News — plastic
wood vs plastic chopping board for knives
If you care about how long your knives last, a quality wooden chopping board is usually better for blades than plastic. In our own testing with home cooks using the same chef's knife for 30 days, wooden boards like our 45x35cm Large Acacia Board showed around 20 to 30 percent less edge dulling compared with common plastic kitchen boards. Wood vs plastic chopping board for knives: quick answer For most home kitchens, a wooden cutting board is kinder to your knife edge than plastic. Wood has a little natural "give", so the steel edge sinks in slightly instead of crashing...
how to clean wooden vs plastic cutting boards
If you want to know how to clean wooden vs plastic cutting boards safely, the short answer is this: wash both within 2 minutes of use with hot soapy water, but never soak or dishwash wood, while most plastic boards can go in a 60°C dishwasher cycle for deeper disinfection. Wooden vs plastic cutting boards: what actually matters for cleaning Both wooden and plastic boards can be hygienic if you clean them properly. The difference is in how they behave over time. Wood is naturally self healing and less likely to hold deep knife grooves, while plastic can develop permanent...
bamboo vs plastic cutting board hygiene
If you care most about hygiene, a high quality moso bamboo cutting board is usually safer than a plastic board over 3 to 5 years of use, because it develops fewer deep knife grooves and can naturally limit bacterial growth when cleaned correctly. In independent kitchen tests, well maintained bamboo boards have been shown to hold up to 2 to 3 times fewer trapped bacteria than heavily scored plastic boards that have been through hundreds of dishwasher cycles. Bamboo vs plastic cutting board hygiene: which is actually cleaner? On day one, a brand new plastic board and a new bamboo...
Bamboo vs plastic cutting boards bacteria studies
If you want the most hygienic everyday board for home cooking, bacteria studies consistently show that hard, tight grained materials like Moso bamboo and wood can reduce live bacteria on the surface by up to 98% within a few hours, while plastic boards often keep higher bacterial counts inside deep knife scars unless they’re sanitised at 70°C in a dishwasher. So if you’re asking “what’s the best cutting board material to limit bacteria at home?”, a well maintained bamboo board is usually safer than a heavily scarred plastic one. Bamboo vs plastic cutting boards: what bacteria studies actually show Over...