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Culverin 07-25-2010 04:15 AM

Where your knives at?
 
1 Attachment(s)
If RS has a Food section, I'm going to assume we've got our fair share of food nerds and home cooks as well?

Here are my first forays into kitchen knives.

Global Vegetable Cleaver
Awesome for dealing cutting things like carrots, I really enjoyed the depth of the blade.
I have since sold this.

Global Slicer
The length of the blade was perfect for slicing down slabs of short ribs into grillable slices.
I've sold this as well.

Global 5" Mini Santoku
One of my favorite knives hands down.
I keep it razor sharp and it serves as my big-ass-paring knife.

Wusthof Classic 7" Santoku
My first ever serious blade.
It never got as sharp as my globals, but seemed to hold it's edge a fair bit longer, even with minimal honing.
Believe what you like, but the scalloped edges actually work.
Sold this one too.

I have since graduated to an handmade artisan japanese gyuto.

Your turn. :)

(Photo by my brother).

winson604 07-25-2010 12:50 PM

I'm not a cooker by any means I just love to eat lol. Nice set though mang

bd0n 07-25-2010 11:39 PM

id have to bring my set home, cause i know if i took a pic at work id get laughed at for months lol

6793026 07-27-2010 08:02 PM

I'm a decent cook and I do a lot of cooking but seriously, maybe cause it's an asian thing but I'm a one knife kind of guy. I've had my cleaver for eons.

Great68 07-27-2010 08:59 PM

I just use a standard Henckels set. They work great if you know how to sharpen knives properly.

Senna4ever 07-31-2010 11:39 PM

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...p/DSC07868.jpg

From the top:
- Henckels 18cm Fillet Knife

- Wustof 20cm Carving Knife

- 18cm Japanese 'Usuba' high carbon steel vegetable knife

- 30cm Japanese 'Yanagiba' high carbon steel sushi/sashimi knife. Well, it used to be 30cm. Now it's 22cm from 24 years of use - it was given to me by the owner of the restaurant I used to work at after he'd used it for 12 years.

- 30cm Japanese Masamoto brand 'Ao-ko Layered Steel Hongasumi Yanagi' sushi/sashimi knife. This is a super high carbon (Ao-ko) steel knife. This is my most expensive knife. It cost about $1000. This knife is made with the same type of steel used in Samurai swords and made using the same techniques. Many Japanese sword makers switched to making knives after Japanese feudalism ended in 1868. It's extremely hard, but brittle. It will keep its edge for weeks in a busy restaurant environment, but it also takes me over an hour to sharpen properly every time.

- 30cm Japanese Masamoto brand 'Ao-ko Hongasumi Yanagi' sushi/sashimi knife. This one cost $500. This is not as hard as my knife above, so it will not keep its edge as long (about 2 weeks), but is also much easier to sharpen.

*FYI:
Japanese knife makers have always chosen their materials carefully. Traditional sword craftsmen used a form of steel called tamahagane which is only produced in western Japan in a high heat smelter, or tatara. Tamahagane is made of iron dust and pure charcoal. Traditional craftsmen use tamahagane to produce swords that are both sharp and strong, but it is extremely expensive and difficult to forge. It is the ultimate material for sword making.Today’s chef knives are forged with similar methods used by sword craftsmen for generations using shiro-ko ("white steel") and ao-ko ("blue steel").

Shiro-ko and Ao-ko Carbon Steels:
Shiro-ko steel is a highly refined carbon steel that has no added ingredients (though it may contain varying levels of the impurities phosphorus and sulfur). Adding chromium and tungsten to Shiro-ko steel creates Ao-ko steel. With these additional ingredients, an Ao-ko steel blade becomes more durable, easier to temper, and capable of maintaining a longer-lasting edge than a Shiro-ko blade.

If you want to read up on Japanese knives, read this: http://korin.com/Learn/About-Japanese-Knives

cho 08-01-2010 09:36 AM

i have all the basic victorinox ones from school =.=

looking into a 10inch mac chefs knife

FN-2199 08-01-2010 09:51 AM

Posted via RS Mobile

LsquareD 08-01-2010 11:15 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cho (Post 7051383)
i have all the basic victorinox ones from school =.=

+1 hahahah
Posted via RS Mobile

beanzzz 08-01-2010 07:21 PM

I don't have much of a collection since I only use them at work but here we go...

Global Santoku
My everything knife!

Global Sashimi
Only use it for making Tuna Tataki.

Global Ceramic Sharpener

Mino Sharp Combination Whetstones 220/1000 and 1000/8000


http://members.shaw.ca/baybeejay/global.jpg

Death2Theft 08-01-2010 08:50 PM

Costco has a 10 pcs henkle set for 199 ATM and beside it they have some 8 peice set of another brand for 40 bux. Hell I just have the miracle blade set + the costco knife sharpener and im' set. Dont see any reason to have fancier knives if they are sharp.

Senna4ever 08-02-2010 11:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cho (Post 7051383)
i have all the basic victorinox ones from school =.=

looking into a 10inch mac chefs knife

Quote:

Originally Posted by LsquareD (Post 7051462)
+1 hahahah
Posted via RS Mobile

Where do/did you guys go to school?

Quote:

Originally Posted by beanzzz (Post 7051896)
I don't have much of a collection since I only use them at work but here we go...

Global Santoku
My everything knife!

Global Sashimi
Only use it for making Tuna Tataki.

Global Ceramic Sharpener

Mino Sharp Combination Whetstones 220/1000 and 1000/8000

Where do you work? You need to wipe down your ceramic sharpener with a wet towel. :p I hope you don't use the sharpener on the sashimi knife!

How are those stones of yours? Are they soft, or hard, and about how much is the 1000/8000 one? I've misplaced my stones after quitting the restaurant business and I need to condition/sharpen/polish my knives, but I don't want to spend $500 on new high quality stones.

LsquareD 08-02-2010 11:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Senna4ever (Post 7052560)
Where do/did you guys go to school?

VCC for me

bd0n 08-02-2010 12:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Senna4ever (Post 7052560)
Where do/did you guys go to school?


Northwest

bd0n 08-02-2010 12:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Senna4ever (Post 7052560)

How are those stones of yours? Are they soft, or hard, and about how much is the 1000/8000 one? I've misplaced my stones after quitting the restaurant business and I need to condition/sharpen/polish my knives, but I don't want to spend $500 on new high quality stones.

Lee Valleys i think are cheap and their nice quality

Senna4ever 08-02-2010 09:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bd0n (Post 7052626)
Lee Valleys i think are cheap and their nice quality

Do they lose their flatness after only a few sharpenings? I can't stand those cheap stones that go concave after using it a few times.

murd0c 08-02-2010 10:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Death2Theft (Post 7051970)
Costco has a 10 pcs henkle set for 199 ATM and beside it they have some 8 peice set of another brand for 40 bux. Hell I just have the miracle blade set + the costco knife sharpener and im' set. Dont see any reason to have fancier knives if they are sharp.

those are single man Henckles which the quality is not good at all.

this is a good quality starter set if you dont mind buying online

http://www.cutleryandbeyond.com/inde..._detail&p=4668

brokentelephone 08-03-2010 09:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Senna4ever (Post 7053254)
Do they lose their flatness after only a few sharpenings? I can't stand those cheap stones that go concave after using it a few times.

I am a fairly avid sharpener, and I absolutely recommend going synthetic. I use DMT brand diamond stones -- I've got a full set of Naniwa japanese stones and haven't used them in months -- the diamond stones work so much faster, are perfectly flat, and have a much smoother action when sharpening.

It takes a little while to get used to the diamond stones because they're so much harder than natural, but once you invest in a set you'll never ever need to buy another stone again and you'll cut down your sharpening time by more than half.

Senna4ever 08-03-2010 05:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by brokentelephone (Post 7053712)
I am a fairly avid sharpener, and I absolutely recommend going synthetic. I use DMT brand diamond stones -- I've got a full set of Naniwa japanese stones and haven't used them in months -- the diamond stones work so much faster, are perfectly flat, and have a much smoother action when sharpening.

It takes a little while to get used to the diamond stones because they're so much harder than natural, but once you invest in a set you'll never ever need to buy another stone again and you'll cut down your sharpening time by more than half.

Hmmm.....but is it ok to sharpen the high-carbon steel knives that I have, I wonder... I usually sharpened my knives once a month at the most. Does it polish to a mirror finish? When you say that it stays flat, do you just get the metal particles coming off? ...and does the stone need to be wet?

gars 08-28-2010 07:48 PM

i bought a set of 3 Henckels 5 star while I was in Germany... Had them for about a year now, but I'm sort of afraid to sharpen them. Any good websites and suggestions on where I can start...?

Senna, are there any other expensive hobbies you want to mention?

hal0g0dv2 08-28-2010 08:08 PM

dam some of those knifes are really nice

SkinnyPupp 08-28-2010 08:27 PM

http://www.couponorder.com/ginsu0.jpg

hal0g0dv2 08-28-2010 08:31 PM

as seen on tv must me good lol

SkinnyPupp 08-28-2010 08:48 PM

Them orientals sure know how to make good knives!


Mizter 08-29-2010 07:24 AM

Hey guys, I'm looking to purchase some knives. Since I'm not much of a 'professional' cook by any means, though I do enjoy cooking, I was thinking I would just need 2-3 knives just to cut meat, veggies and fruit. My question is whether it would be worth considering ceramic knives at all. I've done the research on the internet and it says that ceramic knives are easier to clean (less porous), stays sharp longer but chips rather easily. I was wondering if I could get some insight on whether to still consider ceramic at all. If not, would anyone care to recommend me some decent knives?


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