Did someone say cleaver?
I found these in the garage among all the previous owners’ stuff. The cleaver’s tang is a quarter inch thick. It weighs a ton and I’ll never have a need for it, other than preparing kindling maybe. The machete looking knife is old German steel. I don’t butcher anything, so I’ll probably end up giving these away.
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Dude chill its the padded room. -AKPM
I bought an IMarku 10” chef’s knife off Amazon last year for $20 that I like a lot. It has German stainless steel, a sharp, thin blade, and a comfortable handle. Holds the edge very well.
Sure probably not as sharp as one of those carbon steel exotic blades, but more than adequate for my use, and cheap!
You bought a house from Bill the Butcher?
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Back to the OP... https://www.surlatable.com/shun-chef...ze=8in#start=6 Great knife to have if you want "fancy" just keep it clean (by hand, no fucking dishwasher!) Don't cut on metal or extremely hard surfaces.
That's my second pet peeve. When I use our knives, I am constantly rinsing or wiping them clean through the prep. My better half uses the knife and then sets it aside dirty to allow it air dry to a nice hard crust.
I love her, and I steer well clear of the kitchen when she gets her swedish chef persona on. I then buck up after the meal and properly tend to the knives and cast iron.
Man I hate the handle on the Shun. Yea you hold it by the blade most of the time but for those times you need a good grip... I guess that’s the point, if you need to apply pressure grab a different knife.
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All cabinets left open, bowls and cutting boards everywhere, multiple pans (even grease from part of the cook poured in a new pan to cook next step) new knife for each stage...I'm resolved to do what you do and come in for heavy clean up when done. We have a pretty small kitchen and looking at a bigger version. I'm pushing to stay small. The only thing more counter space and cabinets will buy me is more cabinets to close and things to clean.
I always say i'm pretty lucky mrs XXX thru me out so i could do it all my way period
except at GF's place i do it her way and she has her quirks
we all do
Lee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know
Yup. We are in a similar stage, looking at purchasing a larger property, maybe a slightly larger living space. Literally the double edged knife.
Back when I managed large silviculture contracts/projects, we would ask the question of how much space a tree planting contractor will use if given either 1ha or 5ha of space to set up camp. The only correct answer is all of it. Told the lady that one, she didn't get the humour of it.
Same. Got this one a few months ago as an upgrade to our cheaper ones and love it.
https://www.surlatable.com/shun-clas...iew#turntodone
After owning many "fancy" knives, I am continually reminded that not much beats a Victorinox. Bought a couple smaller ones for butchering recently and they are hard to beat. I even think PapaPooh referenced the same recommendations in one of his delightful tales.
If you want to get fancy, you can always buy the Rosewood handled version.
https://www.amazon.com/Victorinox-Sw...xpY2s9dHJ1ZQ==
Worth mentioning given the Shun love in this thread: Kershaw/Shun have an annual in-person warehouse sale at their site outside of Portland, but this year, given the ongoing shitshow, they've moved it online. The Shun sale is December 9-10.
https://kershaw.kaiusa.com/blog/
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https://www.japaneseknifeimports.com...210mm-wa-gyuto
I bought this for my wife last year. It’s our new favorite. I had to wait a while for it to come back into stock.
As best as I can tell from google my katana is a generic officer's sword, not a family heirloom. These were machine made, are not considered valuable, and as weapons apparently cannot be brought into Japan to be reunited with a family, and the swords do not have markings to indicate the identity of the officer it was issued to. My dad picked it up after the war when he was stationed in Japan, billeted with a Japanese family. Apparently these swords were surrendered at the end of the war and were brought home by the hundreds of thousands by GI's. I imagine a few of them were taken directly from Japanese soldiers--living or dead--but I'm pretty sure my dad never saw either kind. He was a lab tech on New Guinea before VJ day.
I like carbon blades. They will take a sharper edge but do require care to maintain and won't look as purty as stainless. All my woodworking blades are carbon, except for the carbide saw blades of course. It's a pain in the ass to keep them from rusting in the garage, but a plane blade has to slice through hard rock maple, not a tomato.
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