News — wooden board
Oak vs acacia chopping board for kitchen?
If you want a long lasting wooden chopping board for your kitchen, acacia usually beats oak because it is more water resistant, less prone to cracking and kinder to knife edges, giving you around 5 to 10 years of regular use with simple oiling and hand washing. Oak vs acacia: which chopping board is better for your kitchen? When people ask “what’s the best wood for a chopping board in a busy kitchen, oak or acacia?”, our practical answer is: choose acacia for everyday food prep, and keep oak for occasional serving or lighter use. Oak is a beautiful hardwood,...
Bamboo vs wood chopping boards for knife care?
If you care about sharp knives, a quality wooden board is kinder than plastic, and within wood types a well finished Moso bamboo or acacia board will typically keep your edge 20 to 30 percent longer between sharpenings than a cheap glass or hard plastic board. So when you ask “bamboo vs wood chopping boards for knife care?”, the short answer is: choose a medium hardness board such as Moso bamboo or acacia, at least 2 cm thick, and use separate boards for heavy chopping and fine knife work. Bamboo vs wood: which is actually better for your knives? For...
How do I choose a chopping board that protects my knives?
If you want to protect your knives, choose a wooden or bamboo chopping board with a little “give” in the surface, around 2 cm thick, and avoid glass, marble or ceramic boards completely. In practice, a board like the Deer & Oak Large Bamboo Board at 45x35 cm, 1.8 kg and 2 cm thick will help your knives stay sharper for 5 to 10 years with regular home use and proper honing. Why board material matters for your knife edge Your knife edge is only a fraction of a millimetre thick. Every time it hits the board, the surface either...