Selecting Nakiri Knives
#31
Posted 10 January 2009 - 03:04 PM
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#32
Posted 10 January 2009 - 10:08 PM
How does your Ken Onion knife do with the same challenge?
My wife ordered me the Shun classic Nakiri from Williams-Sonoma 8 days before Christmas. She was charged $124.95 for the knife, $5.00 for gift wrapping, $16.50 shipping and $8.79 sales tax (although it was being shipped across state lines), $155 total, guaranteed shipment before Christmas.
Christmas came and went. So did new years day.
My wife went back to the store. They called customer service and agreed to refund our money. They paid her back only $150. Said gift wrapping charges were nonrefundable.
It took another phone call to the store to get the rest of our money back.
I reordered the knife from Chef's Resource for $124.95 shipped free and no sales tax.
It will be arriving this Monday.
#33
Posted 13 January 2009 - 09:39 AM
#34
Posted 13 January 2009 - 09:47 AM
How does your Ken Onion knife do with the same challenge?
Fine on the two initial cuts, but because the edge is so heavily curved, you have to rock it on the final dice cut.
Chris--you mentioned your "left hand". Are you left handed? And how much did it cost to have the other side ground? Thanks
Yes, I'm left-handed. Didn't need the other side ground; as the website states they come with a 50/50 double bevel edge.
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#35
Posted 13 January 2009 - 12:12 PM

#36
Posted 15 January 2009 - 07:26 PM

There's no taper along the spine:


Of course, there's a taper from spine to edge:

I couldn't get a good shot of the heel as you look down the underside of the handle; it's impossible with my lousy camera skills to focus on the edge and not, say, the table.
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#37
Posted 15 January 2009 - 07:46 PM
#38
Posted 20 January 2009 - 10:08 PM
#39
Posted 21 January 2009 - 02:19 PM
I can state that the RyuSen is incredibly sharp and glides through vegetables like nothing else I have used and as far as onions are concerned, the only way I can slice them thinner is on my mandoline. I have not used it enough to require sharpening but I was assured it could be sharpened with my Chef'sChoice Diamond Hone sharpener.
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#40
Posted 25 July 2009 - 05:52 AM
It performed fantastically -- the heavily vegetarian South Indian meal required a lot of nakiri-perfect prep -- and in so doing probably will be inducing several of the cooking-mad people here to order it. The thin, light blade and keen edge were show-stoppers. (You can learn more about the South Indian meal itself by clicking here.)
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#41
Posted 04 August 2009 - 06:57 AM
--note to self need to buy another magnetic knife strip.
Jon
#42
Posted 20 August 2009 - 04:55 PM
This knife blows through prep accurately and lightning fast.
Well worth the $98- My wife also loves the gekko santoku that I ordered in error initially.
Good times.
PS it is easy on the eye too :)
Edited by 6ppc, 20 August 2009 - 04:56 PM.
Jon
#43
Posted 08 July 2010 - 04:23 AM
A nakiri or santoku would be great for doing julienne and dices. I still like a pointed tip which the nakiri doesn't have but some santokus retain.
Over time, I came to the same conclusion. In a perfect world, I'd find a nakiri with a pointed tip.
Cut to Kappabashi Street in Tokyo, home of more kitchen and restaurant equipment than you'll ever find in any other one location. I spent hours in dozens of stores, with an emphasis on the many amazing knife shops (more on them later). While I was perusing the mindblowing selection at Tsubaya Hochoten, 3-7-2 Nishi-Asakusa, Taito-ku, Tokyo (Japanese website here; some photos -- not by me -- here; 1985 NY Times article here), I saw what looked like the object of my dreams.
Pointing at it with my mouth agape, I said to Hiroshi Saito, the proprietor, "It looks like a nakiri with a pointed tip. What is it?" He said, dryly, "It's a nakiri with a pointed tip. It's the only one in the world. I make them myself. Good idea."
So, 22000 yen later, I am the proud owner of a Tsubaya pointed-tip nakiri:

The knife is a bit bigger than my Gekko nakiri, though the blade length is basically the same. I haven't used it at all yet but will report back when I do.
If anyone can find out more information about the knife from the Tsubaya website, I'd be eager to know. I didn't get into a long discussion with Hiroshi about steel in particular: I was in too much of a consumer frenzy to think rationally.
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#44
Posted 08 July 2010 - 04:45 AM
http://e288.jp/?mode...d=&keyword=ºÚÀÚ
Four types of nakiri; yours isn't listed here.
#45
Posted 08 July 2010 - 11:41 AM
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#46
Posted 08 July 2010 - 12:50 PM
Chris Hennes
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#49
Posted 08 July 2010 - 07:04 PM
If you really want to know about your knife, I can always send them an inquiry, asking for more details about it.
I would really appreciate that, yes. Thanks!
I understand that you like your nakiri, but I just can't resist asking: Is that exactly what you call pointed-tip?
If by "that" you mean the tip of the bottom knife -- which is acute and not rounded like the knife above -- then, yes, I call that a pointed tip. (As did Hiroshi Saito.) It's not as pointed/acute as a deba or yanagi, of course, but it will enable me to prepare a shallot or garlic clove for mincing with greater ease than the rounded tip of the nakiri.
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#50
Posted 09 July 2010 - 06:42 AM
粉末ハイスダマスカス鋼 百層打 八角紫檀柄 菜切
powder HSS (= high speed steel) damascus, 100-layer, octagonal rosewood handle, nakiri
It adds that 8- and 16-layer ones are easy to find, but a 100-layer one is rare.
Edited by Hiroyuki, 09 July 2010 - 06:43 AM.
#51
Posted 09 July 2010 - 07:06 AM
Once I put it to the EdgePro in a few days and give it a test run, I'll report back.
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#52
Posted 09 July 2010 - 12:21 PM
#53
Posted 09 July 2010 - 12:31 PM
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#54
Posted 09 July 2010 - 01:22 PM
I see that at JCK they are now listing an additional line they call "Inazuma": the styling is more traditional, and they use a different steel. Does anyone know anything about 19C27 steel, and how it compares to the VG10 in their Gekko line?
Chris, check out Gators website on Japanese knives and steel composition and resource information.
http://zknives.com/index.shtml
"19C27 - Sandvik steel, very pure alloy. Popular with Japanese knifemakers, referred simply as Swedish steel. Often seen in Japanese kitchen knives, where it is hardened in the range of 62-64HRC.
Alternate designations: 19C27(Sandvik)."
#55
Posted 09 July 2010 - 02:07 PM
OK, so why not a kamagata nakiri??I'm a lefty and need the double-beveled edge of the nakiri.
(That's what I wanted to ask in a previous post of mine!)
An example of kamagata nakiri can be found here. Scroll all the way down to the last photo, and you will see a Shigefusa kamagata nakiri.
I am the proud owner of a Shigefusa nakiri and a Shigefusa kitaeji petty knife as I mentioned here. They are both great!
#56
Posted 09 July 2010 - 02:16 PM
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#57
Posted 09 July 2010 - 04:33 PM
Kamagata (sickle-shaped) nakiri are nothing new; even Kaijirushi (Kai in the United States) makes them, like this one.That seems like a great option! I hadn't ever knowingly seen one of those before.
By the way, I found that your nakiri is listed here in the shop's website.
The one in the photo doesn't look like yours, but the description is exactly the same.
Now, let's see your nakiri in action!
#58
Posted 12 July 2010 - 02:08 PM
This is the Inazuma Nakiri from JCK. It comes pretty sharp out of the box, so I don't know that I'll bother sharpening it right away. Off to make dinner to see how it performs!
Chris Hennes
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#59
Posted 12 July 2010 - 02:09 PM
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