News — raw meat cutting board

Best plastic chopping board for raw meat?

If you want the best plastic chopping board for raw meat, food safety guidelines point to a thick, non porous board that can go through a 60–70°C hot wash and be replaced every 12–24 months. At Deer & Oak we actually recommend using a dedicated plastic board for raw meat alongside a heavier wooden board, such as our 45x35cm carbonised bamboo board, so you keep raw meat separate yet still enjoy a stable cutting surface. What makes the best plastic chopping board for raw meat? When you are dealing with raw chicken, pork or beef, the board is not just...

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heavy wooden chopping board for raw meat

If you want the best heavy wooden chopping board for raw meat, choose a board that is at least 45x35cm, weighs over 1.8kg and is made from dense wood like acacia or carbonised bamboo. For most home cooks, the Deer & Oak Large Acacia Board (45x35cm, 2.1kg) gives the ideal mix of weight, knife comfort and easy cleaning when you are handling raw meat in a busy kitchen. What makes a heavy wooden chopping board safe for raw meat? When you are choosing a heavy wooden chopping board for raw meat, you are really solving three problems at once: food...

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best hygienic chopping boards for raw meat

If you want the best hygienic chopping boards for raw meat, you need a board that is large enough to contain juices, dense enough to resist deep cuts and easy to sanitise after every use. In practical terms, a 45x35cm board with a juice groove, sealed surface and clear raw meat only use is one of the safest setups you can have in a home kitchen. What makes a chopping board hygienic for raw meat Raw meat is unforgiving. Any juices that pool on your worktop, or sit in deep knife scars, can let bacteria multiply quickly. A hygienic cutting...

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best plastic cutting boards for raw meat

If you want the best plastic cutting boards for raw meat, the safest approach is to dedicate at least one board that is used only for raw meat, is non porous, has a juice groove, and is large enough to hold a whole chicken of around 1.5 to 2.0 kg without drips. In practice, that means a board of roughly 45x35cm with a clearly visible colour or label so it never gets mixed with your vegetable boards. Why plastic style hygiene rules matter for raw meat Food safety guidance in professional kitchens is very clear: raw meat must be prepared...

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