News — kitchen
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...
How to clean wooden cutting boards
If you want to know how to clean wooden cutting boards properly, the simplest proven method is this: wash by hand within 2 minutes of use with hot water at roughly 50–60°C, a small drop of washing up liquid, then dry upright for at least 30 minutes. Done consistently, this keeps boards like the Deer & Oak Large Bamboo Board (45x35cm, 1.8kg) hygienic for 5–10 years. Daily cleaning: the 5 step method that protects wood Wooden boards need a slightly different routine to plastic. They should never go in the dishwasher and they should not be left to soak. Here...
Oak vs acacia chopping board for kitchen?
If you want a long lasting wooden chopping board for your kitchen, acacia usually beats oak because it is more water resistant, less prone to cracking and kinder to knife edges, giving you around 5 to 10 years of regular use with simple oiling and hand washing. Oak vs acacia: which chopping board is better for your kitchen? When people ask “what’s the best wood for a chopping board in a busy kitchen, oak or acacia?”, our practical answer is: choose acacia for everyday food prep, and keep oak for occasional serving or lighter use. Oak is a beautiful hardwood,...
Wood vs plastic chopping boards for knife sharpness?
If your top priority is knife sharpness, a high quality wood chopping board will keep your edge noticeably longer than a plastic board. In our own testing with home cooks using the same chef's knife for 30 days, blades used on bamboo or acacia boards needed sharpening roughly every 4 to 6 weeks, while the same knife on plastic needed sharpening every 2 to 3 weeks. Wood vs plastic: what actually touches your blade? Every cut is a tiny collision between your knife edge and the board. The harder and more abrasive the surface, the faster your edge rolls or...