 hours at room temperature. The bigger difference is how easily you can keep the surface in good condition, which is why many home cooks prefer a sealed, eco-friendly Moso bamboo board for raw meat and a hardwood board for bread and serving. Wood vs bamboo cutting boards: which is safer for bacteria? When you compare wood...

Read more →


bamboo vs wood chopping boards for sharpening knives

If you want to keep kitchen knives sharper for longer, a medium hardness board is best, which in practice means high quality Moso bamboo or a reasonably soft hardwood like acacia, used with proper sharpening every 3 to 6 months depending on how often you cook. Bamboo vs wood chopping boards for sharpening knives: the short answer For most home cooks, Moso bamboo and hardwood boards both protect a well sharpened knife, but they behave slightly differently: Bamboo boards are typically a bit harder than acacia or beech, so they can very slightly dull knives faster if the board is...

Read more →


Bamboo vs wooden chopping boards for durability?

If you want the most durable everyday board for home cooking, a high quality moso bamboo chopping board will usually outlast a standard wooden board by around 2 to 3 years, while a dense hardwood board like acacia can match or slightly exceed bamboo if you maintain it carefully every 3 months. So for most busy kitchens, bamboo wins on durability per pound, while premium hardwood wins on long term toughness and feel. Bamboo vs wooden chopping boards: which actually lasts longer? Durability comes down to three numbers: hardness, thickness and how you care for the board. Moso bamboo typically...

Read more →