Cooking & Baking
Related: About this forumHow do you maintain your cutlery?
Last edited Tue Feb 18, 2014, 03:24 AM - Edit history (1)
It was a dirt-slow night at work (we aren't doing NYC Restaurant Week Month, we have no business till March) so I was sharpening up my knives and attracted some attention; I ended up teaching an impromptu sharpening class to everybody from the dishwashers to Chef proper.
Anyway - all cooks (should) know that sharp knives are critical, and they must always be kept that way. I'm an outlier by any standard, I hand-sharpen on Japanese waterstones to a literal mirror finish. What do y'all do to keep your knives sharp? This isn't meant to be any kind of a demo or informative OP, more a whole tips-and-tricks thread.
BainsBane
(54,094 posts)I wish I were better at it or liked doing it better. I need to flatten the stone but haven't gotten around to it.
sir pball
(4,918 posts)That's the DMT bench stones, right? Sorry, I'm a total knife geek, I know steels, construction, brands, sharpening, all of it. Comes with the territory.
Anyway. Try the Sharpie trick, it's a great way to get a feel for the edge angle (which is everything). And you don't need to flatten as much as you may think, as long as the stone is even across the blade, on the short dimension, it can be as deeply dished as you can stand. One of the best edges I ever did started on a 1000 that was damn near an inch deep in the middle.
BainsBane
(54,094 posts)This is my knife.
A Hiromoto Aogami super steel 240 mm gyotu.
Maybe I won't worry about flattening the stone. The knife geeks online go on about it constantly. I just can't care about the details that much. I just want a good, sharp knife.
sir pball
(4,918 posts)Better than 99.5% of what home cooks use, and most professionals too...not that they make poor choices but aogami Super is one hell of a steel. And that's an amazing price for it! Pity they don't make sujihikis.
To get technical, what grit stones are you using? To get any advantage out of that knife over a Wusthof, you need to start it at 1000 grit and then polish the edge on a 4000 or 6000 - it needs to shine like a mirror. My set of 4 was obscenely expensive, but you can get a really nice 1000/4000 double-sided stone from JCK, same place you got that pic, for cheap.
Here's my crown jewel - Mizuno Tanrejo Akitada Hontanren 240mm wa-gyuto:
BainsBane
(54,094 posts)I know I'm not doing as much with sharpening the knife as I should. I bought it about four years ago after doing a good deal of research online. It has proved to be an excellent choice. It has a carbon cutting blade but is covered around the edges in a stain resistant steel.
sir pball
(4,918 posts)It's a great way to go, makes caring for the blade much easier. Mine uses "normal" carbon steel which leaves the blade able to rust but it's incredibly thin and durable.
If you can afford it, get a good 6000 grit stone, or a combination, and polish the edge on the fine grit after you do the 1000. You'll be completely amazed.
Can you use that in professional kitchens? Or is that only for home use? I notice it has a wooden or bamboo handle. I'm also wondering if there are regulations against carbon blades in restaurants?
sir pball
(4,918 posts)I'm sure NYC probably does have some prohibition against wooden handled knives but I've seen many of them in city kitchens; I suspect the health department just looks the other way with those. I mean, technically, all tools have to be NSF-certified but I've only ever seen that on dirt-cheap stamped-blade commodity knives. No problems that I know of with carbon other than maintaining it. The patina can be a real PITA to develop but once it's on there, you just gotta keep it wiped. I use mine mainly for fish butchery and extra-precise vegetable cuts.
I varnished that handle with Minwax anyway - I don't really like the "worn in" look on light wood like magnolia. It just seems grimy to me. Maple or rosewood ages much better, but that wasn't an option there.
Major Nikon
(36,877 posts)I used to sharpen all my knives by hand and steel, but this is quite the chore given the number of knives I have. The Chef's Choice makes life a lot easier. I have the 3 stage model and although it's electric, I very rarely use the electric sharpening stage as it's really only intended for knives that are really dull or need reshaping. The primary sharpening stage is just a pull through and requires no electricity. The 3rd stage is for honing/polishing, is electric and basically replaces a steel and/or a strap. I was a bit skeptical of getting one since I had sharpened my knives by hand for years, but I've been using it for a number of years since and am sold on it. I think it's probably possible to get a better edge by hand, but you'd have to be pretty meticulous and even then I think it would be hard to objectively tell the difference. The angles are all set and pretty much impossible to mess up unless you use it incorrectly.
I agree that sharp knives are critical and I would argue are more safe than dull knives. The key is to keep them sharp all the time by maintaining the edge.
sir pball
(4,918 posts)It's perfect for mandoline and food processor blades as well as most of my home-use Western knives. It's pretty much ideal for "classic" Western steels at typical edge angles.
It's much more than possible to get a better edge by hand though, if you break from tradition and are using non-European alloys and blade designs. Like BainsBane's aogami Super blade; it's a very hard high-tungsten alloy with an extremely fine grain structure that benefits from being taken down to a much shallower angle (11-15 vs. the German standard 22) on a much finer stone (8000+ vs. 1000). Polishing Western steel is actually counterproductive; waterstones get so fine they smooth the steel to the point where the carbide inclusions actually "fall out" and the edge turns to dough. Had it happen.
But, on the other hand, when I take the time to put my 5" petty knife across all four stones, 1000 to 16,000 (14.7-0.97µm) grit...I have used it to shave. Quite well.
Major Nikon
(36,877 posts)I'm happy with my Wusthof knives that I've had for many years before I had ever even seen a Japanese knife. I'm sure the Japanese knives are better, but I'm kinda attached to what I have. Prior to the electric I used a set of synthetic stones which probably weren't the best but worked fine for my purposes.
sir pball
(4,918 posts)I still keep the paring, utility, and boning knives in my bag. Even then, those three get the hand treatment...if you're good with stones, even cheap ones will work better than a grinder. A matter of convenience. Not to mention "synthetic" is almost all you can buy, the last natural fine stone I saw was almost $8,000 for a 3x6" hunk of rock. I'll take my Shaptons any day!
Major Nikon
(36,877 posts)I'm sure the Japanese synthetic stones have raised the bar considerably. At one time synthetic stones were looked down upon, but I certainly wasn't going to pay a lot more for something I wasn't convinced was all that better.
sir pball
(4,918 posts)The Shapton 16k and 32ks, Pro or Glass, are the lust objects of the sushi and straight razor guys. Thankfully, if you only have classic Western steels, you can do with a 1000 and a steel.
Though, I'd try the aogami #1 or Super if you want a new blade.
Major Nikon
(36,877 posts)When I bought my knives they were near the top of what was reasonably available at the time (this was before you could get anything on the internet). They do what I need them to do and I bought them with the intention of keeping them indefinitely. I like to think my knife skills are decent for a non-pro, but I've seen guys who make their living in the kitchen put mine to shame with restaurant supply stamped blades. So while it's nice to think about dropping a few C notes on a good piece of Japanese steel, it's just way overkill for anything I'm going to demand out of a knife.
sir pball
(4,918 posts)I respect your opinion quite a bit and we've have some interesting differences, in the most fascinating and strangely coincidental ways I've seen since being online since 1993.
That being said, our relative spending is out of whack - I have $2500 of knives and stones, and $1200-1500 of camera gear. And the next time I have $200 of purely pocket money - new knife, not new lens. I think I recall you being a pilot - my knives are closer to your instruments than lenses. I deal with heavies at JFK while you have an uncontrolled grass strip.
With all due respect.
Major Nikon
(36,877 posts)On the off chance you're a pilot, I'd imagine you as a low wing person.
sir pball
(4,918 posts)I started it, then got distracted - didn't even LOOK for a reply. Now I sound like an arrogant ass.
Major Nikon
(36,877 posts)sir pball
(4,918 posts)My uncle is an avid pilot from the 60s; he grew up on and still flys a 172 but is too old, but certified for, multi-jet...he joined the CAP when he retired from CU and now flies 20-40 hours a week with cadets and on exercises.
I got to fly his club's 172 at least a half dozen times, but my last time with him was in a Cherokee. I did like how it handled better, but I'm not enough a pilot to know "how".
But if I had to guess...yeah, low wing.
Major Nikon
(36,877 posts)Whether that's better or not is subjective. They are typically more responsive, but high wing aircraft tend to be more stable. There are exceptions to this. I have a 182 and most of my flying is cross country and IFR, so stable is good. CAP almost exclusively has high wing aircraft which are better for search and rescue, so your uncle probably has a lot of time in those. I did a few years with CAP and enjoyed the volunteer work and managed to get a lot of flying out of it.
sir pball
(4,918 posts)I mean, the Cherokee was vaguely snappier at 5000 feet making three turns in ten minutes but that's all of my experience. I understand the physics of it but I also know the feel takes a lot longer to develop. Like if you used my MT for two fish you'd want one for yourself
And yeah, he does fly a 172 in CAP; they pay all expenses and he loves every second of it.
Major Nikon
(36,877 posts)It even has an instrument approach or two, but since we are under the approach/departure path of DFW it's somewhat limited. In one respect that's a good thing because it means the aiport will probably not expand all that much.
sir pball
(4,918 posts)Reasonable analogy though...Johnnycake would be the people using $14.99 20-piece Walmart specials with just the included steel.
Poorly.
Jenoch
(7,720 posts)I bought our first Wusthoff Classic about six years ago. We now have almost every Wusthoff Classic knife offered for sale and all at flea markets. I have found SS TRI-ply cookware and cast iron cookware as well.
sir pball
(4,918 posts)95% of cooks, 99.9% of home cooks, make Wusthof and German-style knives in general a very good, effective, and useful kitchen tool. But a few of us can make a thin, super-sharp knife do our bidding well.
We have an infinitely deep hole to sink our bank accounts in, but for the average Joe, Bed Bath & Beyond is as good a store as any.
Warpy
(112,814 posts)I do have a few cheaper knives and 2 Chinese cleavers and for those I use an electric sharpener.
sir pball
(4,918 posts)You aren't using them enough!
Warpy
(112,814 posts)they got when I was cooking for a crowd at work or at home.
My oldest MAC is over 30 years old, though, and that's all the care it's ever needed.
sir pball
(4,918 posts)My mom had a set of MAC steak knives and one slicing blade over 15 years ago that made me curious, "how were they so thin yet sharp?"
I thought "thin" meant "cheap and flimsy" (like most Americans in '87) and snapped all of them cutting bones. I wondered why mom yelled at me...whoops. Always made MAC = "cheap" to me, though...but that's why I have a better knife than you
hobbit709
(41,694 posts)Whenever I feel it's getting dull I give it a few strokes on a whetstone. The blade width is now about half of what it used to be after about 25 years.
Fortinbras Armstrong
(4,473 posts)Until last Christmas, I would have said that my favorite knife is a Shun 8-inch chef's knife, which keeps a beautiful edge and fits my hand perfectly. My son, who is a chef, gave me a Miyabi 5000DP 8-inch chef's knife and a Miyabi 600D 6-inch chef's knife and I like these equally well. I have a King K-80 water stone, but only use the 800 grit side. A few swipes with a steel every time and some work with the stone about once a month keeps these knives nice and sharp.
I also have a Henckels Four Star 8-inch chef's knife that is about forty years old. It is also a fine knife, but it feels clunky in my hand compared to the Shun or the Miyabis. I also use a steel and a stone to keep it sharp. I have a proper bread knife, a Henckels Pro S which cuts even hot bread well (and also tomatoes). I have a couple of paring knives which are sort of "eh".
When I was shopping for a wok in Chicago's Chinatown, I picked up a carbon steel Chinese style cleaver for under $50 about 20 years ago. It is great for smashing garlic or ginger, and I can cut up a chicken with it in about 90 seconds -- hint, have a small spray bottle with a ten-percent bleach solution for disinfecting the cleaver after cutting up a chicken. Wash the cleaver, spray it with the bleach solution, then wipe off the solution with a paper towel. Since it is not a stainless blade, it has stained, and will rust if not dried properly. About once a year or so, I go over the blade with metal polish. Again, a few swipes with the steel with each use and occasional sharpening with the stone keeps it sharp.
Of course, none of these knives has ever seen the inside of the dishwasher.
sir pball
(4,918 posts)They're much more like odd knives than a true cleaver; the things I've seen Martin Yan do with one leaves no doubt in my mind how useful they are!
japple
(10,229 posts)take my kitty and go back to the cooking discussion.
BainsBane
(54,094 posts)Last edited Fri Mar 14, 2014, 09:58 PM - Edit history (1)
You'll be amazed at the difference if you ever have a chance to use a good Japanese knife. They are 1000x better than the German knives sold in department stores.
Le Taz Hot
(22,271 posts)the more digits I'm likely to lose. Seriously. I'm so used to my nice, dull knives I can pretty much do anything I need to do with them. But then again, I'm just a home cook, not a connoisseur, not a "foodie," not a professional chef, just a simple, home cook.