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Glass vs wooden chopping boards hygiene?

If you care about hygiene, a high quality wooden chopping board is usually safer for everyday use than glass, because wood can trap and reduce bacteria within its fibres while glass boards often develop deep scratches that can harbour germs and are harder on knives. In most home kitchens, a well maintained wooden or bamboo board, cleaned within 10 minutes of use and dried fully, gives better long term hygiene than a scratched glass board. Glass vs wooden chopping boards: which is more hygienic? On paper, glass looks more hygienic. It is non porous, can go in a hot dishwasher...

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Best plastic chopping board for raw meat hygiene?

If you want the best hygiene when cutting raw meat, the safest setup is not one single plastic board, but a dedicated raw meat board that never touches ready to eat food. Many home cooks in the UK now pair a colour coded plastic board for raw meat with a heavy, non porous board like the 45x35cm Deer & Oak Carbonised Bamboo Board for everyday prep, so raw juices stay strictly separate. Why plastic is often chosen for raw meat hygiene Plastic chopping boards became popular for raw meat because they feel easy to sanitise. You can usually put them...

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Best lightweight bamboo chopping board for everyday use?

If you want the best lightweight bamboo chopping board for everyday use, the Deer & Oak Medium Bamboo Board (38x28cm, 1.2kg, Moso bamboo) is the most practical choice for daily cooking. It is light enough to lift with one hand, large enough for family meals, and made from eco-friendly Moso bamboo that is kind to your knives. Why a lightweight Moso bamboo board works so well every day A chopping board you use every single day has to do three things well: it must be easy to move, gentle on your knives, and simple to keep clean. Moso bamboo hits...

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Is bamboo chopping board better for knives?

If you want to protect your knives, a good quality Moso bamboo chopping board is usually kinder to your blades than glass, stone or cheap plastic, and in everyday home use it can keep a sharpened edge for 20 to 30 percent longer. However, compared with softer hardwoods like acacia or end grain butcher’s blocks, bamboo is slightly harder, so it is a balanced choice rather than the single best option for every knife and every cook. How bamboo affects knife sharpness The main question is simple: does bamboo blunt knives faster or slower than other boards? In practical kitchen...

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