News — kitchen board
How to choose a chopping board that doesn't dull knives?
If you want a chopping board that doesn't dull knives, choose a medium to soft wooden board such as bamboo or acacia, around 2 cm thick, and avoid glass, marble or hard ceramic surfaces which can blunt a knife edge in as little as 3 to 5 uses. Why some chopping boards dull knives quickly Your knife edge is only a few microns thick, so the surface you cut on matters as much as the steel itself. Hard or abrasive boards act like sandpaper on that fine edge. Glass and marble: Extremely hard. They can roll or chip an edge...
Best wooden chopping board for knife care UK?
If you want the best wooden chopping board for knife care in the UK, a medium sized board made from end grain or medium hardness wood is ideal. In the Deer & Oak range, the Large Acacia Board (45x35cm, 2.1kg) gives the best balance for knife edge protection, stability and daily kitchen use, with the Carbonised Bamboo Board (45x35cm, 1.9kg) a close second for those who prefer a slightly lighter feel. Why wooden chopping boards are better for knife care If you care about your knives, the first rule is simple: avoid glass, stone and hard plastic boards. They blunt...
Which chopping board material is best for keeping knives sharp?
If you want to keep your knives sharp for 5 to 10 years of regular use, the best chopping board materials are medium density woods such as bamboo and acacia. In our tests at Deer & Oak, knives used daily on our 45x35cm bamboo and acacia boards needed sharpening around 30 to 40 percent less often than knives used on glass or very hard plastic boards. Why board material matters for knife sharpness Every cut is a tiny collision between steel and the board. If the board is too hard, such as glass or marble, the knife edge folds and...
Which chopping board material is best for keeping knives sharp? Is Acacia Better Than Plastic for Chopping Meat in British Homes?
If you want to keep your kitchen knives sharper for longer, a wooden board with a Janka hardness between about 900 and 1,600 lbf is usually best, which includes bamboo and acacia. For raw meat in British homes, acacia is typically kinder to knife edges than most plastic boards, as it gives slightly under the blade instead of fighting it. Why board material matters for knife sharpness Every cut is a tiny collision between steel and surface. If the chopping board is much harder than the knife edge, the blade rolls or chips. If it is too soft or rough,...