I don't use very expensive knives when I step into a commercial kitchen. Whenever I go for my courses, I will bring along my JA Henckel Four-Star knife set which costs about $400 for 5 blades. A good kitchen knife can easily cost more than $400 each.
A bread knife is used only for slicing. Asian cooking, especially Chinese cooking, utilizes mainly chopping, dicing and mincing which are difficult to perform with such knife. Furthermore, due to its elongated blade, chopping and dicing with a bread knife requires more effort. Using an improper kitchen knife can cause serious injury.
This is interesting.....Surprisingly, I am one who does most of the above with kitchen knives.
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Thanks for lots of interesting information, Photobum. Is there some place I can read up on how to sharpen using the Japanese method?
What you said is very true. I once bought a set of knives for my in law from US costing over usd2k. she cooks at high speed and can prepare a few dishes at a go (ie cuting, stewing, washing, boiling, frying). Due to the blade too sharp, she suffered a deep cut. Bandaged up, she carry on cooking.
Good blade cuts like a razor, but your flesh is the weakest point of contact.
As for commercial kitchen, the trend is to go towards using machines for dicing and slicing. Its more efficient, more safe, more clean (if equipment well maintained) and less skill based. I cant find a chef that can flip the knife like a swordsman without injuring himself, hence, machinery is the way to go. Well, thats my pov for a mass production facility.
I once came across a meat specialist from ritz. He is very skillful in preparing meat for a high dollar steak. He said that a good meat cutter is not about the blades. It's the knowledge that matches the tools. He was high salaried and guess what? he was replaced by PRC for a salary 1/5 of his.
From my own experience, a cut wound from a sharp knife heals faster than one cuts with a dull knife. Trust me on this, I have cut myself more than enough to notice this.
That meat specialist was right. Many people just go for expensive things without understanding the knowledge behind (photography, unfortunately, is one of such practices). I must know my knives well enough to know how to cut certain meat, fish and vegetable. For example, one cannot use a sashimi knife (which is meant for filleting fish) to cut beef.
By the way, I am not surprised that PRC uses only a Chinese cleaver to get his job done. Chinese cleaver is probably the most versatile cutting tool ever invented by man. It is a 'do all' knife. Don't believe me.... Just look at any Martin Yan's cooking show.
True enough...
and even with Sashimi, there are a few knives to be used.
Fillet,
bone
decorative,
etc
:sweat:
The chef of a Japanese restaurant once told us that his knive was about 2k and has to be sharpened every night... :sweat:
His $2K sashimi knife is considered a budget knife. Top-of-line ones can easily cost more than $10K each.
His $2K sashimi knife is considered a budget knife. Top-of-line ones can easily cost more than $10K each.
I have caught a staff using a nice blade for prying a metal tin! Damm!
:sweat:
Now, the Kill Bill comes to mind with Hattori Hanzo katanas.... wonder if there are any blades like tat on the market... :bsmilie:
:bigeyes::sweat:
Yes, you can buy Hattori (not Hanzo's katanas) knives and they are available in Singapore. If you look through my knives collection, you will see that I have a Hattori HD 240mm western deba.
Each top-of-line Hattori KD knife can easily cost as much as a Canon EOS 1Ds MKIII.
OT: You can purchase an 'authentic' Hanzo sword from Ebay.
the 2-stage knife sharpener has 2 flat pre-adjusted grinding surface (mini blocks?), not wheels. are these any better? i know that motorised wheel turning at high speed is bad. i dun have those, & unlikely the common folks here have such a fancy tool too... :sweat:
IMO, i think grinding them with some water is better den dry. rite or not?
the reason i bought (yes, me) the sharpener is that compared to the whetstone, the angle are prefixed. no worries grinding oni to blunt the knives! :bsmilie:
I think this is the only one I would be interested in :
SUJIHIKI KNIFE
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You are most welcome!
I can teach you FOC. Just give me about two hours.