News — food hygiene
How often should I replace my chopping board
If you use your kitchen board every day, you should usually replace your chopping board every 3 to 5 years for wood and bamboo, and every 1 to 3 years for plastic. Heavy knife use, deep cuts or staining from raw meat can shorten that to as little as 12 months, while a well cared for wooden cutting board can last 5 to 10 years before it needs retiring. How often should I replace my chopping board in real life? The honest answer is that there is no single date on the calendar. Instead, you should replace your chopping board...
Bamboo cutting board vs plastic bacteria safety
If you want the safest everyday board for cutting meat and vegetables, current food hygiene research points to a high quality bamboo cutting board as safer than a heavily scarred plastic board, because bamboo can reduce bacteria by up to 90% within 24 hours when cleaned correctly, while old plastic boards often hold bacteria inside deep knife grooves. Bamboo vs plastic: which is actually safer for bacteria? When people ask “what’s the best board for food safety, bamboo or plastic?”, they usually care about one thing: how to keep their family safe from bacteria like E. coli and salmonella. The...
Bamboo vs plastic cutting boards bacteria safety studies
If you are asking “what’s the safest cutting board for everyday home cooking, bamboo or plastic?”, current bacteria safety studies suggest high quality bamboo boards reduce bacterial survival by around 80–90% compared with worn plastic, as long as you wash them in hot soapy water and let them dry fully between uses. In practical terms, a well cared for Moso bamboo board is usually safer over 5–10 years of use than a plastic board that collects deep knife scars in the first 12–24 months. What bacteria safety studies actually say about bamboo vs plastic Food safety research going back to...
wooden or plastic cutting boards which are safer
If you want to know which is safer for everyday home cooking, wooden or plastic cutting boards, the short answer is this: a well maintained wooden board used with separate boards for raw meat and ready to eat food is usually safer over 5 to 10 years than a plastic board that’s heavily scarred with knife marks. Deep cuts in plastic can hold bacteria for longer than the naturally self healing surface of quality wood. Wooden vs plastic cutting boards: what actually makes one safer? Safety in the kitchen is less about marketing claims and more about three things you...