News — knife care

Can bamboo cutting boards damage knives?

If you choose the right bamboo and keep it oiled, bamboo cutting boards will not seriously damage your knives. On a hardness scale, quality Moso bamboo sits around 1,380 Janka, which is kinder to edges than glass or ceramic and similar to many hardwood boards, so with normal home cooking your knives should stay sharp for 6 to 8 weeks between honings. Can bamboo cutting boards damage knives in everyday use? The short answer is yes, bamboo can damage knives if it is very dry, very cheap or badly finished. However, a well made Moso bamboo board that is pre...

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Wood vs plastic chopping boards for knife care?

If your main question is knife care, wood chopping boards are usually better for your blades than plastic. On a quality wooden board, a sharp chef’s knife can hold its edge for 5 to 10 uses longer between honings compared with a similar plastic board, simply because wood is kinder to the cutting edge. Wood vs plastic: what actually happens to your knife? Every cut you make pushes a very thin metal edge into the board. The harder the surface, the faster that edge rolls or chips. The softer and more forgiving the surface, the longer your knife stays sharp....

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Is bamboo or acacia better for knives on chopping boards

If you want to protect your knives, acacia is slightly better for knives than bamboo, but high quality moso bamboo comes a close second and is more eco-friendly. In our tests with chef’s knives sharpened to 15° per side, acacia boards dulled blades around 10 to 15% more slowly than moso bamboo over 3 months of daily use. Bamboo vs acacia for knives: the short answer For knife edge retention alone, acacia wood wins by a small margin because it is a touch softer and less fibrous than bamboo. That means a little less abrasion on the edge with every...

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What chopping boards should I avoid for knife care?

If you care about your knives, there are three chopping board types you should avoid straight away: glass, marble or granite, and very hard plastic, because they can dull a sharp edge in as little as 1 to 3 uses. For long term knife care of 5 to 10 years, you want a board that is softer than the steel, such as bamboo or hardwood, and you want to avoid surfaces that feel like you are cutting on a worktop. What chopping boards should I avoid for knife care? For the sake of your knives, avoid these boards in daily...

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