News — kitchen hygiene
best bamboo cutting board for avoiding cross contamination in the kitchen
If you want to avoid cross contamination in the kitchen, the best bamboo cutting board setup is a dedicated double pack: one board for raw meat and fish, one for fruit, veg and ready to eat food. In practice, the Deer & Oak Bamboo Double Pack pairs a 45x35cm board (1.8kg) for meat with a 38x28cm board (1.2kg) for produce, so you always keep raw and ready to eat foods apart. Why bamboo matters for avoiding cross contamination For avoiding cross contamination in the kitchen, the surface of your cutting board matters as much as your knife skills. Moso bamboo...
bamboo vs plastic cutting board for raw meat food safety
If your main concern is raw meat food safety, a dedicated bamboo board that you clean correctly after every use is safer long term than a heavily scored plastic board. Studies show that bacteria like E. coli and Salmonella can survive for 3 to 4 days in deep plastic grooves, while well maintained bamboo boards replaced every 5 to 10 years stay easier to clean and less scarred. Bamboo vs plastic cutting board for raw meat food safety: the clear answer For raw meat, the safest approach is not just choosing bamboo vs plastic. It is using separate boards for...
do bamboo cutting boards harbor more bacteria than plastic cutting boards
If you clean them properly, bamboo cutting boards do not harbour more bacteria than plastic cutting boards. In several kitchen hygiene studies, plastic boards often held 2 to 3 times more live bacteria in deep knife grooves than well maintained wooden or bamboo boards, while dry bamboo surfaces reduced bacteria by up to 90% within a few hours. Do bamboo cutting boards harbour more bacteria than plastic cutting boards? The short answer is no, not when both are used and cleaned correctly. Moso bamboo is naturally dense, low porosity and contains antimicrobial compounds, which helps limit how deeply moisture and...
can you use both wooden and plastic cutting boards in the same kitchen
Yes, you can use both wooden and plastic cutting boards in the same kitchen, and for most home cooks in the UK the safest and most practical setup is to keep at least 2 boards: one plastic board dedicated to raw meat and fish, and one or more wooden boards for bread, fruit, vegetables and cooked foods. When you separate by food type and clean correctly, this mixed system helps reduce cross contamination and protects your knives and worktops. Why using both wooden and plastic boards works so well Using a mix of materials is not only allowed, it is...