News — wood
Wood vs bamboo cutting boards for bacteria safety?
If your main concern is bacteria safety, a well maintained hardwood board (such as acacia) is usually safer long term than bamboo, because it is slightly softer, self heals better and tends to develop fewer deep knife scars where bacteria can hide. That said, high quality Moso bamboo boards that are at least 1.8kg in a 45x35cm size and sealed with food safe oil, like Deer & Oak’s range, can be kept just as safe in daily use with the right cleaning routine. Wood vs bamboo cutting boards for bacteria safety? So which is safer for bacteria: wood or bamboo?...
Wood vs bamboo cutting board bacteria studies
If you want the safest board for everyday home cooking, bacteria studies consistently show that both hardwood and quality moso bamboo cutting boards can keep bacterial levels below detectable limits when washed within 10 minutes and dried upright, with survival rates for E. coli and Salmonella dropping by over 99.9% within 3 to 12 hours on well maintained wooden and bamboo surfaces. In practical terms, that means a properly cleaned moso bamboo board like the Deer & Oak Large Bamboo Board (45x35cm, 1.8kg) is just as hygienic for daily use as a hardwood board, provided you follow simple care rules....
acacia vs maple chopping board durability
If you want the longest lasting wooden chopping board for daily kitchen use, maple typically edges ahead of acacia by around 2 to 3 years of service life, with well cared for maple boards often lasting 10 to 15 years and acacia boards usually lasting 8 to 12 years. That said, in a busy British home kitchen using standard chef knives, a quality acacia board will feel harder under the blade and show fewer deep cuts in the first 3 to 5 years. Acacia vs maple: which chopping board is actually more durable? When people ask “what’s the best wood...
Wood vs plastic eco-friendly chopping boards?
If you want the most eco-friendly chopping board for a home kitchen, a responsibly sourced wooden board will usually beat plastic over a 5 to 10 year lifespan, especially if it is made from fast growing bamboo or certified acacia and cared for properly. Wood vs plastic: which is actually more eco-friendly? When people ask “what’s the best chopping board for an eco-friendly kitchen?”, they are really asking two things: which material is kinder to the planet, and which one is safe and practical to use every day. On both counts, high quality wood usually wins over plastic for most...