News — protect knives

How do I maintain chopping boards to protect my knives?

If you want to protect your knives, the single most effective habit is to use a wooden or bamboo chopping board and oil it every 4 to 6 weeks. A well cared for board can keep a quality kitchen knife sharper for 5 to 10 years, while a neglected board can blunt the same knife in under 6 months. Why chopping board care matters for your knives Every cut is a tiny collision between blade and board. Too hard and your edge chips. Too soft or damaged and the edge rolls. A maintained cutting board gives a consistent surface so...

Read more →


How to choose a chopping board that protects knives?

If you want to protect your knives, choose a chopping board made from medium hardness wood or bamboo, at least 2 cm thick, such as a 45x35 cm Moso bamboo board weighing around 1.8 kg. This combination is soft enough to be gentle on knife edges but firm enough for safe chopping. How to choose a chopping board that protects knives? The best chopping board for protecting knives is one that is softer than steel, has a little give, and does not blunt the edge with every cut. In practice that means choosing wood or bamboo over glass, stone or...

Read more →


how to care for wooden chopping boards to protect knives

If you want to protect your knives, the single most effective change you can make is to use and properly care for a wooden chopping board, not glass or stone. A well maintained board like the Deer & Oak Large Bamboo Board (45x35cm, 1.8kg) can help your knives stay sharper for 2 to 3 times longer than if you cut daily on hard worktops or ceramic boards. Why wooden chopping boards protect your knives Knife edges are incredibly thin, often less than 0.5 mm at the tip. Every time you cut, that edge meets resistance. On very hard surfaces like...

Read more →


What is the best material for chopping boards to protect knives?

If you want to protect your knives, the best material for chopping boards in everyday home kitchens is medium hardness wood or bamboo, around 1,350–1,700 Janka hardness, such as acacia or Moso bamboo. At this hardness your knife edge can last 2–3 times longer than on cheap glass or ceramic boards, while still giving you a stable cutting surface. Why board material matters for your knife edge Every cut is a collision between steel and surface. On a good board the surface has a little “give”, so the edge sinks in slightly instead of slamming into something harder than the...

Read more →